33 Colo. 355 | Colo. | 1905
delivered tlie opinion of the court.
About July 1, 1887, one F. P. Brown, together with appellee, who was plaintiff below, and T. A. Davis, located, surveyed and filed their claim to the waters of Mill creek to the extent and amount of 13.25 cubic feet per second of time, and-constructed a ditch through which they conveyed the water so claimed from the point of diversion to the lower end of the Ohio Placer, the property of F. P. Brown, where one-half was turned onto said placer and the remainder onto the Kokomo Placer, the property of the appellee. The water so diverted has ever since been used for beneficial purposes on said placers, Brown claiming* one-half, and the appellee, Davis, one-half thereof, he having become vested with the interest originally held by T. A. Davis.
During the year 1897 an action was commenced in the district court of San Miguel county by F. P. Brown, E. L. Davis and others against" the city of
The court below held that the appropriation made by Brown and Davis was a joint appropriation, and was owned and held by them as tenants in common, and that neither could, without the consent of the other, divide the water at any other point than where they have heretofore divided it, nor divert or take his water through a different headgate, and that his grantee, having acquired no greater rights than Brown had, could not do so, and entered a decree enjoining the appellant from diverting any portion of the water allotted to priority number three in any manner except as the interest derived by appellant has heretofore been diverted and used by its grantor Brown.
We think the court below erred in holding that the appropriation made by Brown and Davis invested them with a joint ownership of the water appro
In these circumstances the right to a unity of possession necessary to constitute a tenancy in common did not extend to the right of user, which is essential to the existence of such a tenancy in a water right. — Norman v. Corbley (Mont.), 79 Pac. 1059.
We think this conclusion is clearly sustained by the allegations of the complaint and the evidence introduced. After stating the location of the water right, plaintiff avers: ‘ ‘ That said Brown, by virtue of said location, was entitled to an undivided one-half of the waters so claimed, and this plaintiff with' his co-claimant was, and is, entitled to the remaining one-half thereof.” The appellee, on his re-direct examination, was asked the following question: “You may state as to the amount of water that you understood you were to use through this ditch, or out of this creek by means of this ditch, and how much Mr. Brown was to use? A. — Mr. Brown was to have one-half and I was to have one-half. ’ ’ Mr. Brown testified as follows: “Q. — Was anything ever done for the
Without noticing the evidence further in detail, we think that when considered in the light of the conduct of the parties, together with the fact of the intended and actual application of the water, the right thereto was not a joint, but a separate and several, right in each of the parties to a one-half of the water appropriated. In this view of the case, there can be no question of the right of either to change his place of use of the water or the point of its diversion, if such change does not damage or infringe the
In the absence of such showing, the appellee is not" entitled to the relief awarded. The decree is therefore reversed, and the cause remanded.
Reversed.
Chief Justice Gabbebt and Mr. Justice Bailey concur.