67 Neb. 377 | Neb. | 1903
This plaintiff and appellant owns and is operating a canal for irrigation purposes. In May, 1889, it began the construction of the canal, and took the necessary steps for the appropriation of the water of the North Platte river, pursuant to the statute then in force, and in July, 1895, the county clerk of Scott’s Bluff county having transmitted a copy of plaintiff’s notice of appropriation to the state board of irrigation, the plaintiff filed its claim with the state board, and afterwards, in January, 1897, the plaintiff’s right to irrigate all lands included
The plaintiff began this action in the district court for Scott’s Bluff county to enjoin the defendant from crossing the plaintiff’s canal, and from further prosecuting his condemnation proceedings for that purpose. Upon the trial, the district court found that the defendant’s proceedings in condemnation were irregular, and enjoined the defendant from further prosecuting those proceedings, or attempting to cross the plaintiff’s canal thereunder, but refused to enjoin any further attempts to cross plaintiff’s canal with the canal of defendant, and the plaintiff has appealed to this court.
1. The first contention is that this action can not be maintained because the plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law. The trial court found “that a lateral ditch, flumed or siphoned, can be built or constructed across the plaintiff’s right of way at the locality intended by the defendant, and all damages sustained thereby can be compensated,” and it is insisted that it follows that the plaintiff’s remedy at law is complete. In Beatty v. Beethe,
2. The plaintiff contends that there is no right under the statute to construct irrigation works, and to take the property of others without their consent for right of way, until the state board of irrigation has granted a permit to divert the waters of the state, and that such permission can be. granted only upon an application for that purpose, in which application the lands to be watered by the proposed improvement, and the amount of water appro-priat'd therefor, must be specified. We think this contention is well founded. The trial court made specific and comprehensive findings of fact, which are not seriously questioned by either party. From these findings, it appears that the plaintiff company was duly organized under the irrigation laws then in force, and, after the enactment of the act of 1895 (Session Laws, 1895, ch. 69), complied with the provisions thereof, and its right to appropriate the waters of the North Platte river for the irrigation of (lie defendant’s land was adjudicated in pursuance of sections 16 to 21 of the act, and no appeal was taken from that adjudication.
It also appears that defendant has never been granted a permit by the state board to appropriate .any of the waters of the state for the irrigation of the land in question.
“The water of every natural stream not heretofore appropriated, within the state of Nebraska, is hereby declared to be the property of the public, and is dedicated to the use of the people of the state, subject to appropriation as heretofore provided.” Section 42 of the act of 1895.
By section 19 it was provided that: “When the adjudication of a stream shall have been completed it will be the duty of the state board to malee and cause to be entered of record in its office and [an
Section 20 makes it the duty of the board to determine each appropriation in its priority and amount by the time at which it shall have been made, and the amount of water which the works are constructed to carry, and the section provides that such an appropriator shall at no time be entitled to the use of more than he can beneficially use for the purposes for which the appropriation may have been made, and that no allotment for irrigation shall exceed one cubic foot per second for each seventy acres of land for which such appropriation shall be made.
Section 21 malíes it the duty of the state board, “within thirty days after the determination of the priorities of appropriation to the use of water of any stream,” to issue a certificate, to be transmitted to the county clerk of the county in which said appropriation shall have been made, “setting forth the name and post-office address of the ap-propriatox*, the priority number each of appropriation, the amount of water appropriated and the amount of prior appropriation and if such appropriation be made for irrigation, a description of the land to which the water is to be applied and the amount thereof.”
Section 22 provides for an appeal from the determination of the state board to the district court.
By section 28 it is provided that the state board “may upon examination of such application, indorse it approved for a less amount of water than the amount of water stated in the application, or for a less amount of land or for a less period of time for perfecting the proposed appropriation than that named in the application. * * * If there is no unappropriated water in the source of supply, or if a prior appropriation has been made to water the same land to be watered by the applicant, the state board, through its secretary, shall refuse such appropriation and the party making such application shall not prosecute such work so long as such refusal shall continue in force.”
Section 18 provides that all appropriations for Avater must be for some beneficial or useful purpose, and when the appropriator or his successor in interest ceases to use it for such purpose the right ceases.
It is contended in this case that the charges of plaintiff for water used upon defendant’s land Avere exorbitant, and that defendant should not be compelled to take Avater from plaintiff at exorbitant charges; that the Steamboat Ditch Company is a mutual corporation for the purpose of obtaining water by the stockholders thereof for their own lands, and that-they should be allowed the privilege of procuring water at as reasonable rates as they may be able by making the ditches for themselves. But it is not necessary, nor is it proper, to consider these questions in this proceeding. If the action of the state board in refusing to grant the defendant or the company in which he is a stockholder a permit to appropriate the waters of the
The right of a private owner of land to condemn the property for a lateral to convey water to his land from the main canal of the company is much discussed in the briefs, but clearly, from the view we have taken of the principal point presented, this question is not involved in a determination of this case, since neither the defendant nor the company has been allowed an appropriation of the water of the state to irrigate the defendant’s land.
The defendant, not having complied with the law, was not entitled to proceed with the contemplated work, and the injunction should have been allowed. The decree of the district court is reversed, with instructions to enter a decree enjoining the defendant as prayed.
Reversed.
Opinion by Reese, C. J.
The enrolled bill reads “and,” — a patent error. The correction was made by the writer of the opinion. — W. F. B.