61 Neb. 317 | Neb. | 1901
> An opinion was filed in this case during the last term, which is found reported in 60 Nebr., 754. Subsequently the court, owing to the importance of irrigation, and a seeming misapprehension on the part of those interested in that important industry concerning the questions decided by the court, of its own motion ordered a reargument of the case. Since the filing of the opinion counsel for plaintiff has filed what he is pleased to designate a motion for a rehearing, which comprises some forty pages of solidly type-written matter, and is nothing more than an extended argument upon what counsel conceives to be the merits of the case. The attorney who filed the so-called motion is a practitioner of ability and extended experience, and it would seem to us is certainly acquainted with the practice relative to • applications for rehearings. Arguments or citations of authorities have no place in a motion for a rehearing. Such motions should concisely state the ground or grounds upon which a rehearing is asked. 18 Ency. Pl. & Pr., 57, and cases cited. Were the questions determined by the prior opinion not important to others, we would be justified in striking the so-called motion from the files. But, for the reason stated, we will endeavor to remove any erroneous impressions that may prevail concerning the former opinion, so far as that is possible, within the issues involved in the case.
Before entering at large upon a discussion of what we conceive to be the only points necessary to a complete de
At the commencement of the former opinion we stated that there were many reasons for sustaining the decree of the lower court. This is true, but it is manifest that it is unnecessary to decide more than the two questions there determined, namely, the right of plaintiff to maintain this .action before the rights to the waters of the stream had been adjudicated by the state board of irrigation, and the right of Hall to have his vested interests protected from the invasion of plaintiff. These are the two vital questions discussed and decided, and the court, has no doubt they were determined correctly, and is further satisfied that to a complete determination of the litigation the examination of other questions argued, or sought to be raised, is unnecessary at this time.
It is suggested that Hall had an adequate remedy at law for any damages he might suffer at the hands of plaintiff, and that, therefore, he was not entitled to relief by injunction. We do not think the law afforded him a remedy that was adequate; much more than mere compensatory damages was involved in the invasion of his rights by plaintiff, and it seems clear that he was entitled to the equitable relief accorded.
It is contended, however, that if the court entertain jurisdiction to enjoin plaintiff from destroying Hall’s vested right to the use of the water for mill purposes, it should have proceeded to adjudicate all in controversy. We do not think so. The proper tribunal before which to try the rights to the priority was the state board of irrigation, a special tribunal of limited jurisdiction; and while the court below could properly interpose its equity powers, so far as necessary to prevent an invasion of his
Counsel for plaintiff complain of our former ruling, to the effect that sections 47 and 48, chapter 93a, Compiled Statutes, 1897, did not abrogate the common law rights of riparian owners as they theretofore existed, and insists that the court should hold that those sections, which are termed the act of 1877, in effect established a separate ownership of land and water in this state, and are in effect the acceptance of a grant by federal statute (Revised Statutes TJ. S., sec. 2339) of the waters on the public domain to the people of the several states. We copy the so-called act of 1877 as since amended:
“Sec. 48. Canals and other works constructed for irrigation or water power purposes or both are hereby declared to be works of internal improvement, and all laws applicable to works .of internal improvement are hereby declared to be applicable to such canal and irrigation works.”
There is nothing occult to this act, so far as we can ascertain. It is a simple, plain, straightforward authorization of certain classes of corporations or associations to borrow money, and to condemn for right of way. To give them the right to condemn, their object must be a public one, to conform to the constitutional requirements that private property can be taken for public uses only. The statute gives them nothing, other than these two powers. It does not point out the manner in which the water is to be procured to fill their ditches. The right to irrigate land has always existed everywhere. How then could this act be said to authorize these associations to take water from the streams of the state, irrespective of the rights of individuals thereto? If it had the effect that is claimed for it, to accept the gift from the general government of the water upon the public clomain, this acceptance, it will be noted, was in favor solely of corporations or associations organized under the laws of the state. In that case, what became of the rights of individuals to the water, which counsel insists belong to the people and is no longer an adjunct to land? We think
The federal statute, which the plaintiff claims constituted the grant of the Avaters on the public domain, of which the act of 1877 it is insisted was an acceptance, is as folloAvs: “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, laAVS, and the decisions of courts, the possessors and owners of such vested rights shall be maintained and protected in the same; and the right of Avay for the construction of ditches and canals for the purposes herein specified, is acknowledged and confirmed,” etc. Revised Statutes U. S., sec. 2339. It is claimed that this statute Avas a grant by the federal government to the people of the state of the waters on the public domain. We do not think so. Its purpose was to confirm the rights of those who have acquired, under certain conditions, the use of the water, and calls that right a vested one, even though the Avaters are taken from streams upon the public domain and without the assent of the government. If the statute were a grant, it protects Hall, for he appropriated the water of this stream ten years prior to the time this action) was commenced. The statute would
Some confusion is probably bred because of the use by the court of the terms “riparian proprietor” and “riparian rights” in the former decision. It is not necessary to the determination of this case that Hall should be designated merely a riparian proprietor. He was more; he was both a riparian owner and a prior appropriator. Whether by virtue of the mere fact that this stream flowed through his property he was entitled to the full flow of the stream is not necessary to the determination of the case. Whether, since Hall acquired his rights, which were vested at the time this action was commenced, the legislature has abrogated or modified the rights of riparian owners merely, as such, in cases where they have not attempted to appropriate the waters flowing through their lands, was not involved in the question being decided, as up to the time he appropriated this water there had been no legislation on the subject of water rights, save this law of 1877. The whole of the discussion turned upon Hall’s rights as affected by said act of 1877, and the court, in effect, said that, independent of statute, the common law .relative to riparian ownership was applicable to this state. The question of whether it is within the power of the legislature to abrogate or modify the mere naked right to the full flow of the stream, where no act looking to a,n appropriation has been taken by an individual, was not involved, and is not decided.
It appears from briefs filed by counsel not directly interested in the case at bar, but who, or whose clients are, interested in the subject, as well as from that of counsel
It is insisted that, although the-act which created the board of irrigation is constitutional, those portions thereof alone which it is claimed give to it judicial powers are invalid; that the residue of the act which confers upon the board the duty to distribute the water is valid, but that the former is invalid, and can be separated from the remainder of the act and still leave a valid board of
The motion for a rehearing is denied.
Rehearing denied.