152 Mich. 645 | Mich. | 1908
Complainant, a riparian owner along • the Muskegon river, a stream used for many years for the navigation, floating, and driving of saw logs, and other forest products, filed his bill of complaint against defendant company seeking to restrain it from digging up and removing from the bed of said stream all saw logs and other forest products, and from taking away from the premises of complainant all such logs and products already taken from the bed of said stream and piled upon said premises by defendant, claiming to be the owner of all such property by reason of his riparian proprietorship, and praying the court to so decree and determine. From a decree granting complainant full relief as prayed, defendánt has appealed.
The Muskegon river has been used for the navigation of forest products to as great an extent as any river in Michigan. Many hundreds of millions of feet of saw logs, and other forest products, have been lumbered and put afloat in the waters of this river to be floated to the
Defendant is a Michigan corporation, operating on Muskegon river, engaged in raising these sunken and deadhead logs from their bed, under contract with the original owners of a large number of these logs to raise from the bed of the river logs bearing their log marks, and float them to their mills at Muskegon for an agreed consideration. Owners of logs put in the water to be run down stream, for purposes of identification, put their log mark upon each log. f
By statute logs put into the water must be marked with log marks duly recorded, and logs having marks impressed thereon are presumed to belong to the person owning the recorded mark. On some of the logs raised by defendant the marks have become obliterated. Upon these logs defendant has placed its own mark as soon as they were raised. All the logs when raised are water soaked and heavy. They are placed upon the banks of the river at different points in rollways to dry, so that they will float when put into the water. There are now piled upon the banks of the river, upon complainant’s land, logs which have been raised from the river bed by defendant company.
The facts in the case are practically undisputed. The court granted complainant relief tfpon the ground that the marked logs had been abandoned by their original owners, and, if not abandoned, were in the same situation .as the unmarked logs because the marks were not properly recorded, and that all logs both marked and unmarked belonged to the riparian proprietor by virtue of his ownership of the soil to the middle thread of the
Appellant alleges that the case presents the following questions:.
(1) As to the title to logs still in the bottom of the river and upon which the original log marks are distinguishable.
(2) As to the title to logs still in the bottom of the river and upon which the marks have become obliterated.
(3) As to the right of defendant to go upon the river to recover both marked and unmarked logs.
(4) As to the title to logs which defendant company has already removed from the bed of the river and which are now piled on complainant’s land. .
The court held that the marked logs had been abandoned and therefore belonged to complainant as riparian proprietor. We do not find from this record any evidence upon'which to base such a finding. Complainant introduced no testimony on the question of abandonment, and the fact that the marked logs were in the river bottom is of itself not sufficient to support such finding. There is
1 ‘ The mere failure to exercise the act of removal would not operate as an abandonment or proof of an intention to abandon.” Log-Owners’ Booming Co. v. Hubbell, 135 Mich. 65 (4 L. R. A. [N. S.] 573).
In the case at bar an abandonment of property of great value is claimed upon the bare fact that the act of removal has not yet been exercised. In addition to the evidence as to the steps taken each year by the owners of the log marks to recover their sunken logs, the proofs show that they have not yet abandoned logging upon the Muskegon river. There was no abandonment, and the title to the marked logs already removed from the water and those still remaining in the bottom of the river is in the owners of the marks and those lawfully claiming under them.
Complainant’s claim in this case is that logs sunken in the river and partly or entirely covered with the soil by the action of the current and upon which the marks are no longer distinguishable belong to the riparian proprietor by virtue of his ownership of the soil to the middle thread of the stream. The distinction is made by complainant between personal property lost and found upon the surface and the same kind of property found embedded in the soil. It being admitted that the former may belong to the finder. Can it be said that any of this property may be treated as lost property ? If it is not to be so considered, then a discussion of the rights of the finder and the rights of the proprietor upon whose land the property is found, whether on the surface or embedded in the soil, would be foreign to the issue and fruitless.
We have already arrived at the conclusion in.this opinion that the proof shows that the marked logs had not been abandoned. The title to that class of logs,.then, continues in the original owners or their representatives and assigns. The law requires that all logs put into these waters must be marked. The presumption follows that the great share of these logs were originally marked for the purpose of identification, and that the abrasions of transportation have obliterated the marks upon the unidentified logs. Can we say on that account that the logs upon which the marks have become obliterated have been abandoned or lost ? The efforts made every year by all
Defendant very properly disclaims, in the oral argument, any right to put these logs on complainant’s land. Its agents and servants in so doing were unlawfully trespassing upon complainant’s premises. Such trespass however did not operate to give complainant any title to the property; for all of which trespasses complainant has an adequate and complete remedy at law.
Our conclusion is that the circuit judge was in error in granting relief to complainant. The decree is reversed, and a decree will be entered in this court dismissing the bill of complaint, with costs of both courts.