Court Opinion

ID: 4729991
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2021-08-12 02:54:58.495039+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:07:59.928830
License: Public Domain

Chadwick, J.
(concurring)—Appellant rests his contention upon the proposition “that the right to do an unlawful thing, the creating of a public nuisance, cannot be acquired under the power of eminent domain.” He assumes that any obstruction of the right of free navigation in the Humptulips river is a purpresture or blocking of a highway which, under our statute and under the common law, has been declared to be a nuisance. If this were literally true, appellant’s argument would be unanswerable; but the question he raises is not new and, where it has been considered by other courts, has been resolved as we have resolved it. The particular question whether the obstruction of a floatable stream is a nuisance, quite naturally came up in those states where the logging industry first assumed commercial proportions. In an early case in Maine, Davis v. Winslow, 51 Me. 264, 81 Am. Dec. 573, it was held, that every person has an equal right to the reasonable use of navigable waters as public highways ; that what constitutes a reasonable use depends upon the circumstances of each particular case, and that the rights of the parties cannot be defined or regulated with entire precision; that the courts must, regard the subject-*571matter of the use, the occasion and manner of its application, its object, extent, necessity, duration, established usage of the country, and the size of the stream and its volume. Waters which are not navigable for ordinary commercial purposes, or in the “Federal sense,” as Judge Gose puts it, are subject to state regulation and control; and the power of the state in this behalf will be measured by the necessities of its commerce as well as the rights of the riparian proprietor. In Hamilton v. Vicksburg etc. R. Co., 119 U. S. 280, a similar question to that before us was presented. The navigation of a stream had been wholly prevented for a period of six weeks, and an action was brought to recover damages by reason of this obstruction. The defendant company justified under state legislation, and on the ground that its action was necessary and • performed with reasonable care. The plaintiff claimed that the state legislation was void because it violated the compact of the state with the Federal government guaranteeing the free navigation of the river. The state court had held that no recovery could be had under such circumstances, and this was affirmed by the supreme court of the United States, that court holding that, in all such cases and until Congress intervenes and exercises its authority, the power of the state is plenary, the only limitation being that the acts of those obstructing navigation at times should not be unreasonable or interfere unnecessarily with the navigation of the streams. To the like effect is Willamette Iron Bridge Co. v. Hatch, 125 U. S. 1, where the authorities are collected:
In Pound v. Turck, 95 U. S. 459, the judgment of the lower court was reversed because the jury had been instructed, in effect, “that if the structures of the defendant were a material obstruction to the general navigation of the river, the statute of the state afforded them no defense though they were built in strict conformity to its provisions.” If the Humptulips river is not navigable in the “Federal sense,” these authorities are controlling.
*572In “City of Erie” v. Canfield, 27 Mich. 479, Judge Cooley said:
“The fact that the boom embraced a portion of the navigable waters of the Manistee river, capable of being navigated by vessels like this, does not necessarily constitute it a nuisance which may be abated by force. It appears by a map which is in evidence by stipulation, that the boom is in the river between Manistee City (then a considerable village) and the lake, and it would seem from the judge’s opinion, which is returned, that considerable evidence was taken to show its necessity, and whether it did or did not constitute an unnecessary impediment to navigation. The circuit judge examined this question elaborately, and reached the conclusion that it did not. The evidence on which he acted is not returned, and the correctness of his conclusion on its weight and credibility has not been argued. It is clear that on a river like the Manistee, which is navigable by steamers for a long distance, but down which logs by the million are floated and gathered in booms every season—where, in fact the principal industry consists in cutting, floating, and manufacturing into lumber the forests in its vicinity, and where the river is more valuable for this floatage than for any other navigation; the necessity and convenience of this floatage must be considered in any rules laid down for the public use of the stream, and the need of booming facilities to render the floatage of value. Indeed, to take away the privilege of booming would be to strike a fatal blow at the principal commerce on the stream; for the vessels which ply between Manistee and other ports are loaded principally with the lumber which the mills along the shores of Manistee lake and river are enabled, by means of the privilege of floating and booming logs upon these waters, to manufacture and place upon the market. It is just and reasonable, therefore and conducive to the best interests of commerce, that the right of navigating the river should be exercised with due regard to the necessity for booming facilities, and the former is not so far paramount as to render the latter a nuisance whenever and wherever it encroaches upon waters navigable by the large vessels which enter this stream. The question whether a nuisance or not, is complicated; it must depend in any case upon the particular facts, and the necessities and *573convenience of each interest must be .considered and compared before the proper conclusion can be reached.”
