15 Wis. 101 | Wis. | 1862
By the Gourt,
When this cause was reached in the consultation room, it was examined and decided upon the oral argument of the counsel for the appellant and the printed argument on file. We then understood that it was conceded on both sides that the action was brought and must be sustained under the provisions of the act of the territorial legislature referred to in the complaint, with the amendment thereto found in chapter 214, p. 170, Laws of 1850. The complaint evidently grounds the action upon that law. But in considering the case, we found an insurmountable difficulty in sustaining the action under that law, because we deemed it an unconstitutional enactment, for reasons which will be presently stated. The question then arose, whether the complaint could be sustained under the general mill dam law; and we came to the conclusion that it could, although in this view it is clear that there is much redundant matter in the complaint. We now find upon file a written argument of the counsel for the appellant, in which he seems to have reached substantially the same conclusion as to the validity of the law of 1848 as amended, and as to the nature of his complaint, as the one to which the court had arrived. The law of 1848 (p. 13, Laws of 1848,) was evidently designed to, and in terms does grant to A. Hyatt Smith, Ira Miltimore and their associates &c., the right to erect and maintain a dam across Bock river, at any point they might deem most suitable on their own land, and according to the conditions therein prescribed. But it expressly limits this right to the flowage of such lands only as they, or either of them, might own. The reason of the law undoubtedly was, that as that river was supposed to be a navigable stream, they would have no right to erect and maintain such a dam, even on their own lands, without a previous act of the legislature. Hence the necessity of that law. In 1850 the legislature attempted to give them the right to so construct the dam as not only to flow their own lands but the lands of others. The material part of the law is embrac-
We do not know upon what principle of law, reason or justice, such an enactment of the legislature, under the constitution of this state, can be sustained. Within repeated decisions of this court, it is clearly unconstitutional and void. It professes to authorize the respondents to overflow, use, enjoy, and practically destroy the value of lands of an individual, without first making compensation therefor. The only compensation in fact given by the law, is an action of trespass against the respondents for the value of the lands overflowed. It is not readily perceived how an action of trespass for the permanent use and enjoyment of land places the owner in any better condition for the redress of his injury than he would have been at common law. At all events, an action of trespass for the permanent use and enjoyment of private property is not just compensation therefor, either in a constitutional sense or any other.
It is true we have quite recently affirmed the constitutionality of the mill dam law. But we did so upon the distinct ground and for the express reason, that its validity had been sustained by previous decisions of this court, and we did not feel at liberty; under the circumstances, to depart from those decisions. We acted upon the principle of stare decisis, through our own opinions were in conflict with the doctrine of those cases. As an original question, we should be unwilling to declare that the taking of property for the purpose of overflow by the waters of a mill dam was taking it for a “public use.” By the adjudications of this court it has been settled that it was. We have no intention of unsettling and overthrowing those decisions. At the same time we are as little disposed to extend the principles and scope of those decisions to cases which do not fairly come within them. There is a wide and fundamental distinction in respect to
Although tbe mill dam law was repealed by tbe revision of 1849, it was re-enacted in tbe spring of 1857. In tbe summer of that year tbe complaint alleges that tbe respondents increased tbe height of their dam so as to cause tbe water of tbe river to set back and overflow tbe lands purchased by tbe appellant under tbe foreclosure proceedings. It alleges that in consequence of this overflowage, those lands are rendered wet, marshy and wholly worthless, and that tbe damage sustained by reason thereof is five thousand dollars. This is tbe material part of tbe complaint, and we think it sates facts constituting a cause of action under tbe mill dam law. In the view we have taken of tbe complaint, it is apparent it contains immaterial allegations; but this is not a ground of demurrer. It further appears from tbe complaint, that tbe appellant became the absolute owner of the three tracts of land therein mentioned, in September, 1860. For some four years before that time, be had held a mortgage on two of tbe tracts, to secure tbe consideration money of these witb other lands sold to David N oggle in March, 1856. He became likewise assignee of a mortgage on tbe other tract in 1859. The question is therefore distinctly presented on this demurrer, whether tbe appellant, having purchased land already flowed, and for which no compensation in gross had ever been made to tbe former owner, can maintain an action
The order sustaining the demurrer must be reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.