DocketNumber: 2656
Citation Numbers: 234 P. 690, 49 Nev. 35, 1925 Nev. LEXIS 36
Judges: Ducjker
Filed Date: 4/6/1925
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
To establish alleged water rights complaint should state fully all facts concerning appropriation, means, and amount of water appropriated in some standard measurement. Stats. 1913, 193; Ramelli v. Sorge,
Claim that plaintiff is entitled to all water in creek during dry season is too indefinite. Porter v. Pettengill, 110 P. 393.
It is not sufficient to allege mere priority of right. This is legal conclusion. One must aver all substantive facts constituting such priority. Church v. Stillwell, 54 P. 395.
Complaint for injunction is bad if it does not state how irreparable injury will be done. Willie v. Lauridson,
Public domain is used for pasture at sufferance of federal government and not through any rights granted to anyone. Sifers v. Johnson, 65 P. 710.
Statute allows plea of several defenses. Rev. Laws, 5050.
New matter constituting defense, no matter how named, may be pleaded. Rev. Laws, 5050, 5046; Yori v. Phenix,
Assuming there was uncertainty in statement of quantity of water diverted, there was attempt made to state it and not total failure of allegation, and any lack of definiteness should have been reached by demurrer. *Page 38
Amount of land which could be irrigated is not too indefinite a description. Church v. Stillwell, 54 P. 395; Roeder v. Stein,
Right to use water is real property. In action to quiet title to real property it is not necessary that steps by which title was secured be stated, but it is sufficient to allege ultimate facts showing ownership, leaving deraignment to be established by evidence. Wiel on Water Rights in Western States (3d ed.), 694; Town of Sterling v. Ditch Co., 94 P. 339.
Although decree was erroneous in allowing respondents all water in their ditch, irrespective of season's necessity, and it had to be modified by eliminating all directions touching any fixed quantity of water to be taken, yet error did not affect verdict and would not necessitate reversal. Gotelli v. Cardelli,
Were it not for Ramelli v. Sorgi,
Plaintiffs' statement in the brief of the substance of the complaint is concise, and, for convenience, is adopted. It is alleged in the complaint that Watkins Spring is a natural source and spring of water from which, in its natural state, a small stream of water flows in a well-defined channel; that prior to the year 1905, and a time when the waters of the spring were *Page 39 unappropriated, plaintiffs' predecessors in interest appropriated, diverted, and used the said waters for watering approximately 2,500 head of sheep; that to the end of so beneficially using the waters of said spring, they constructed near said spring impounding facilities suitable for watering of said sheep, and diverted the waters of said spring into said impounding facilities, and used the said water for watering said sheep, and continued to so water said sheep from the waters of said spring during the grazing season, that is, between April and November of each year, since the appropriation and diversion were so made until the year 1921, when they conveyed their right to plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs ever since have been and are now the owners of the right to use sufficient water of and from said spring to water 2,500 head of sheep; that defendant has wrongfully inclosed the spring and plaintiffs' impounding facilities by fence, and refuses to permit plaintiffs to water their sheep therefrom and is using it for his own benefit for the irrigation of certain lands, and threatens to continue to do so; that on July 25, 1921, plaintiffs attempted to so water not exceeding 2,500 head of sheep, but defendant wrongfully closed and locked the gate in said fence and refused to open it, personally took a position near plaintiffs' water troughs, and forbade plaintiffs to open the gate or to water the sheep from said water troughs or from the waters of the spring, and wrongfully prevented plaintiffs from so doing, and informed plaintiffs that he would not permit them to so water any sheep in the future; that defendant threatens to prevent such watering by the use of violence if necessary; that if defendant persists in so preventing such watering of plaintiffs' sheep as he threatens to do unless enjoined by the court, plaintiffs' right to the use of the water will be permanently lost and plaintiffs will be compelled to abandon a large and valuable sheep range surrounding the spring and used for many years by plaintiffs' predecessors, and which plaintiffs have the right to use, but which can only be utilized by watering the sheep at Watkins Spring; that *Page 40 by the loss of the right to use the waters of the spring, plaintiffs will suffer irreparable injury; that plaintiffs have no plain, speedy, or adequate remedy at law. Plaintiffs prayed that their title to the right to use the water be quieted, for an injunction, temporary and permanent, for costs, and general relief.
