Cook v. Evans

185 N.W. 262 | S.D. | 1921

WHITING, J.

About the year 1876, several parties settled in the Spearfish Valley. These parties found this valley to be semi-arid', and that, in the ordinary season, in order to bring best agricultural results, it would be necessary to irrigate the farm land. With the object of appropriating water for irrigation purposes, they did, during the year 1876 and the years immediately succeeding thereto, open up ditches and take waters from- Spearfish creek. Contiguous owners united in the establishment of a single ditch, so that, while there was quite a number of these settlers, there were eight separate appropriations, and these all for irrigation purposes. The order of time in which the ditches were established does not seenn to be in dispute; and, except as hereinafter noted, there is no dispute but that the rights of the claimants under one ditch, as against those under the others, rank in priority according to the time of the original act of appropriation under such ditch and to the extent of the original appropriation. The summer of 1914 was an unusually dry season; and those claiming under the first three appropriations took from the stream practically all its waters, leaving to the claimants under the fifth appropriation an amount of water wholly inadequate to their needs, and to some of the appropriators no water whatsoever. Apparently realizing what the future had in store for them, the claimants under the fifth appropriation brought this action, seek*37ing a determination of the rights of the claimants under the various ditches, and also the rights of certain parties who claim to be entitled to water as riparian owners. The trial court made findings which, in the main, were favorable to the defendants and especially to those claiming under the first four appropriations. Three appeals have been taken, being appeals on the part of plaintiffs and on the part of some of the defendants. These appeals have been submitted together. Inasmuch as, under the views which we hold, this casé must be’remanded to the trial court for further proceedings in said court—including, undoubtedly, the receipt of further evidence—we deem' it unnecessary to review in detail the evidence received or to note separately the several rulings of the trial court; but shall confine ourselves to an announcement of those rules of law which we deem to be supported by reason and authority and to be applicable to the facts of this case. The rights of defendant Homestake Mining Company, as determined by the trial court, not being questioned on this appeal, the judgment of the trial court, determining the rights of such defendant, will not be disturbed by the judgment of this court.

There are numerous riparian claimants, many of whom also make claims as appropriators. It is contended that no riparian rights could be acquired through an entry upon land or other act done prior to February 28, 1877, the date these lands ceased to be Indian lands and therefore became open to entry by settlers. It is also contended that, by the act of Congress of date March 3, 1877 (U. S. Comp. .St. §§ 4674-4678), the “Desert Land Act,” all public waters ceased to be the subject of future acquisition under riparian claims. It will readily be seen that, if these contentions are sound, the only period during which a riparian right could have been acquired was the few days between February 28 and March 3, 1877; and the record before us does not disclose that any entry was made upon the public domain, under the federal laws, during that short period. W'e are of the opinion ■that no riparian right could be acquired until the claimant had a lawful right to and did make entry upon the lands which he claimed to be riparian.

Whether or not the Act of March 3, 1877, severed all riparian rights from the public lands not then filed on by settlers, by dedicating all remaining public waters to the public for the *38purpose of and subject only to appropriation, is a most important and far-reaching question. It is urged by the riparian claimants that this court, long ago, established the law of this state on this matter, and that the law so announced-has become a rule of property and has fixed the property rights of all who have entered upon the public domains and acquired title to lands, whether or not the entries -were prior to or subsequent to March 3, 1877. An examination of the various decisions of this court touching upon riparian rights will disclose that this court has never determined the effect of the said act upon the acquisition of future riparian rights; and nothing -can be better settled than the rule that no decision can become binding under the rule of stare decisis, and thus be claimed to have established a rule of property, unless there was before the court, when it made such decision, the identical question, before the court when the rule of stare decisis is relied upon. This identical question was raised by appellant in Henderson v. Goforth, 34 S. D. 441, 148 N. W. 1045, but because of other matters that were controlling in that case, this court said:

“We are not called upon, therefore, to determine the effect of the proviso in the federal 'D'esert Land Act of March 3, 1877, or to consider the decisions of the courts construing the same.”

