45 Neb. 798 | Neb. | 1895
This is an appeal from a decree of the district court for Furnas county perpetually restraining the defendant the Cambridge & Arapahoe Irrigation and Improvement Company from diverting the waters of the Republican river for the purpose of irrigation by means of a ditch or canal of which the defendant company is the owner and proprietor. It is in the petition, in- substance, alleged that the plaintiff, in the year 1879, in said county, erected a mill for the purpose of grinding grain, and has since the completion thereof in the year mentioned continuously used and operated said mill for the purpose aforesaid; that his said mill is supplied with water power by means of a dam constructed by him in the Republican river in the year 1879, on land then and now owned by him; that he has since said date until the year 1891 had the continued and uninterrupted use of the water of said river, and which is, when not interfered
The able arguments with which we have been favored include many questions of vital importance in view of the prominence given to the subject of irrigation in the recent legislation of. this state, but a few of which, for reasons hereafter appearing, call for notice in this opinion.
The first proposition to which we will give attention is that inasmuch as the original surveys meander along the banks of the Republican river and the adjoining lands were conveyed by patents which do not include the bed of that stream, the title thereof remained in the general government, and subsequently passed to and became the property of this state upon its admission into the Union as such, — in short, that the Republican is in legal effect a navigable river, and that plaintiff’s dam therein is a public nuisance, and not within the protection of the law. At common law navigable streams arfe held to be those in which the tide ebbs and flows. (3 Kent, Commentaries, 413, and note; Black’s Pomeroy, Waters, sec. 216.) But the doctrine of the common law has not, as a rule, been accepted in this country, and has been entirely repudiated by
The appellant’s next contention is that conceding the Republican to be unnavigable, the water thereof is public property and may be acquired by appropriation without regard to the claims of riparian proprietors. That contention is based upon the provisions of the act of March 27, 1889, and which, for convenience, may be referred to as the “Rayner Irrigation Law,” the first section of which, as amended in 1893, reads as follows: “The right to the use of running water flowing in any river or stream, or down any canyon or ravine, may be acquired by appropriation by any person, company or corporation, organized under the laws of the state of Nebraska; Provided, That in all streams not more than twenty (20) feet in width the rights of the riparian proprietor shall not be affected by the provisions of this act.” (Session Laws, 1893, p. 377, sec. 1, ch. 40.) Authority is by other sections conferred upon persons and corporations in certain cases to condemn the right of way over and upon any lands for irrigating ditches and for the enforced access thereof to the public
It is a well known fact that our irrigation laws are modeled after the statutes of California, and we may with profit look to the interpretation there given them, in determining to what extent, if at all, they abrogate or modify common law rules. In Lux v. Haggin, 69 Cal., 255, a leading and instructive case, the question presented was the effect of section 1422 of the Civil Code of that state, viz., “The rights of riparian proprietors are not affected by the provisions of this title.” It was held, after an exhaustive examination of the subject, that the statute, so far as it authorizes the appropriation of water, applies to such water •only as flows over the lands of the state and the United
We arc asked to determine in this action the question of the plaintiff’s rights in the premises by reason of his alleged adverse use of the water of the Republican river for more than ten years, and also whether the several irri
Reversed.