5 Wis. 112 | Wis. | 1856
By the Court,
This was a proceeding under the territorial act of 1840, in relation to mills and mill dams, approved January 13th, 1840, and which was repealed by the state legislature, January 1st, 1850. .
On the 26th day of December, 1851, Hains F. Owen, the defendant in error, filed in the office of the Circuit Court of Columbia county, against John M. French, the plaintiff in error, a complaint, in conformity with the provisions of the act of 1840, to recover damages occasioned by the flowing of the complainant’s lands by means of the erection of a mill dam by the defendant below.
To this complaint the defendant pleaded the general issue, also accord and satisfaction, and also a license from the complainant.
Upon this verdict, in the terms therein expressed, judgment was rendered, to reverse which this writ of error is sued out.
There can be no doubt that this suit or proceeding was instituted, and prosecuted to its final determination, under the provisions of the act of the territorial legislature of 1840, in relation to mills and mill dams, under the supposition that that law remained in force, in respect to mill dams erected prior to its repeal. The question here presented was ably argued, and thoroughly considered in the case of Pratt and wife vs. Brown (3 Wis. 603), in which it was held, that the act of 1840 was repealed by the Bevised Statutes of 1850, and that the parties were thereby restored to their common law rights and remedies. It was held in that case, that the repealing statute did not preserve the remedies provided by the act of 1840. We see no reason to alter or modify the conclusions to which we then arrived. It is clear that the remedy here sought to be enforced, is the statutory remedy of 1840, and cannot be sustained.
It was, indeed, said on the argument, that the complaint contained all the essential averments of a common law declaration
Judgment of the court below is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings, according to law.