24 Or. 304 | Or. | 1893
delivered the opinion of the court:
1. The evidence conclusively shows that the defendant was a prior appropriator of the waters of Willow Creek. He made his settlement upon an unsurveyed tract of land with the intention of acquiring title thereto from the government of the United States, and had diverted and appropriated the water of said creek two and one half years prior to the building of plaintiffs’ dam, and when the defendant made his proof and obtained his patent his title related back to the time of his settlement: Faull v. Cooke, 19 Or. 455 (26 Pac. 662); Larsen v. Or. Ry. & Nav. Co. 19 Or. 240 (23 Pac. 974); Sturr v. Beck, 133 U. S. 541 (10 Sup. Rep. 350); and hence it follows that at the time plaintiffs made their appropriation of the waters of Wil
2. The evidence shows that on Willow Creek there was a local custom which required the claimant to file for record with the county clerk a notice of his claim to appropriate the water of a natural stream, and that in pursuance of such custom Logan, in January, 1872, filed with the county clerk of Baker County a notice of his claim to appropriate two hundred and fifty inches of the water of said creek upon the line of his survey made in October, 1871. If, instead of being obliged to abandon his ditch on this line in 1873, he had completed it, so as to have been able to divert the water thereby, and appropriate it in irrigating his homestead, he would, doubtless, have had a prior right to the use of a sufficient quantity to irrigate his land, assuming that his diversion was begun within a reasonable time, and was prosecuted with due and reasonable diligence; and his appropriation would have related back at least to the time of commencing the work, if not to the time of giving the notice or to the time of the survey: Pomeroy, Riparian Rights, § 52. When he abandoned the survey of 1871, and made another to tap the creek at or near plaintiffs’ dam, in order to enable him to hold the rights acquired under such original survey, he must have commenced the diversion within a reasonable time, and must have prosecuted it with due and reasonable diligence. In Ophir Min. Co. v. Carpenter, 4 Nev. 534, Lewis,.C. J., in a similar case, says: “The law does not require any unusual or extraordinary efforts, but only that which is usual, ordinary, and reasonable. The diligence required in cases of this kind is that constancy or steadiness of purpose or labor which is usual
3. While the evidence shows that the ditch on the line of the new survey was commenced in 1873, that some work was done thereon each year, and that it was completed so as to divert the water in 1883, at a cost of about two thousand dollars, it fails to show what amount of labor or of money was expended thereon in any one year, and Logan pleads as an excuse for the delay his inability to raise the necessary means to prosecute the work. The evidence further shows that from 1871 to 1873, Logan dug about one and one fourth miles of ditch, and that quite a portion of it was through quicksand, but
4. The defendant, as a prior appropriator, is entitled to a quantity of water sufficient to irrigate his homestead, and his original appropriation may be made with reference to the quantity of water needed to irrigate the land he designs to put into cultivation. “The needs or purpose for which the appropriation is made, is the limit to the amount of water which may be taken”: Simmons v. Winters, 21 Or. 34 (27 Pac. 7). The defendant, as a prior appropriator, did not find it necessary to divert or appropriate in 1871 all the water he ultimately intended to use in the irrigation of his lands. As he adds to the area of his cultivated land he may increase the amount of his diversion until he has acquired the quantity necessary to properly irrigate the whole tract, and any subsequent appropriator diverts the water subject to such prior claim. To entitle the defendant, however, to the benefit of such an appropriation, he should, within a reasonable time, apply the water to such beneficial use. As fast as he can reasonably put his homestead into cultivation, he is entitled to divert and use the water for that purpose. The rule established in Simmons v. Winters is just and reason
5. The defendant, however, having made a prior appropriation of the water at his homestead, has the prior right to the use thereof, unless he has abandoned his claim thereto. The fact that he in 1873 commened the survey of another ditch from his homestead to tap the creek at a point further up the stream shows that he had not abandoned the idea of irrigating his land; and while it appears that his old ditch had been in 1877 enlarged and used, with his consent, by the Willow Creek Irrigating Company, it also appears that from 1872 to 1891 the El Dorado' Ditch Company had diverted about one thousand inches of water from Burnt River, and discharged the same into Willow Creek at a point above defendant’s homestead, and thus it would seem to follow, in the absence of any evidence of the right of the Willow Creek Irrigating Company, that it took no rights from the defendant therein except as to the surplus water, from Burnt River, and that defendant had claimed and reserved his right to the use of his original diversion from Willow Creek. The evidence also shows that defendant had at one time cultivated on his homestead about twelve acres, but that since he moved
6. The defendant having made a diversion of the water in 1871 could not thereafter change the point of his diversion if it injuriously affected the rights of any subsequent appropriator: Kidd v. Laird, 15 Cal. 161; Butte Mining Co. v. Morgan, 19 Cal. 609. Did the change of the point of diversion injuriously affect the plaintiffs? It appears from the evidence that the plaintiffs diverted and used all the water of the creek, but that the plaintiff Kendall returned the waste water to the creek at a point above, and the plaintiff Cole at a point below defendant’s land. If Kendall, as a subsequent appropriator, had, with knowledge of the defendant’s diversion, tapped the creek at a point above, used and returned the whole volume of the water above the defendant’s point of diversion, the defendant could not have been injured thereby, while under the same’state of facts the defendant, by changing his point of diversion and' tapping the creek above Kendall’s dam, could have taken the whole amount of the water and would have injuriously affected that plaintiff. If by taking the whole the plaintiff Kendall would have been affected, he would also have been affected injuriously by the taking of
7. Appellants contend that they should have had a judgment for their costs and disbursements. Section 554, Hill’s Code, provides that in equity cases the party in whose favor a decree is rendered shall be allowed his costs and disbursements in like manner and amount as in an action unless the court otherwise directs. This invests the trial court with a discretion in the taxation pf costs and disbursements, and such discretion will not be reviewed except for an abuse thereof: Lovejoy v. Chapman, 23 Or. 571 (32 Pac. 687). The plaintiffs’ cause of suit was based upon an alleged prior appropriation, while the court found that the defendant was the prior appropriator, and there were also many equities in favor of the defendant which the court considered, and hence the conclusion upon the taxation of costs was not an abuse of discretion.
The decree of the court below will be modified and one entered in accordance with this opinion. Modified.