Citation Numbers: 3 Idaho 255, 28 P. 438, 1891 Ida. LEXIS 44
Judges: Been, Below, Counsel, Hearing, Huston, Morgan, Sullivan, Took
Filed Date: 12/24/1891
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment and decree of the district court for Bingham county, in an action by the plaintiff to establish his right to the waters of Gooseberry creek and its tributaries, and to restrain the defendants from interfering therewith. The case was heard upon pleadings and proofs before the court without a jury, and is brought here upon a statement of the case, containing all the evidence, the findings of the court and the decree and judgment. The plaintiff, and those under whom he claims, settled upon certain lands lying upon and along Gooseberry creek, in Bingham county, Idaho, in the years 1871, 1873, and 1873. These lands were at the time unsurveyed public lands of the /United States. Subsequently, after the lands were surveyed, said parties secured title to their various claims, plaintiff tak
Defendants allege location of lands by defendant Hardwick, of one hundred and sixty acres in 1877; defendant T. Croshaw, one hundred and sixty acres in 1887; by defendant B. Croshaw,. one hundred and sixty acres in Í882; and defendant Beck-stead, one hundred and sixty acres in 1877; defendant Cox, one hundred and sixty acres in 1878; defendant Denny, one hundred and sixty acres in 1880; and that said lands are-valueless for cultivation without artificial irrigation. That'all of said defendants, except defendants T. Croshaw and Beck-stead, claim to have appropriated one hundred and sixty inches each of the waters of Gooseberry creek, at the time of making their land locations- or settlements, to wit: Hardwick, one-hundred and sixty inches; Cox, one hundred and sixty inches;. Denny, one hundred and sixty inches; B. Croshaw, one hundred and sixty inches; and defendant T. Croshaw, one hundred and sixty inches from Chicken creek, a tributary of Gooseberry creek. The defendant Beckstead claims that the water-
Thus it will be seen that, besides the location, or rather appropriation, by the plaintiff and his grantors, in 1871, 1872 and 1873, of all of the waters of said creek, there has since been appropriated by the defendants eight hundred inches of said water. The plaintiff alleges, and we think his allegation in this behalf is fully borne out by the evidence, that all the waters-of the creek are necessary for the irrigation of the lands owned by him, and susceptible of irrigation from the waters of said creek and its tributaries. The only witness who testifies to the amount of water ordinarily flowing in said Gooseberry creek is William H. Homer, who states that in the spring (the season when the water is presumed to be at its highest) of 1871 “there was about eighty or one hundred inches of water in Gooseberry creek. I think that would be a fair average of water in the creek for every year except the last two years” — that is, 1888 and 1889 — which years, the record shows, were exceptionally dry. -This evidence is not contradicted, disputed or sought to be impaired.
We then have this anomalous condition of affairs: A creek or stream flowing one hundred inches of water, with appropriations of-that water to the amount or extent of eight hundred inches, in addition to the prior appropriation by the plaintiff of all the waters of the creek and its tributaries. To the ordinary mind, this might, and perhaps does, present a somewhat difficult problem for judicial solution, unaided by the statutes; but the learned district judge found no difficulty whatever in reaching a conclusion as unique as it is unprecedented. We say unprecedented, because this question, under statutes identical with that of Idaho, has been decided so often in favor of the prior appropriator that it has been generally considered, both by professionals and profanes, as a settled question; as instance, the question had been decided up to 1889 twice by the supreme court of the Hnited States, seventeen times by the supreme court of California, five times by the:
There was no issue made, it seems from the record, upon the title to the lands of either the plaintiff or any of the defendants. The priority of the plaintiff’s appropriation is established beyond question or peradventure; in fact, it is scarcely contested or disputed. It was claimed by the counsel for defendants, upon the argument here, that plaintiff’s land did not require irrigation, or, at least, only a small portion of it; but the evidence on the part of the defendants themselves shows that the meadow lands of plaintiff require irrigation, and one of the defendants testifies that the meadow lands will not produce a remunerative crop without irrigation; and this is a matter of such general knowledge with all who are at all acquainted with the lands and soil of this state as scarcely to need testimony to establish it. The following is the tabulated distribution of the waters of Gooseberry creek as decreed by the district court: Ira K. Hillman (plaintiff), to June 15th, seventy-five inches; to July 15th, forty' inches; after July 15th, twenty-five inches. John H. Hardwick (defendant), to June 15th, sixty inches; to July 15th, thirty inches; after July 15th, thirty inches. Harry Denny (defendant), to June 15th, sixty inches; to July 15th, thirty inches; after July 15th, twenty-five inches. Len Cox (defendant), to June 15th, forty inches; to July 15th, twenty inches; after July 15th, fifteen inches. Ben. Croshaw (defendant) — from South Fork — to June 15th, twenty inches; to July 15th, ten inches; after July 15th, eight inches. Same (from main creek), to June 15th, thirty inches; to July 15th, twenty- inches; after July 15th, fifteen inches. T. Croshaw, to June 15th, .forty-five inches; to July 15th, thirty inches; after July 15th, twenty inches. Alex Beckstead, to June 15th, forty inches; to July 15th, twenty-five inches; after July 15th, fifteen inches — and yet the evidence shows that one hundred and fifty inches is the maximum of water flowing in the creek at its highest stage. It appears from the record that the defendant Beckstead never located, claimed or used any of the waters of Gooseberry creek; and he claims, and his claim is established by the evidence, that he derives all the water used by him from an entirely different source, and yet, willy-nilly, the court gives him his specified amount of water from Gooseberry creek. Evidently the court assumed that Gooseberry creek was as inexhaustible as the widow’s cruse, or else that its decree possessed the potency of Moses’ rod. All the provisions of the statute in regard to priority of right incident to priority of appropriation are ignored, as are the sources and'volume of supply. Revised Statutes of Idaho, section 3159, treating of water rights, provides: “As between appropriates, the one first in time is first in right.” Section 3165 of same chapter provides that “all ditches, canals and other works heretofore made, constructed or provided, by means of which the waters of any stream have been diverted and applied to any beneficial use, must be taken to have secured the right to the waters claimed, to the extent of the quantity which said works are capable of conducting, and not exceeding the
Many of the questions raised by counsel on the argument of this case were not considered or passed upon by the district court, and are not, in the opinion of this court, essential to a decision of the case, and we have not, therefore, considered them. The record fails to show any interest or- claim of interest in the waters of Gooseberry creek by defendant Cox, ■and it, moreover, appears from the record that the defendant Beckstead derives the water used by him from a source other than Gooseberry creek. Still as they, in common with the ether defendants, are made beneficiaries under the beneficent decree of the district court, the injunction must run against them also. The decree and judgment of the district court are reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to the district court to enter a judgment and decree in favor of the plaintiff for all the waters of Gooseberry creek, and the tributaries thereof, to the extent of one hundred and twenty-five inches, that being the capacity of the plaintiff’s ditches taking water from said Gooseberry creek prior to the attempted appropriation of any of the defendants; and enjoining the said defendants, and each of them, and the agents and servants thereof, from in any manner interfering with said right to the waters of said creek, and the tributaries thereof, to the extent of said one hundred and twenty-five inches.