27 Wis. 433 | Wis. | 1871
The defendant was created a body corporate by chap. 71 of the Private and Local Laws of
Section 4 of the charter was amended by the Private and Local Laws of 1867, ch. 201, and again by the Private and Local Laws of 1868, chap. 144, so that it now provides, in substance, that where the company and the owner of the land overflowed are unable to agree, the compensation to which the owner is entitled shall in the first instance be ascertained by arbitration. The mode of appointing arbitrators is prescribed in the statute, and either party may procure it to be done and bring the matter to a hearing, and two of the three arbitrators may make a valid award. Either party may appeal from the award, within a specified time, to the circuit court. The damages are to be assessed in gross, and when paid or tendered to the party entitled thereto, the exclusive right to the perpetual use of such land becomes vested in the company.., The act as- it now stands contains no reference to the “ Mill Dam Act,” but contains a provision as follows: “ The said company shall have full power and authority, pending all such proceedings and until they shall refuse to pay the compensation so to be ascertained as aforesaid, to use, occupy, and enjoy the peaceable and uninterrupted possession of said lands for
In 1866, the company erected a dam pursuant to its charter, and raised the waters of “ Pike Lake ” so that the same overflowed a portion of the premises in question. The plaintiif was not then the owner of such premises, but purchased them in the fall of 1867. In September, 1868, he procured arbitrators to be appointed pursuant to such amended charter; and two of these arbitrators subsequently made an award in writing, fixing the amount of the compensation to which the plaintiff was.entitled at $600, and specifying therein the height of the gate and the size of the opening through which the water reaches the gate, with reference to which the damages were fixed and determined.
The company, being dissatisfied with the award, appealed to the circuit court for Washington county; and the place of trial was afterwards changed to the circuit court for Milwaukee county, where the appeal was tried, and the trial resulted in a verdict and judgment for the plaintiff for $747 damages, and for costs.
' From that judgment the defendant, the Hydraulic Company, has appealed to this court.
I. It is argued that the circuit court had no jurisdiction of the case, because there was no award between the proper parties, it being claimed that the same is against the officers of the defendant, and not against the defendant.
I do not think that this objection is well taken. There is sufficient in the award to show that it is against the company, although the term “ officers of the said company” is employed in it twice. Yet it is
II. It is claimed by counsel for the defendant, that inasmuch as the land was flowed before the plaintiff became the owner of it, he has no action therefor, but that the right of action is in the plaintiff’s grantor alone.
It is said that there is no testimony tending to show when the dam was erected and the land overflowed. It may be true that the bill of exceptions contains no such testimony, but the circuit judge instructed the jury that this was done in 1866 ; and, inasmuch as the bill of exceptions does not purport to give all of the testimony, it must be assumed that the facts were proved as stated by the judge, and that the land in question was overflowed before the plaintiff became the owner of it. Does this fact defeat his right of action for the damages caused by the overflowing of such lands ? This -is a very important question, and one by no means free from difficulty.
I have reached the conclusion, after a careful examination of the cases bearing upon it, that the question must be answered in the negative, and I proceed to give the considerations which have impelled my mind to that conclusion.
The charter of the defendant does not give it any right to flow lands of other parties before proceedings are instituted to appraise the damages. Under the Mill Dam Act (R. S. ch. 56), such right doubtless exists. That law gives the mill owner power to erect the dam and raise the water, and if the lands of other persons are thereby overflowed, it restricts the remedy of such persons therefor to proceedings under such' law. Sec. 29 provides that “no civil action shall be maintained for the recovery of damages for the erecting, maintaining or using any mill or mill dam, except as provided in this chapter.” Thus, as soon as the land is flowed, the right of the mill owner to the easement becomes vested, and he can only he divested of it by a sale of his mill property for failure to pay the damages which may have been assessed pursuant to the law; and even in that case the right goes to the purchaser at such sale.
Not so in this case. For while the charter of the defendant gave it the right to flow the plaintiff’s land, it gave it no right to do so until proceedings to appraise his damages should he commenced. That portion of the charter has already been quoted. Until those proceedings were commenced, I discover no reason why the plaintiff or his grantor could not have maintained an action therefor, in the nature of an action on the case as for a nuisance, against the defendant, upon the ground that it had acquired no easement or right to flow his lands. He also had the legal right to institute proceedings under the charter of the defendant to procure an appraisement and award of his damages; and as soon as the plaintiff did so, the easement became thereby vested in the defendant, but
Keeping in view, then, the proposition that when the plaintiff purchased the lands which were thus flowed, the defendant had no such easement therein, but was liable to an action in the nature of an action on the case at the suit of the plaintiff for flowing his land, I will refer briefly to the cases before mentioned.