In Attorney General ex rel. Muskegon Booming Co. v. Evart Booming Co., 34 Mich. 462, Judge Cooley said:
“The questions then are, first, whether the appropriation is of something which is common to the public; and if so, then, second, whether it is made in a manner or under circumstances which justify or excuse it. In considering these questions it is important that we bear in mind the sort of navigable water we are dealing with. Navigable waters at the common law are those where the tide ebbs and flows; under these the public have a proprietorship in the soil itself; and in various ways the sovereign authority may make use of this ownership for the benefit and protection of navigable rights as well as for other purposes. The Muskegon river, it need hardly be said, it not of this character, and the public have no rights whatever in the soil under it. Neither is it a navigable stream, at least at the point where the alleged purpresture exists, in the more popular sense of that term, for it is only a small stream whose value to the public consists in the use which can be made of it for the purpose of floating logs and lumber. The right of floatage is unquestionably a right which the state should guard and protect; but it is a serious mistake to assume that the private appropriation of a part of the bed of the river would necessarily be either a purpresture or a nuisance. The property taken in such a case is not public but private property, and the owner of the bank, who also presumably owns to the center of the stream, may maintain trespass or ejectment against the taker. If the owner makes no complaint, the public can have neither right nor occasion for any, provided the navigable fights are not abridged. If they are, it is not very manifest how this can be a purpresture. The difference between the highway by land, with its definite limits to which the public right extends, whether the whole is used or not, and the highway for floatage in our small streams, where the public rights have no definite limitations of space except as practicability for use and the occasion for use may give variable limits, as the seasons and the needs of business and traffic may change, is so plain that the difference between an appropriation in the two cases needs only to be mentioned. It requires neither argument nor illustration. The one is a *574public grievance of some sort; but the other is no public grievance of any sort, unless the public use is unreasonably abridged or inconvenienced. But if the appropriation of a part of such a stream were presumptively a public injury, the public must be deemed to have waived its right to complain, so far as the appropriation was not unreasonable, when the law permitting the organization of booming companies, and regulating their operations, was enacted. This is so because some appropriation is essential to their operations. Nothing can be a nuisance which the sovereign authority allows, especially when the allowance is on public grounds, and made to facilitate the use of that which is common to all. The question of lawfulness in the action of a booming company in enclosing part of the stream for its own purposes, whether it is done by permanent structures or otherwise, must therefore necessarily be a question depending on the particular facts; it is a question of nuisance or no nuisance; in other words, it is a question whether the general public desiring to avail themselves of the navigable rights, are or are not more inconvenienced than accommodated thereby. If they are not, the enclosure is not unlawful; if they are, it may be.”
Watts v. Tittabawassee Boom Co., 52 Mich. 203, 17 N. W. 809, is a case somewhat similar to this. It was there held that a boom company is liable in damages for needlessly or wilfully obstructing a navigable stream, to the hindrance and consequent injury of persons having an interest in its navigation. In the course of the opinion it was said:
“It has always been proper to stop a mass of logs in a river for the purpose of securing the rights of several owners of the same, or to prevent their loss or destruction. Of course, when this is done on the small streams, navigation is of necessity for the time being impeded. The only question which can arise in such cases is whether the stoppage of the logs was done in a reasonably prudent manner, and was continued no longer than was necessary to accomplish the object.”
The Wisconsin cases are to the like effect. Keator Lumber Co. v. St. Croix Boom Corp., 72 Wis. 62, 38 N. W. 529, 7 Am. St. 837; Field v. Apple River Log Driving Co., 67 Wis. *575569, 31 N. W. 17; Edwards v. Wausau Boom, Co., 67 Wis. 463, 30 N. W. 716.
Reference to some of the cases will show that they were decided upon general principles of the law, and not under the legal conditions existing in this state where the boom company is given the right to condemn and meet the consequential damages resulting to the landowner because of its operations. It would, therefore, seem that, if the occasional obstruction of a floatable logging stream is not a nuisance in and of itself, as reasoned by Judge Cooley and others who have met this question, the relator in this case cannot be heard to complain if the damages that he will suffer because of these obstructions are determined and paid him at this time, rather than put him to occasional lawsuits to recover for each particular obstruction which might be found to be unreasonably or unnecessarily prolonged.