66 Wis. 167 | Wis. | 1886
The principal question discussed in this case is whether the right of the plaintiff to maintain the dam mentioned in the complaint, and to demand tolls for its use, had expired by limitation. The plaintiff rests his right to maintain the action upon ch. 876, P. & L. Laws of 1868, and ch. 100, P. & L. Laws of 1872. The first act granted to George A. Gore, his associates, successors, or assigns, the right to maintain the dam and exact tolls for its use, for the period of fifteen years next succeeding the erection thereof. The complaint states that the dam was constructed or completed June 1, 1868, and has been ever since maintained and kept in repair. The plaintiff seeks to recover tolls for logs and lumber passing over or run through the dam and slides between April 1, 1888, and December 1, 1884. If the limitation in the original act was not repealed by the act of 1872, still it is apparent the plaintiff would be entitled to recover such tolls as "were earned for logs and lumber run over the dam’ and slides between April 1, 1883, and June 1, 1883. So, in view of that fact, the order overruling the demurrer would have to be affirmed. But the real question discussed, which counsel seek to have decided, is whether the act of 1872 repealed the limitation in the original act. We are of the opinion that it did.
The act of 1872 is entitled “ An act to amend chapter three hundred and seventy-six of the Private and Local Laws of 1868, entitled ‘ An act to authorize George A. Gore to maintain a dam across Apple river.’ ” The first section thereof, so far as it relates to the first section of the act of 1868, which contains the limitation, reads as follows: “Section 1. George A. Gove, his heirs and assigns, are hereby authorized to build, keep up, and maintain a dam across Apple river, in the county of Polk, at or immediately above that part of-said river known as Little Falls,” on section 12, township 32 N., of range 17 W. This act is not only
But it is said the act of 1872 confers the privilege or franchise upon a different person from the one named in the first act. But it is very evident, from the language of the second act, that there was a misnomer, or error in the name of the first grantee, and one object of the act of 1872 was to correct that error. This is perfectly obvious as well from the title of the act of 1872 as from its various sections, where the name of George A. Gore is stricken out wherever it occurs in the act of 1868, and the name of George A. Gove inserted in the new sections. There is no ground for claiming that the legislature granted the franchise, by the law of 1872, to a different person from the one upon whom it was intended to be conferred by the act of 1868. It was manifestly not the intention of the legislature to authorize two dams, one to be built and maintained with the franchise for fifteen years, by George A. Gore, and one to be built and maintained by George A. Gove, without limitation as to time. The act of 1872 took effect in less than four years after the dam was completed, and there can be no doubt that one object of that act was to secure the franchise to the person who had made the expenditure, and improved the stream for the purposes of navigation.
It appears from the complaint that the plaintiff derives the right or title by assignment made by George A. Gore prior to April 1, 1883. It seems to us it would have been more accurate to state that it was acquired from George A. Gove, as this was probably the fact. But this inaccuracy,
It follows from these views that the order of the circuit court must be affirmed.
By the Court.— Order affirmed.