23 Mich. 93 | Mich. | 1871
This appears to have been an information against the defendant for a 'supposed offense against the provisions of § 5790 of the Compiled Laws. That section provides for the punishment of any person “who shall willfully and maliciously break down, injure, remove or destroy any dam, reservoir, canal or trench, or any gate, flume, flash-boards or other appurtenances thereof, or any of the wheels, mill-gear or machinery of any mill, or shall willfully or wantonly, without color of right, draw off the water contained in any mill-pond, reservoir, canal or trench.” The information charged the defendant in different counts with having will
Of the evidence actually given by the prosecution, the following is all the statement which appears in the bill of exceptions: “ The counsel for the people gave evidence tending to show that the defendant, on or about the eleventh day of October, 1869, injured a structure of plank built in the bank of the Kalamazoo river, in a place where the said bank had been carried away by former freshets or inundations, and that the said structure of plank was not erected across the channel of said river.” The defense requested the circuit judge to charge the jury “that the jury cannot convict the defendant unless they find from the evidence that the structure of plank destroyed or injured by defendant was placed across the current of the original and natural channel of the river, to obstruct and prevent the natural flow- of the water in and along said natural channel, and that they must acquit the defendant if they find from the evidence that such plank were placed in the bank of the river to repair and fill up an opening in such bank, made by former freshets and inundations, and to prevent the same result from future freshets or inundations.” This request was refused.
"We think the defendant was entitled to have this charge given. We do not think such a structure as the evidence indicates is a “dam,” within the meaning in which the statute employs that word. A dam is an obstruction to the
Had this structure constituted one of the wings of a dam, or anything built into the bank by way of anchoring, protecting or extending the dam, we should have no doubt that it ought to have been regarded as a part of the dam itself; but we do not understand such to have been the case. The record indicates that it was an independent structure, built to supply a break in the bank, and only accomplishing the same purpose which was answered by the bank in its natural condition.
The verdict should of course be set aside, but we think there should be no new trial. The defendant was entitled to a verdict of acquittal upon the counts for drawing off the water from a mill-dam, because no evidence was given under them. He was also entitled to a verdict of acquittal on the other counts, because the facts in evidence, if they made out any offense at all, did not tend to establish the