3 Wis. 461 | Wis. | 1854
By the Court,
There is no doubt that the plea of the defendant below is bad.
It sets out an authority granted to him by the legislature of the territory of Wisconsin to build and maintain a dam across the Milwaukee river, at the place described in the declaration of the plaintiff, and avers that the dam was there erected by him for the purpose mentioned in the act, and that in consequence of the building of the dam the water of the river was flowed back, and the land of plaintiff overflowed, &c.
The opinion of the majority of the court which sustained the law, was founded upon the fact that the use to which the land was devoted was a public use, and that full compensation was made to the ownei*. It cannot be maintained that private property can be taken for the use of the public unless compensation is made to the owner, and no one can claim that the property of one person can without his consent be given to another, even if compensation is made. Const. Wis. Art. 1, Sec. 13.
Admitting, then, that the use to which the overflowed land of the plaintiff was applied was a public use, still the plea is bad for not averring that compensation was made for it. There are other defects in the plea, but we have confined our attention to the one above stated. The judgment of the court below must be affirmed.