123 Neb. 588 | Neb. | 1932
This is an appeal from an order of the department of public works, permitting the city of Fairbury to construct certain retards and deflectors in the Little Blue river near Fairbury, Nebraska. The appellant is the Fairbury Mill & Elevator Company, which has dammed and used the water of the Little Blue for more than 58 years, for manufacturing purposes. The city of Fairbury takes water out of the mill-pond about a third of a mile upstream for cooling its turbine engines used in connection with the municipal light and water plant. The city has appropriated 16.7 cubic feet per second of water subject to all prior rights of the mill company to the use of the water. After using the water it is returned to the stream and, passes down to the mill-dam. The river now divides into two branches about one half mile above the dam, most of the water running down the south branch of the stream. Prior to 1901, when the south channel was cut by a flood,
Considering the rights of the parties as riparian owners, the use of the water desired by the city is reasonable and is not an interference with any use which the mill desires to make of the stream as a riparian owner. The mill owns the land for some distance above its dam on both sides of the river, including the islands, except 100 feet owned by the city at its intake. Both the city and the mill are riparian owners. “A riparian’s right to the use of the flow of the stream passing through or by his land is a right inseparably annexed to the soil, not as an easement or appurtenance, but as a part and parcel of the land; such right being a property right, and entitled to protection as such, the same as private property rights generally.” Crawford Co. v. Hathaway, 67 Neb. 325. See Meng v. Coffee, 67 Neb. 504. But the president of the milling company testified that the city’s use of the water did not interfere with the use desired by the mill. It seems, however, that both parties to this litigation are relying upon appropriations of the water to a beneficial use more than upon their rights as riparian owners. But
The rights of the mill company to maintain its dam and to use the water of the Little Blue river are determinable under the law as it existed prior to 1895. Chapter 69, Laws 1895, did not interfere with, impair or change the rights of the appellant to the use of the water. This court held in Culver v. Garbe, 27 Neb. 312, that the owner of the dam had a vested right in the stream and water •yvithin the land covered by the lease, and that appellee had no right or authority to interfere with it, and would be enjoined from changing the course of the stream, constructing the dam, or diminishing appellant’s reservoir or supply of water. The owner of such mill, after procuring the right to dam a stream, and cause the water to flow back upon said stream, was held to have a vested right, not only in the water, which he would have by reason of his title to the land through which it runs, and to the fall caused by his dam, but to the reservoir of water created thereby, and in this right he is entitled to protection the same as in any other. The parties involved in the foregoing situation or.their successors in interest had the same controversy passed upon in a later case, Smith v. Garbe (191086 Neb. 91. In this case the court held: “The main question involved in the case is the right of defendant to maintain a certain ditch and two dams which the undisputed evidence shows were dug and constructed within the dead water zone of plaintiff’s mill-dam. The rights of the parties with regard to this question we think were fully settled by this court in Culver v. Garbe, 27 Neb. 312.” This case approved and followed the former case and quoted the following language: “A careful examination of the evidence
But the appellant complains about the permit issued by the department of public works for the construction by the city of certain retards, deflectors or dams in the river.
The predecessor in title to the city, in 1887, acquired a perpetual right to remove water from the mill-pond, to which the city has succeeded. The city has been given an appropriation by the department of public works. The dam at the intake is necessary to an enjoyment of that right. It is not an interference with the right of the mill to use the water.
The deflector or dam, which it is proposed to construct at the point of the division of the two branches of the stream, presents numerous problems, many of which have been disposed of by this opinion. The appellant contends that it has a right to have the stream continue to run in its natural channel (Flader v. Central Realty & Investment Co., 114 Neb. 161) and that the department of public works is without jurisdiction to change the course of a running stream. Both branches of the Little Blue river are natural courses of the running stream. Clark v. Cedar County, 118 Neb. 465. The north branch, having always
The language of this opinion is clear, but in order to eliminate the possibility of- a misunderstanding, this decision passes only upon the right to the use of the water in the Little Blue river. Only this is within the jurisdiction of the department of public works, and our jurisdiction upon appeal is likewise limited. Obviously, the question of damages from the flow back or the question of the acquisition of property upon which to build improvements is not determined.
Affirmed.