29 Wis. 254 | Wis. | 1871
The charge was chiefly made up of, and the court below granted, the requests to instruct, one and all, as prepared and presented by counsel for the plaintiff and for the defendant. Those requests evinced a very careful examination
To tbe second request given for tbe plaintiff, tbe objection is, that there was no evidence wbicb justified it. It is said that there was no evidence tending to show that “ tbe defendant bad not used tbe water in a reasonable and proper manner for tbe regular prosecution of bis business, but, during tbe times specified in tbe plaintiff’s complaint, bad used it unreasonably, wantonly and unnecessarily,” and so on, in tbe language of tbe request. Upon this point we can only say, that, after a careful reading of tbe evidence, we cannot agree with tbe learned .counsel who make tbe objection. It clearly seems to us that
The third request to charge granted in plaintiff’s behalf was in these words: “If the jury find from the evidence in the case, that the defendant did, at any time after the erection of his new dam, and before the commencement of this action, detain the water at his mill or pond so that it did not run to the_ plaintiff’s mill in its usual current; and by reason thereof the plaintiff suffered injury, the defendant is liable to the plaintiff for such damages, unless it appears that such detention of the water by the defendant was necessary and reasonable for the convenient and profitable use of his own mill.”
This instruction is said to have been against the law of the' case, because the law recognizes changes in the current, in its velocity and the quantity of water, below all water mills, and such changes are presumed to be necessary and proper until the contrary appears. The gist of the objection, therefore, is, that the instruction was wrong as to the burden of proof, or which party had it, of showing that the detention of the water was necessary and reasonable for the convenient and profitable use of the upper mill, the fact of detention and of injury by reason thereof to the lower mill being first duly shown. Counsel cite authorities to the effect that such interruptions of the flow and changes in the volume and velocity of the water running in a stream used for hydraulic purposes, the same being necessarily incident to such use, carry with them no presumption of malice, but rather a presumption of innocence. That, however, is a different question; the point here, as already stated, being as to where the burden of proof rests to show the necessity and reasonableness of the detention, the fact of detention and of injury arising from it being first established. To this point no authorities are cited; and we doubt if any can be found to sustain the position assumed by counsel, which seems to be altogether outweighed by the reasons which may be opposed to it.
It is generally true of such matters, also, that they are peculiarly within the knowledge of the party seeking the benefit of them, and are not known or are incapable of disproof by the other party. To require the plaintiff to go beyond the prima fade case made by proof of injury, and of an adequate cause for it proceeding from the act or omission of the defendant, and to prove that there was no justification or excuse, would be to require him to prove a negative. This is a species of proof which the law and rules of evidence, except in rare and especial cases, never require. In the present case, it was far more fit and proper that the defendant should be required to show the necessity and reasonableness of the detention of the water for the convenient and profitable use of his own mill, than that the plaintiff should have been required to show the contrary. For these reasons we are of the opinion that this instruction, in common with all the others which were given, was correct, and that there was no misdirection in point of law in the charge of the court to the jury.
It appearing thus that there was no error in the charge, it next becomes necessary to inquire whether there was error in any other respect, for which the verdict and judgment should • be set aside. It is said that the court erred in refusing to non-suit on the motion of the defendant made at the close of the plaintiff’s testimony. This assignment of error proceeds partially on the ground that the sole cause of action charged in the complaint was a wrongful and wanton construction of the new dam and withholding of the water by means thereof, and that
But if proof of malice, or of a wanton withholding or letting down of the water at unreasonable times or hours of the day, were required to sustain the action, it cannot be said there was an entire want of evidence tending to establish it. We refer to the two occasions when it was shown that the water was withheld during the day, and then discharged at night in such. quantities as to flood the floor of the plaintiff’s mill; ■ and to several other occasions when it appeared that the water was stopped on the arrival of customers at the plaintiff’s mill, and when no sufficient explanation or good cause for stopping it was made or shown by the defendant.