Defendant demurred to the complaint for insufficiency of facts to state a cause of action, and also on the ground that it is ambiguous, unintelligible, and uncertain in these respects, to wit: That it failed to specify the amount of water flowing from the spring; the amount necessary to water 2,500 head of sheep; the amount used therefor; whether all was necessary all of the time or any part of the time; or whether or not there is a surplus of water flowing from the spring more than is necessary to water 2,500 head of sheep; that it does not specify the character of plaintiffs' watering facilities, or the nature of plaintiffs' right to the sheep range, claimed in the complaint.
The demurrer was overruled, and defendant filed an answer in which the material allegations of the complaint are denied. The answer contains an affirmative defense in which it is alleged that Watkins Spring is located on land comprising a United States homestead entry made by the defendant in November, 1920; that defendant entered upon the land on or about July 1, 1918, when it was unsurveyed public domain of the United States, and then and there established his home thereon, and ever since said date has continuously resided thereon with his family; that the Watkins Spring is an artificial well fed by the percolating waters under the homestead premises, collected by means of artificial channels, and does not flow off or from the homestead premises; and that the waters thereof are the property of defendant, and belong to the soil of defendant's homestead. The answer also contains what is called a cross-complaint, setting up two causes of action against plaintiffs, in the first of which it was sought to recover damages from plaintiffs on account of the alleged herding and grazing of their sheep within *Page 41 the one-mile limit of defendant's said home on or about the 3d day of August, 1920, and on numerous occasions thereafter. In the second cause of action alleged in said cross-complaint, it was sought to recover damages from the plaintiffs for trespass in herding and grazing their sheep on the said land of defendant in the month of August, 1920, and on numerous occasions thereafter.
Plaintiffs demurred to the affirmative defense on the ground that it failed to state a cause of action, and demurred to the alleged causes of action in the cross-complaint on the ground that they were not pleadable as counterclaims in this action. Plaintiffs also made a motion to strike a portion of the answer. The demurrers to the answer were sustained, and the motions to strike granted. Whereupon, defendant filed an amended answer, in which the material allegations of the complaint are specifically denied. The defendant demanded a jury trial, which was denied by the court. Thereafter the case was tried by the court, which made its findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of plaintiffs, and entered judgment and decree in their favor decreeing that they are the owners of the right to use sufficient waters of Watkins Spring to water at plaintiffs' watering troughs, and at the reservoir near said spring, 2,500 head of sheep, at any and all times between the months of April and November of each year, and that defendant has no right, title, or interest in said waters adverse to the said rights of plaintiffs. It was also adjudged and decreed that plaintiffs' said right had vested and accrued in plaintiffs' predecessors in interest prior to the year 1905 and prior to the homestead entry, and that said homestead right of defendant is subject to said vested and accrued water right of plaintiffs, and subject to the right of plaintiffs to maintain said watering troughs and reservoirs thereon, and to have access thereto at all times between the months of April and November of each year for the purpose of watering 2,500 head of sheep. It was also adjudged:
"That in order to enable plaintiffs to exercise said watering right and their said right of access without *Page 42 undue friction between plaintiffs and defendant, and with as little damage to defendant as practicable, the defendant shall, on or before the 1st day of April, 1924, construct, and thereafter maintain in good repair and condition, a sheep-proof fence along certain specified lines and courses inclosing a small tract of land over which plaintiffs' sheep might enter for watering, and leave without damage to defendant's premises; and that on the failure of defendant to construct such a fence the plaintiffs could, at their option, build and construct the same."
Defendant was permanently enjoined from interfering with the right decreed to plaintiff.
1, 2. Error is assigned in the overruling of the demurrer to the complaint. As heretofore specified in the statement of facts, the demurrer sets out several deficiencies of the complaint wherein it is alleged that it is ambiguous, unintelligible, and uncertain. If the complaint is merely uncertain as to these matters, the defendant waived his right to rely upon his demurrers on this ground by answering. Lonkey v. Wells,
The action was instituted for the purpose of obtaining a decree establishing plaintiffs' right to the use of a certain quantity of water for watering sheep, and for an injunction restraining defendant from interfering with that right. Only allegations of ultimate facts showing the ownership of such right by plaintiffs, and the unlawful interference therewith, were essential, and these appear in the complaint.
