Brosnan v. Boggs

198 P. 890 | Or. | 1921

BURNETT, C. J.

The first two points suggested by Boggs in his brief are these: (1) “Since appellant took no water except that delivered to him by the water-master, he is not liable for any damages sustained by the plaintiff”; and (2) “The court erred in refusing to instruct the jury that the defendant had a right to construct dams in Willow Creek in order to divert water.” It will be noted that Boggs does not plead any right in himself to the water, but says only that he took what the water-master gave him. In substance this is like the plea of Adam when accused of eating the forbidden fruit: “The woman thou gavest to be with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat”: Genesis iii: 12. In that instance the pleading was held to be bad, and in principle that has been the law ever since. Under Sections 6617 and 6618, L. O. L. (5706 and 5707, Or. L.), cited by the defendant, it is the duty of the water-master to divide the water of natural streams—

“Among the several ditches and reservoirs taking water therefrom, according to the rights of each respectively. * * The water-master shall have author*475ity to regulate the distribution of water among the various users under any partnership ditch or reservoir, where rights have been determined, in accordance with existing decrees. * * Said water-master shall, as near as may be, divide, regulate and control the use of the water of all streams within his district by such closing or partially closing of the headgates as will prevent the waste of water, or its use in excess of the volume to which the owner of the right is lawfully entitled.”

1. The water-master is an executive officer, whose conduct is regulated by some adjudication of the rights to the water which is to be divided. His action must be founded upon some decree, and unless a party can show some such right, he cannot be protected by the action of the water-master, who in turn can justify only on some established right. As he has not pleaded a right to divert water from the stream, the defendant cannot complain because the court refused to instruct the jury that he had a right to build dams in the creek.

The defendant excepted to an instruction reading in part as follows:

“Neither is the water-master required to permit water to go down the stream when such action would amount to waste of the water. If you find therefore in this case at any time that if the water had been allowed to flow down the stream without let or hindrance it would not, including any seepage water that may arise between that point and the plaintiff’s premises, reach the plaintiff’s premises, then the defendants cannot be blamed because the turning of the water down the stream in such an instance would amount to a waste.”

The objection to the charge quoted in part was the inclusion of seepage water. Clearly, the instruction *476had reference to water flowing in the channel of the creek. In Boyce v. Cupper, 37 Or. 256 (61 Pac. 642), the right of the land owner to water percolating the soil beneath the surface was recognized, but it was said in the same opinion:

“If such springs have a well-defined channel which conducts the water into a stream, an appropriation of the waters of the latter is ipso facto an application of the water of the spring to a beneficial use: Low v. Rizor, 25 Or. 551 (37 Pac. 82). When a stream is supplied by percolation, if the ownership of the water, after it reached the channel, continued in the person from whose land it imperceptibly emanated, thereby entitling him to recapture it in the stream at any point below, the right of prior appropriation would be practically denied; but, as such right is fully recognized and firmly established by the courts in the arid regions of the Pacific Coast states and territories, it follows that the right insisted upon does not exist.”

2. The principle as to seepage water is that if the proprietor of the lands would enjoy the same, he must take it and use it before it leaves his premises. If he allows it to escape into the channel of the stream, he cannot pursue it and retake it as against the appropriator of the waters of that stream. No doubt, all streams are fed more or less by seepage water which gets into the channel from no visible source. As indicted in Boyce v. Cupper, supra, it would destroy the whole irrigation system of the - arid states, if such water could be pursued into the stream by the land owner on whose premises the seepage began. No error was committed on this point.

Three other assignments of error are as follows:

“The court erred in permitting testimony as to the flow of Willow Creek in 1917.”
*477“The court erred in permitting Brosnan to testify as to what his pasturage was for the years 1916 and 1917.”
‘ ‘ The court erred in permitting the witness Brosnan to testify as to what it cost him to dig a well upon his land. ’ ’
On each of these points the language of the hill of exceptions is as follows:
“Defendant by his attorneys duly objected, which objection was overruled by the court.”

No reason for the objection is assigned. Section 170, Or. L., settled this matter thus:

“The point of exception shall be particularly stated.”

3. Merely to object without giving any reason for the exception does not present any question for review in this court.

4. We learn from the bill of exceptions that while the plaintiff was on the stand as a witness in his own behalf he was allowed to give an explanation of some testimony he had given the day before, in effect that his land and that of the defendants was of the same character. In explaining his testimony he pointed out in substance the difference between the vegetation on his land and that of the defendant, and some other particulars not necessary to be mentioned. It is claimed that the court erred in refusing to strike out this explanation. In Pacific Export Co. v. North Pacific Lumber Co., 46 Or. 194, 206 (80 Pac. 105), a witness was allowed to explain what ho meant by the use of certain language. The court there said:

‘ ‘ This was proper. The witness was still under examination, and if he gave out an erroneous impression of the facts as he understood them, he had a perfect right to make the correction in the presence *478of the jury. The same thing would he true if the erroneous impression were contained in a letter he had written relative to the subject, but the whole would be a matter for the jury’s consideration as to the weight that should be attached to it.”

The explanation here in question is not a self-serving declaration, as argued by counsel. Such a declaration is one made by a party in his own interest at some time and place out of court, and of course cannot as a general rule be admitted in evidence. It does not refer to testimony which he gives as a witness at the trial. If a party, appearing as a witness in his own behalf, were denied the right of giving testimony favorable to himself, the privilege of being a witness, although a party,'would be destroyed.

On the questions presented in the brief for review there was no error in the proceedings in the Circuit Court. The judgment is therefore affirmed.

Affirmed. Rehearing Denied.