What constitutes reasonable use depends upon the circumstance of each particular case, and no positive rule of law can be laid down to define and regulate such use with entire precision, is the language of all the - authorities upon the subject. In determining this question, regard must be had to the subject matter of the use, the occasion and manner of its application, its object, extent and the necessity for it, to the previous usage, and to the nature and condition of the improvements upon the stream; and so also the size of the stream, the fall of water, its volume, velocity and prospective rise and fall, are important elements to be considered. The nature and situation of the plaintiff’s mill and pond, the limited capacity of the latter, and
It appears from the evidence that the stream is a small one, with barely sufficient water at ordinary stage to run one millstone and the other necessary machineiy with profit or advantage under sixteen feet head. It also appears that the stream, though small, yet, being supplied by springs, is well maintained throughout the year, and subject to few or no fluctuations in the volume or quantity of water passing, except in times of very heavy rains, or the melting of large bodies of snow, causing freshets. It furthermore appears from the testimony of millwrights and millers, persons familiar with the stream, and having had experience, and who have measured the quantity of water passing in it, that under sixteen feet head it has a power or capacity of only about 30 or 32 square inches of water. The evidence likewise shows that both mills are operated under nearly the same head of water, namely, sixteen feet; but that, while the plaintiff’s wheel is so made as to draw but thirty inches of water, that of the defendant is so constructed as to draw 45 inches, and, when operated with “full gates,” as it frequently is, takes that quantity. The defendant himself testified to having admitted that sueh was the capacity of his wheel; and the same was positively so stated by his own witness, the miller who attended his mill.
We state-these as the facts which the testimony, with little
It is obvious, under this instruction, which correctly states tbe law, tbat the defendant could not erect bis mill and provide it with machinery requiring, or which might take, one-balf more water to propel it than tbe quantity ordinarily and usually passing in tbe stream, and claim tbe right to withhold and discharge tbe water for tbat purpose, to thé' injury of tbe plaintiff. In other words, no proprietor of a mill can put a forty-five-inch wheel into a thirty-inch stream, under tbe proper bead, and then claim tbe right to- detain and discharge tbe wafer in quantities sufficient to drive such wheel to its full capacity, to tbe injury of other mill-owners below him on tbe same stream. Such a use of tbe water would be unreasonable, within tbe rule laid down in tbe instruction. It is not in proportion to tbe size or capacity of tbe stream, and necessarily involves un
There was no error in overruling the objections to the questions put to the plaintiff as a witness relative to the detention in the flow of the water before the new dam was built, and to the number of years the water had been used in the way described by the witness. These and other similar questions, which were objected to by the defendant, were proper, for the reasons assigned by counsel for the plaintiff in his brief. It was proper that the jury should know all about the manner in which the water of the stream had been used, its volume, power and steadiness, and the amount of work which had been done in the mill of the plaintiff for a series of years before the erection of the new dam and the change of machinery by the defendant in his mill, in order that they might ascertain and determine. the reasonableness of the present use, and whether the plaintiff had been injured or not.
Nor was there any error in overruling the objection to the question propounded to the witness Byren, as to the amount of work the plaintiff’s mill could do if it had a constant supply of water. There was no liability, as counsel seem to suppose, to mistake on the part of the jury as to the amount of work actually done, or which would probably be done, at the plaintiff’s mill, with a constant supply of water according to the size of the'stream, or the usual quantity of water flowing in it. The extent or amount of the plaintiff’s customs as they had existed for several years, and probably would have continued but for the interruptions complained of, were clearly shown; and it was proper to show the capability of his mill with a constant supply of water to do work, in order to establish his probable loss.
Two questions were put "by the defendant for the purpose of introducing testimony of this kind, both of which were objected to by the plaintiff, and the objections sustained. This question has been presented respectively to the courts of Vermont and New Hampshire, and with directly opposite results in each state. In the former, the testimony was held admissible ; and in the latter, not. Snow v. Parsons, 29 Vt., 459; Hayes v. Waldron, 44 N. H., 580, 587; Hubbard v. Concord, 85 N. H., 60, 61.
"Without entering into a statement of the reasons assigned by the court of Vermont for its decision, we say that they seem unsatisfactory to us, when contrasted with those given by the court of New Hampshire in support of the opposite view. The reasoning of the last named court in the case last cited, where the point was upon the admissibility of such evidence upon the question of negligence in failing to keep in proper repair, or properly to construct, a sidewalk, whereby injury was caused, is very clear and satisfactory. As observed in the case first cited from the same court, the questions as to what shall constitute a reasonable state of repair of a highway, and what is a reasonable use of a water-course, are very similar. In the case of a water-course, as already remarked in this opinion, what constitutes a reasonable use depends upon the circumstances of each particular case; or, as the court of New Hampshire expresses it, “ upon a variety of conditions, such as the size and character of the stream, and the uses to which it can be or is applied; "and, from the nature of the case, it is incapable of being defined to suit the vast variety of circumstances that exist; but the rule is flexible, and suited to the growing and changing wants of communities.”
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.