3. It alleges a valid appropriation by plaintiffs' *Page 43
predecessors in interest, namely, an appropriation by them of waters subject to appropriation. It alleges the application of such waters to a beneficial use, viz., for the watering of approximately 2,500 head of sheep, and a continuation of such use between the months of April and November of each year from a time prior to the year 1905 until the year 1921, when their right to the use was conveyed to plaintiffs. These are not legal conclusions, but the statements of ultimate facts showing ownership of the right to the use of the waters described in the complaint in plaintiffs. The additional matters held essential in the Colorado cases cited by counsel for defendant are probative only. Wiel on Water Rights in Western States. See, also, Hague v. Nephi etc., Co.,
4, 5. The complaint is not deficient in not stating the quantity of water to which plaintiffs have the right. The quantity is stated as sufficient to water approximately 2,500 head of sheep. In the absence of a statute requiring a plaintiff's claimed water right to be set out in the complaint by a certain standard of measurement, such an allegation is unnecessary. Whatever objection there may have been to the description of the water right as sufficient to water approximately 2,500 head of sheep, for uncertainty, was waived when the defendant answered.
6. There is no merit in the claim that the complaint does not warrant an injunction, because it fails to show that the plaintiffs will be irreparably injured unless the defendant is restrained from interfering with the alleged water right. Defendant's interference with plaintiffs' right to the use of the waters of the spring, his threat to continue such interference, and his use of said waters for his own benefit for the irrigation of lands, which are alleged in the complaint, and which, it is inferable, were under a claim of right, could become, by the lapse of time, the foundation for an adverse right in the defendant. The risk of a permanent loss by *Page 44 the plaintiffs of their right to the use of the waters, therefore, appeared from the complaint and authorized the injunction.
7. In the opening brief filed by counsel for defendant appears the statement that the court erred in striking from defendant's answer his separate and affirmative defense. An examination of the record reveals that this statement is not correct. The court did not strike said defense, but sustained plaintiffs' demurrer to it. However, further than the mere statement of error, and the assertion that the matter stated constituted a legal defense, the point is not discussed either in the opening or closing brief, and must therefore be deemed waived. State v. King,
8, 9. We must also disregard the error assigned in the court's ruling in striking out a portion of the original answer for another reason. The notice of motion to strike, enabling us to know what portion of the answer was stricken, is not before us in a bill of exceptions. True, it appears among the papers constituting the judgment roll in this case; but as it is not properly a part of the judgment roll, it must be disregarded.
10-12. It is asserted that the judgment is so indefinite that it is null and void and cannot be enforced. The judgment decreed that plaintiffs are the owners of the right to use sufficient of the waters of Watkins Spring to water, at plaintiffs' watering troughs and at the *Page 45 reservoir near said springs, 2,500 head of sheep at any and all times between the months of April and November of each year. Uncertainty as to the quantity of water to which plaintiffs are entitled is the ground of the objection. In support of this contention, former cases in this court touching upon the necessity of certainty of the quantity of water decreed to a claimant are cited by defendant. These cases were decided upon a different state of facts. They are all cases in which the defendant was affirmatively asserting certain rights to the use of waters of a stream as against the plaintiff. In such a case, it is essential that the right or rights found be defined in quantity with as much certainty as possible, to the end that future litigation in regard thereto be avoided. Without intimating whether, in a case of that character, the decree before us would be sufficiently certain as to the quantity of water awarded, we are of the opinion that it is not objectionable in this regard under the facts of this case. Here the defendant makes no claim to the waters of the spring adverse to the plaintiffs. In his amended answer he did not set up a right to the use of the water and ask to have such right defined and awarded, but contented himself with denying plaintiffs' claim. He is therefore unaffected by the uncertainty which he alleges against the judgment. Moreover, as this appeal is on the judgment roll, the evidence is not before us, and every intendment must be drawn in favor of the judgment. Plaintiffs' means of utilizing their right to the use of the waters of the spring are set out in the complaint and judgment, and must, in the absence of evidence to the contrary, be deemed a sufficiently economical method to accomplish that purpose and leave any surplus available for appropriation and use by the defendant, or others.
Under the circumstances of this case it is not essential to the validity of the judgment that plaintiffs' right be measured by the legal standard for measurement of water in this state.
Defendant assigns as error the means prescribed in *Page 46 the judgment for securing to plaintiffs a passage for their sheep to and from their troughs and reservoir; but as the alleged error is not discussed in the briefs it must be deemed waived.
The judgment is affirmed.