17 P. 453 | Ariz. | 1888
This was a complaint filed by Clough in which he sought to enjoin defendant, Wing, from taking water from Granite creek, to his injury. He alleges that he has occupied a tract of land, about 200 acres, describing it, and has for some 15 years cultivated the same in cereals, and has set out orchards and vineyards, and that the same have by his husbandry become of great value; that except by irrigation these results could not have been accomplished, and without constant continuance of the same all would be lost; that in the year 1869 he located and appropriated sufficient of the waters flowing in Granite creek to properly irrigate the same by building flumes and digging canals in which to convey the said water from said creek upon his lands, and so he did convey the water from said creek, and did use said water as aforesaid until now; that, in 1884, defendant, knowing of plaintiff’s prior right and appropriation
The court found that the evidence showed that “at the time of the alleged wrong, and at all times since defendant went upon his lands, there was and has been water enough for both parties.” A careful consideration of the evidence leads us to the same conclusion. This fact settled, the plaintiff had no right to the relief he sought. Barnes v. Sabron, 10 Nev. 217; Atchison v. Petersen, 20 Wall. 507; Basey v. Gallagher, 20 Wall. 670. In the former ease the court say: “If the plaintiff did not require the full amount of his appropria
Thus we see that this is the oldest method of skilled husbandry, and probably- a large number of the human race have ever depended upon artificial irrigation for their food products. The riparian rights of the common law could not exist under such systems; and a higher antiquity, a better reason, and more beneficent results have flowed from the doctrine that all right in water in non-navigable streams must be subservient to its use in tilling the soil. Recognizing these principles, the acts of congress March 26, 1866, extended them over the public domain wherever applicable; and all patents (16 St. U. S. §17) to land are subject to these rights to the use of water. By that act it is provided that “whenever, by priority of possession, rights to the use of water for mining, agricultural, manufacturing, or other purposes have vested and accrued, and the same are recognized and acknowledged by the local customs, laws, and decisions of courts, the possessors and owners of such vested rights shall be maintained and protected ip. the same.” The legislature of Arizona at its first session, in 1864, enacted that (C. L. 3240) “all rivers, creeks, and streams of running water are hereby declared public, and applicable to the purposes of irrigation and mining; [3242] all the inhabitants who own or possess arable and irrigable lands shall have the right to construct public or private acequias [canals] and obtain the necessary water for the same from any convenient river, creek, or stream of running water;” (3243) and prohibits the obstruction of such canals, “as the right to irrigate the fields shall be preferable to all others, ’ ’ Up to about a third of a century ago, and but recently before this enactment, the territory of Arizona had been subject to the laws and customs of Mexico, and the common law had been unknown; and that law has never been, and is not now, suited to conditions that exist here, so far as the same applies to the uses of water. Atchison v. Petersen, supra; Basey v. Gallagher, supra; McClintock v. Bryden, 5 Cal. 100, 63 Am. Dec. 87; People v.
The “local customs” of the act of 1866, so far at least as it refers to rights to the use of water, is not a mere usage or custom, requiring proofs of undisturbed continuance beyond the memory of man. ' 1 Greenl. Ev. § 128. The courts take knowledge of them as of the public laws. “The general customs and usages of merchants, as well as the public statutes and general laws and customs of their own country, as well ecclesiastical as civil, are recognized, without proof, by the courts of all civilized nations.” 1 Greenl. Ev. § 5, and eases cited. In Atchison v. Petersen the court, without proof, took knowledge of the existence of these customs; so, of judicial decisions. The court below did not err, therefore, in excluding the judgment roll offered by plaintiff; and the oral proof of local custom could do no harm, but was not necessary.
What constitutes such appropriation is largely a question of fact. The supreme court of California defines the word “appropriation” as. follows: “This appropriation is the intent to take, accompanied by some open, physical demonstration of the intent, and for some valuable use.” (McDonald v. Bear River Co., 13 Cal. 220;) and the supreme court of Colorado, quoting, approves this definition. “When the individual, by some open, physical demonstration, indicates an intent to take for a valuable or beneficial use, and, through such demonstration, ultimately succeeds in applying the water to the use designed, there is such an appropriation.” “While a diversion must of necessity take place before the water is actually applied to the irigation of the soil, the appropriation thereof is, in legal contemplation, made when
Wright, C. J., concurs.