We are called upon to decide for the first time the effect of the Act of March 3, 1877. Reading that act in connection with the previous acts of Congress in relation to public lands, we are of the opinion, as held in Hough v. Porter, 51 Or. 318, 95 Pac. 732, 98 Pac. 1083, 102 Pac. 728, that, by said act, Congress did sever from all public lands not then lawfully entered upon, all rights- to the use of the waters adjacent thereto except the riparian right to use such waters for domestic purposes; and that the government, by said' act, did dedicate to the public, and thus render subject to appropriation in acordance with existing or future laws and customs, for irrigation, mining, manufacturing, and other proper purposes, all remaining public waters. The reasoning in the opinion in Hough v. Porter, supra, is so lucid and convincing that we feel justified in resting our ruling thereon without referring to other authorities except those cited in such opinion. Unless, upon the further hearing of this case, it shall be found that some of those who are claiming riparian rights to *39the waters of Spearfish creek made their entries after February 28, 1877, and prior to March 3, 1877, all questions of riparian rights to the waters of this stream will be removed from this case.

It does not follow, however, that a party who now makes claims as riparian owner may not be entitled to recognition as one who has gained rights by user. If in attempting to make use of their claimed riparian rights, certain of these parties have, in fact, actually appropriated waters to their own use in addition to such waters as they may have heretofore claimed as appropriators, they may, through user, have acquired rights that should be determined in this action. 'Such additional rights, not being based upon such acts of procedure, sanctioned by law or custom, as would constitute in law an appropriation, would vest at the end of the period necessary to acquire same by prescription. Under the facts of the case before.us, all rights so acquired would be subsequent to and inferior to those rights which the several parties may have acquired through the sanctioned methods of appropriation; furthermore, priority as between such additional rights would be governed by the dates upon which such rights became vested in the several parties.

Plaintiffs contend that an appropriation instituted prior to February 28, 1877, has no validity. While it is true that such an attempted appropriation cannot confer any valid rights prior to February 28, 1877, yet the acts are not idle if continued after that date. 'Such a case is analogous to the facts in the mining case of Caledonia Mining Co. v. Noonan, 3 Dak. 189, 14 N. W. 426, and Noonan v. Caledonia Mining Co., 121 U. S. 393, 7 Sup. Ct. 911, 30 L. Ed. 1061, and. under the authority of those cases, we hold that all appropriations initiated prior to February 28, 1877, having been carried on by customary acts after that date, became effective as of that date.

It must be borne in mind at all times that public waters, subject as such to appropriation, are to. be appropriated and. used, not only for the benefit of appropriators, but also for the benefit of the public. The very foundation of the right of appropriation is the fact that it is to the public interest that waters shall not be allowed to run waste and thus not benefit mankind — and what benefits man- benefits society, of which he is a unit. It follows, therefore, that, in all disputes between claimants of public waters, *40the public'itself is a vitally interested party; and that every adjudication by a court as to rights to the use of water should take into consideration and should fully protect the rights of the pub-dic, and should restrict the rights of the claimants in such manner as to properly conserve the waters so that they may, in the end, bring the greatest benefit to the public.

The right of an appropriator of public waters is limited by the capacity of the ditch originally established and under which the right is claimed; but such right is also limited by the amount of water actually needed for the purpose for which the appropriation was made. It follows that the amount of water to which one has acquired a right is not to be determined either by the size of the ditch originally constructed, by the amount of ’water originally claimed, or by the amount of water which may have, in fact, been used—it can never exceed the amount needful ’for the purpose in contemplation of the appropriator at the time of his appropriation. As above mentioned, the lands in question are situated in a semi-arid region in which the amount of rainfall varies from year to year. In a semi-arid, region, one who appropriates -water for irrigation has not a right to the same volume of water per acre as he would have in a region where there was no rainfall; neither can he base the amount to which he is entitled upon the amount that might be put to beneficial use on his land during an exceptionally dry season—it is the amount that is needful in the ordinary year that should govern.

Another matter, that must be taken into consideration in determining the amount of water which a claimant is entitled to, is the nature of the soil to be irrigated. Some soils need more water than others, and are entitled to more; but the fact that a particular soil may need more does not necessarily entitle it to more. It can readily be seen that a court should not allow an excessive amount to be appropriated or used simply upon the plea that, because of a gravel subsoil, such amount is needful; a subsoil may be so porous that to turn water into it is a mere unwarranted waste of same, and there may be gravel spots upon which it would be utterly useless to turn any water. The trial court found that different tracts of land were, for different causes, entitled to varying amounts of water. Thus it allowed to one tract 1Y-2. inches because of a 25 per cent, seepage of water while *41flowing through the ditches leading to this tract; while to another tract was allowed an inch of water, thougflr it was found that, as to such tract, there would be 15 per cent, seepage. Computation shows that, in the one case, 1.125 inches of water must have been deemed necessary for the land, and, in the other, but .85 of an inch.

