Nester v. Diamond Match Co.
Opinion of the Court
after making the foregoing statement of the case, delivered the opinion of the court.
It is most manifest that the Ontonagon river is navigable only in a limited sense. It is a highway, nevertheless, in which every man who has occasion to use it has equal rights, though its only practical use is that which it affords for floating logs to market. The plaintiffs and the defendant, as well as other persons, were en.titled to put logs into the stream to be floated singly to their destination at the month of the river. Logs were thrown in indiscriminately, ownership being signified by a brand on each log. When put in the river, they became a part of a general mass, often filling the river for miles, and the progress is that of those in advance. To separate them according to ownership,- for either manufacturing at the mills
“Piers located at some point were necessary to our interests as well as the interests of others, to drive logs down the river. The objection to these piers is their location. »The real embarrassment was the want of storage room-between the piers and the mouth of the river.”
It is clear that to make the navigable quality of this stream, short and narrow as it was, serviceable to log owners, it was almost essential that the use of the stream should be regulated by a single hand. Still the plaintiffs had the same right with the defendant to construct jam booms and side booms by which their logs might b’e separated from the general mass, and stored for use or transportation. That a multiplication <of such facilities would injure rather than aid the general interests is evident, for every such obstruction would necessarily retard for a time the general movement of the whole mass. But the plaintiffs did not exercise this right by providing any facilities whatever for the sorting or reception of their logs. That neither they, nor any other owner of logs, did so, is doubtless due to the recognition of the necessity for a single management in order to obtain the best results. That the management of sorting and booming facilities, as well as the management of the running of the logs down the river, should be in the hands of persons not themselves interested as 'log owners, is evident; and the law of Michigan has accordingly provided for booming corporations, whose single duty and business shall be the control of the navigation of logging streams, by the construction and maintenance of facilities for the sorting and storing of logs for all who choose to use them. The defendant was engaged in lumbering and manufacturing logs into lumber upon this stream. For its own purposes it improved the Ontonagon by dams and other devices, and constructed and maintained the jam booms in question, as well as extensive storage booms below. It had an undoubted right to do this, provided its jam booms did not unreasonably obstruct the use of the river by others who did not care to avail themselves of the facilities furnished by it. That it was necessary to arrest the whole mass of logs for the purpose of obtaining and securing its own is evident from the nature of the navigation. This right, if reasonably exercised, would not be unlawful, whether exercised by a booming corporation or- by an individual. Watts v. Boom Co., 52 Mich. 203, 208, 17 N. W. 809. That the plaintiffs had an equal right to maintain such piers, and to arrest the progress of the promiscuous mass for the purpose of securing their own logs, must be conceded. That they had a right to construct booms for the reception of their own logs after reaching the mouth of the river must also be conceded. That the defendant, in blocking the entire channel with its jam booms, so that passage was impossible except as it should allow, thereby monopolized the stream and maintained an unlawful ob
The obstruction of a highway by land or water is a public nuisance. Those who construct or maintain it are subject to indictment, and under some circumstances an action at law for its abatement will lie. But no right of action by a member of the community will lie which is not based upon a special injury, differing in kind from that sustained by the general public. A ditch across a public street is a public nuisance. But a party whose use of the street has not been hindered cannot maintain a private suit for damages. To sustain a private action the plaintiff must show that he individually has sustained some special injury as a consequence of such obstruction. Undoubtedly, if the plaintiffs have shown that they undertook to use the Ontonagon river for the purpose of driving their logs to market, and were prevented from passing down the river by obstructions blocking the whole channel unreasonably, an action for the damage due to- such unlawful delay will lie. But there is no evidence that the plaintiffs ever were hindered in the exercise of their legal right by the defendant’s obstruction. In this respect the case is broadly distinguishable from that of Watts v. Boom Co., 52 Mich. 203, 17 N. W. 809. The defendant in the case referred to was a booming company organized under the statute law of Michigan. It was authorized to- construct and maintain all necessary booms to aid in the driving of logs and rafts down the Tittabawassee river, provided such booms should be so constructed and used to allow, “as far as practicable,” “the free passage of boats, vessels, logs and other floatables, along such waters.” The plaintiff’s logs were in a raft under his own control and management, and nothing indicated any purpose to avail himself of the booms or other facilities provided by the boom company. There was evidence tending to show that the defendant had willfully and totally obstructed the entire channel of the river with its piers and booms, and that such obstruction continued for an unnecessary and unreasonable time, and that the “plaintiffs were prevented from opening the piers or booms and breaking the jams by defendant,” and thus were obliged to pass only when and as the defendant- permitted. This delay undoubtedly constituted special damage; for the plaintiff in that case was prepared to care for his own faft after passing the pier boom, and endeavored, in the management of his own affairs, to pass on down the stream with his logs. In the case now before us it is not pretended that the plaintiffs’ logs were separated from the logs of others. They were a part of the general mass of logs held back by the jam booms of the defendant. In that condition they could not pass the jam boom until those in front had passed, and could only be separated from others as they gradually went through the boom gates. The plaintiffs made no effort to pass their own logs through thes.e gates, and made no demand that the jam should be broken or the gates opened, that they
Reference
- Full Case Name
- NESTER v. DIAMOND MATCH CO. (two cases) RIEDINGER v. SAME
- Cited By
- 1 case
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- Published