The cases of Newell v. Smith, 5 Wis. 101, and Cobb v. Smith, 16 Wis. 661, will be considered together in their bearing upon this question, as they relate to the same mill dam. There the dam was erected across the Rock river, which is a navigable stream, by virtue of a law purporting to authorize the erection thereof; hut this court held such law unconstitutional so far as it attempted to authorize the overflowing of the lands of the respective plaintiffs, and that the parties were thereby remanded to their common law rights and liabilities.
In the first of these cases it was held that the plaintiff, who purchased the land after it was overflowed, could maintain an action therefor on the ground that the injury to his land was in the nature of a continuing trespass. It is true that Mr. Justice Cole there expressed the opinion that a purchaser, under such circumstances, where no compensation in gross had been made to the former owner, could maintain an action for damages sustained by him after he purchased the estate; and it is also true that the opinion was so expressed when it was supposed that the action could be maintained under the mill dam act. In view of the real facts in that case the decision was doubt
The doctrine which I deduce from these cases, is, that the right of action for damages occasioned by an easement upon land, is in him who owns the land when the easement is acquired. We have already seen that the defendant, under its amended charter, acquired no easement upon the land of the plaintiff until proceedings were commenced to procure an award of damages. The plaintiff being then the owner of the land, can therefore maintain this action.
For the purposes of this case, I assume" that the provisions of the charter of the defendant which authorize it to acquire the right to flow lands that it does not own, and to flow such lands perpetually without the consent of the owner theréof, is a constitutional exercise by the legislature of the right of eminent domain. I do this because neither party raises the question, but both concede that the provisions of the defendant’s charter in this respect are constitutional and valid. The counsel for the defendant express that opinion in their brief, and the counsel for the plaintiff, although evidently restive and uneasy under the restriction, inform us that their client has instructed them not to discuss the validity of the law.
Under these circumstances, we feel justified in assuming that the law which we are considering is a valid enactment, without stopping to enquire whether the use for which the plaintiff’s property may be taken pursuant thereto is such a “ public use ” as will, under the decisions of this court, justify such taking. Fisher v. Horicon Iron and Manuf. Co., 10 Wis. 351.
III. It is argued by counsel for the defendant, that the circuit judge gave the jury an erroneous rule of damages. If I understand the charge correctly, it was, in substance, that the rule of damages was the value of the land overflowed by the defendant, to be
If we could ascertain the amount of such excess of interest or rent, from the record, it might not be necessary to reverse the judgment for that error, but
Before leaving this branch of the case, we deem it proper to state what we conceive is the true rule of damages, to the end that there may be no misapprehension in relation thereto when the action shall be again tried.
Of course, the plaintiff, whose property has been taken for public use, is entitled to just compensation therefor. Constitution, art. I, sec. 13. In the case of Bigelow v. The Western Wisconsin Railway Co., decided by this court at the present term, it was held that “just compensation” consists in making the owner good, by an equivalent in money, for the loss he sustains in the value of his property by being deprived of a portion of it; and that it includes not only the value of the portion taken, but also the diminution in value of that from which it is severed. In establishing this rule we followed the reasoning of this court in Robbins v. Milwaukee and Horicon R. R. Co., 6 Wis. 636; in Snyder v. The Western Union R. R. Co., 25 Wis. 60, and in Welch v. Milwaukee and St. Paul R. R. Co. [ante, p. 108]; and adopted the doctrine of numerous adjudications by the courts of other states on the same subject.
Applying the foregoing principles to this action, the plaintiff is entitled to recover the value, at the time he became the owner thereof, of his lands actually overflowed by the defendant, together with the amount of depreciation in. the value of his other lands of which the portion so overflowed is part and parcel, by reason of such overflowing, such depreciation to be assessed
IY. Several exceptions were taken during the progress of the trial, to the rulings of the court, admitting and rejecting testimony, which we do not think it necessary to pass upon. The rule of damages which we have given will enable the circuit court to rule advisedly on all such questions as may arise when the case is again tried.
Y. During the progress of the trial, and after all of .the testimony in the action had been introduced, the defendant by its counsel moved that the jury might be taken to view the premises in question, and offered to advance sufficient money to defray all of the expenses of such view. The court denied such motion, and an exception was duly taken to the ruling of the court. We think that it is purely a matter of discretion with the court to order or to refuse to order a view by the jury, and that we cannot review the decision upon an application or motion therefor. R. S. chap. 118, sec. 82.
By the Court. — The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and a venire de novo awarded.