14 Nev. 167 | Nev. | 1879
By the Court,
There were twenty defendants in this case, including Bird & Eitzhugh and E. Caldwell. Bird & Eitzhugh appealed from the decree, etc., and that appeal has been recently decided by this court. Defendant Caldwell also moved for a new trial. That motion was overruled, and he now appeals from the order denying the same, and from “so much of the judgment rendered as gives the said Dick any of the waters of Duck creek used by said E. Caldwell and his grantors, for the period of five years prior to the commencement of this suit, under claim of right, and adverse to the claim of said T. M. Dick.”
The notice of motion for a new trial was directed to plaintiff Dick and defendant Horton, but so far as the record shows the facts, it was not served on defendant Horton. The notice of appeal was directed to and served on plaintiff Dick alone. By the decree affirmative relief and definite rights were awarded to the other defendants. Such being the case, the decision in the appeal of Bird and Eitzhugh is decisive of several points raised by appellant: Eirst, that the decree is void for uncertainty, because it takes as the basis of apportionment the quantity of water necessary to irrigate an acre of ground instead of distributing the water by inches; second, that it is erroneous
The motion for a new trial was made on the grounds of insufficiency of evidence to justify the decision of the court, and that the same was against law.
The appellant excepted to this portion of the -fifth finding of fact, to wit: “Thatdefendant, E. Caldwell, or his grantor, D. It. Pierce, used water from said Duck creek to cultivate six acres of vegetables in 1869, fifteen acres of grain and vegetables in, 1871 twenty acres, in 1872, 1873, 1874 about forty-five acres, in 1875 fifty-seven acres, and during all this time irrigated about ten acres of grass land, and has used the same ever since,” “because the same is contrary to the evidence given on the trial of said cause in this,” otc. The court evidently intended to find, and did find, the number of acres cultivated and irrigated by appellant each year from 1869 to and including the year 1875. Eor the years 1869, 1871, 1872, 1873,1874 and 1875 the findings are clear and definite, and they are fully sustained by the evidence, including the testimony of appellant himself. It is evident that after the words “fifteen acres in grain and vegetables in,” the court intended to insert the year — that is, 1870 — but by a clerical error the year was left out. No other year could have been intended, and appellant testified that he cultivated fifteen acres in 1870. But it can make no difference if the court did in fact fail to find the number of acres cultivated and irrigated in 1870, for the reason, as we shall see, that as between himself and plaintiff, appellant was awarded the first right to all the water that he appropriated to a beneficial use during the whole period from 1869 to 1875 inclusive.
The next exception is to the court’s finding that “plaintiff, Dick, used water to irrigate from two hundred and fifty to three hundred acres of grass land in 1869; this was meadow land upon which the stream naturally flowed; that is to say,
The court took as the basis of apportionment the quantity necessary to irrigate an acre of ground, instead of distributing the water by inches. It was therefore unnecessary to find the number of inches diverted and appropriated by appellant, even though the proof warranted the finding that he did divert two hundred and seven inches, and did continue to divert the same from 1869 to 1875. Such a finding would uot have assisted the court in rendering its decree, apportioning to each party water for such number of acres as he was entitled to. Besides, the court was justified in refusing to find that all water diverted by appellant from
The last exception is to the refusal of the court to find for appellant upon his plea by title of prescription. The facts relating to that question are the same in this appeal as they were in Bird and Fitzliugh’s, and for the reasons there stated, we must hold that the exception is not supported by the facts.
As we have seen, so far as plaintiff is concerned, appellant is awarded the first right to water from Duck creek for the irrigation of fifty-seven' acres of grain and vegetables, and ten acres of grass.
It is plain from his own testimony that he was entitled to no more, because, during that whole period, he did not cultivate or irrigate but that number of acres, and he could not have used beneficially any more water than was necessary to irrigate the same. Tie did not appropriate, in a legal sense, any water except such as he used beneficially. Turning water out of the stream for no useful purpose did not give him any additional rights. If he had, from 1869 to and including 1875, turned two hundred and seven inches of water from the stream and made no use of any portion of it, it can not be claimed that he would have been entitled to a decree for any amount by reason of actual appropriation. Turning more water from the stream than he used was waste, not appropriation. He received water for every acre he cultivated in grain or vegetables, or irrigated for grass, from 1869 to the commencement of the suit. Certainly he can claim no more. Plaintiff received water, subject to appellant’s first use, for no greater number of acres than he had cultivated and irrigated from the creek. We think appellant has no just complaint against the decree as between him and respondent, and we find no errors prejudicial to him.
The order and judgment appealed from are affirmed.