We have carefully considered all the evidence in this case; and we are of the opinion that the overwhelming weight thereof is to the effect that not to exceed of an inch of water per acre is necessary for the proper irrigation of any of the land that is fit for irrigation. Should there be any allowance whatsoever for seepage? As said by the court in Hough v. Porter, supra:

“The wasteful methods so common with early settlers can, under the light most favorable to their system of use, be deemed only a privilege permitted merely because it could be exercised without substantial injury to any one; and no right to such methods of use was acquired thereby.”

In line with the above, we hold that the waters belonging to the public must be so conserved as to meet the public welfare; that the amount of water to which a party is entitled must be measured at the intake; that, in conducting the water to the land where same is to be used, the appropriator alone must suffer through any faulty conduits; that any allowance for seepage should be based on distance from intake to land to be irrigated and not at all upon the nature of the soil over or through which the conduits pass and that no party has a right to claim extra water because of extra seepage.

The amount of water to which .an appropriator is entitled is governed not only, among other things, by the amount which he applies to a beneficial use, but also by the amount so applied within a reasonable time from the initiation of his appropriation. What is a reasonable time must vary as between different localities, and might even vary as between localities not far removed one from another. Each case must, of necessity, rest upon its own facts; but the trial court, after weighing all the facts, should make a finding as to what time after the inception of the appropriation he finds to have been a reasonable time for completing the ditohes and making beneficial use of water sought *42to be appropriated. After having found the number of years that, under the circumstances, is a reasonable time, then the court cannot grant to any claim of water right, which was not consummated by actual use until after the expiration of such time, priority as of the date of the initiation of the appropriation upon which based; but its priority must, date from the time of actual use.

It is contended that the trial court erred in holding that ascertain amount of the water allowed plaintiffs should not have priority over the later appropriations. We think the court erred in the amount declared inferior in right to such later appropriators.

In the case of one small tract of land, the trial court found that the claimants of water therefor were entitled to four inches per acre, and it based such finding upon the fact that it was a small tract. With such conclusion we cannot agree. No tract under irrigation should be given a greater amount of water per acre simply because of its size. On the other hand, the trial court has the right to, and should take into consideration, most approved methods of handling water so as to produce the best results. If the amount per acre to which a small tract of land is entitled would not produce a stream sufficient in size to be practicable for irrigating, purposes, - the court should then give to such appropriator a right to use a volume of water sufficient in size to create an adequate flow for proper irrigation, and limit the time during which such water can be used.

In line with what we have just stated, the court, in a case such as this, involving as it does such great public and private rights, and in which it has jurisdiction over all parties in interest, should attempt to determine and to put into effect, the best methods of irrigation, in order to safeguard the best interests of all concerned, including the public. It may well be that the evidence of witnesses, practical farmers and experts, will satisfy the trial court that it would be better to require the claimants under some of the ditches to take water from' the stream during only certain days of each week, and the claimants under the other ditches to take water from such streams during the remaining days of such week, rather than to have water running through all the ditches all the time. In such case, the judgment should so *43provide, allowing of course for an increased flow during such days. Furthermore, it may be necessary, in order to properly control the distribution of this water, that there be installed headgates different from those now in use. Such court, when this case is remanded to it, will have full power to do that which equity may require. It should declare, in whatever judgment shall be rendered hereafter, that such judgment is not final but subject to such supplemental orders and judgments as to the court may seem from1 time to time necessary for the accomplishment of the end sought— the equitable adjustment and control of the rights of all the parties to this litigation and the rights of the public.

The Judgment appealed1 from is reversed. Inasmuch as it is clear, from all the evidence herein, that this litigation was made necessary by the unjustifiable selfishness of the claimants under what are known as the Fvans-Tonn, the Matthews, and the Walton ditches, the plaintiffs should have judgment against these defendants who claim under such ditches, for plaintiffs’ costs herein; except as so directed, each party shall pay his own costs.

McCOY, J., dissents.
midpage