Docket Number:But it is urged upon this motion that the language of the opinion is only general and will not enable the trial court to determine and direct in what specific place, or in what pi-ecise manner, the water must be returned to the stream; nor how and where the respondent may lawfully use that relative proportion of the flow of the stream which is appurtenant to its bank, below the dam. Probably this is a just estimation of the opinion. It has assumed to determine only the general principle by which the relative rights of the parties are to be determined, and has pronounced that general principle in general terms only. It could well do no more. The court had no concrete question before it. Uo such issue was made, nor such judgment asked by the respondent’s pleading; lior was any such issue adjudgéd by the trial court. Uor does the record furnish data by which such questions can be determined by this court. These are practical questions which cannot be answered by the aid only of mere theory. Probably it cannot be satisfactorily predicted, in advance of experiment, just where and how the water must be returned to the stream so as to work no injury to lower owners. Certainly, it cannot be determined by a court without evidence of some kind. The court has performed its full function in this case when it has established the general rule which governs it. The judgment of the superior court of Milwaukee couuty is reversed, upon each of the three appeals, as to those parts of the judgment which were appealed from, and the cause is remanded with direction to enter judgment in accordance with the opinion