130 P. 1073 | Idaho | 1913
— This is an action to quiet title to eighty inches or one and three-fifths cubic inches per second of time of the waters of Morse creek, diverted and appropriated and used by the plaintiff Horn, and also certain waters appropriated by John D. Brown and M. A. Brown, and to have the rights of the plaintiff Horn declared prior in time and superior to the rights and claims of the defendants and each of them. The defendants answered and plead their respective rights to water appropriated from Morse creek. When the cause was called for trial, the parties all agreed as to the decree that should be entered except as to the date of the
Counsel for appellants and respondents have entered into a stipulation and filed the same in this court that two questions are to be relied upon and discussed and decided upon this appeal, and this court in considering this appeal will limit such consideration to the questions specified in the stipulation : First, that the trial court erred in making the following finding: “That on or about the 1st day of June, 1891, the predecessors in interest of said plaintiff S. F. Horn, for the purpose of irrigating the said lands of S. F. Horn, appropriated of the waters of the said Morse Creek, forty-five inches of water .... and by means of dams and ditches of sufficient size to convey the same, diverted a sufficient amount of water from said stream to flow the said amount to and upon the said lands, and since their said appropriation and diversion, said plaintiff and his said predecessors in interest, have continued to use the said water thereon”; second, that the court erred in refusing to allow the defendants upon the trial of said cause to prove the ante-mortem statements of J. B. Morrow, and also in refusing to allow the defendants to prove their ownership in the Morrow ditch by showing the general and current understanding in the neighborhood before the death of Morrow. As a part of this stipulation the appellants 'contend that the right of Horn, as stated in the finding, should date from the time he first used water through the Campbell ditch in 1904 and not from 1891.
We have carefully gone over the evidence, and find that there is evidence which tends to support both sides upon this contention. To recite the evidence and draw distinctions as to the weight in favor of or against either contention would
Upon the second question as to the refusal of the court to allow the defendants to prove the ante-mortem statements, of Morrow and show the title to the Morrow ditch by general and current understanding, this was properly refused by the trial court for two reasons: First, that the evidence is hearsay ; second, for the reason that the title to the Morrow ditch is not involved in the question of fact submitted to this court under the stipulation, inasmuch as the finding made by the trial court, which is recited above, makes no finding whatever with reference to the Morrow ditch or the title thereto,, neither is there any provision in the judgment which determines the ownership or the right to use the Morrow ditch.
The judgment, therefore, is affirmed. Costs awarded to respondents.