65 Neb. 3 | Neb. | 1902
This case presents two questions: First, as to what equity jurisdiction obtains in dealing with rights acquired under the irrigation laws of this state; and, second, whether a prior áppropriator down the stream is entitled to get his allowed amount of water without loss of convenience because of subsequent appropriations above him. Plaintiff’s appropriation is conceded to be first in time and right to the extent of 1,142 6-7 cubic feet of water per second, not, however, more than 1-70 of a foot for each acre of land watered. The defendant company has its headgate and intake about one-half mile below the upper end of Willow Island, in the Platte river, which is some seven miles long, and between 'which and the north bank of the river is a channel about 150 feet wide. Plaintiff’s head-gate is about a mile below the island. Both take their water from the north bank of the river. The river does not at all times carry enough for both ditches, and in times of greatest need is frequently entirely dry. When the water in the river gets low, it is found in comparatively small channels, mostly, however, in two, near the respective banks of the stream. The river is here about 4,000 feet wide, and its bed at low water is an expanse of sand. Plaintiff procured a temporary injunction against defendant’s putting any obstruction in the river, or interfering with its natural flow, or appropriating water from the north side of it to the exclusion of plaintiff as prior appropriate^ and also against defendant’s maintaining any dam in any channel of the river. It is urged that section 35, chapter 93a, article 2, Compiled Statutes, provides for summary action by the under-assistants of the state board of irrigation, and gives to such under-assistants plenary power to shut the gates of any one taking more than his lawful share of water. It would seem, however, that the powers of the under-assistant do not, in terms, extend to the determination of the precise question presented here, and it was conceded at the hearing that at the time of
There is some evidence tending to show an unnecessary interference with plaintiff’s drawdng from the river its
The question, aside from that as to the propriety of equity intervention at all, is really whether the trial court was right in requiring the defendant to go across the river bed to get water in order to let that in the north channel go down in undiminished volume to plaintiff’s headgate. The result of the modified injunction in the decree will be that in times when barely the amount of Avater to which-the plaintiff is entitled is going down the river the defendant, merely because it is located upstream, must bring plaintiff’s water across this 4,000 feet of sand before it is itself allowed to take out any. This Avould seem to be putting the plaintiff in a better position than it was before the defendant’s franchise was established. All the water Avould be gathered for plaintiff into the channel north of the island. There is considerable variance in the testimony as to the practicability of bringing the water from the south channel across the sand so as to take it out on the north bank in times of low water. It is clear, so far as
The decree is clearly based on a finding that the plaintiff is entitled to an undiminished and unimpaired flow of the river from which to take the water. This finding can hardly be sustained. A requirement that the second appropriator should not throw upon the first one an additional burden of bringing water across the sand bed would seem reasonable. The requirement that he shall leave the channel north of the island open to the extent of one-half its width does not. It seems clear that each appropriator takes subject to the possible rights of all subsequent ones. The waters are made appropriable, and mutual inconvenience arising from such appropriation must be borne to a reasonable extent. As above suggested, inconvenience and expense in obtaining the water may easily become such as to practically forbid its use. The subsequent appropriator, therefore, must not be permitted to interfere unreasonably with its use by his predecessor lower down. Public utility is probably the surest test of reasonable use. The arrangement that will get out the most water, and get
If, as the trial court found, and the proofs seem to indicate, the defendant can go across the river after water as readily as the plaintiff can, a.nd turn the main south channel north of the island, it would seem reasonable to require it to do so rather than throw on the prior appropriator this inconvenience. When the water, to the extent practically possible, — that is, by an expense commensurate with the value of the result, — is thus brought across to the north side, it is the right of defendant to take it out so long as enough is left to enable plaintiff, by a like expense, to get its allotted supply. Where an equal inconvenience is to be thrown upon one or the other, the subsequent appropriator should bear it. Where a deprivation must be suffered because water is scarce, of course the first appropriator must not suffer until the last. Whenever an inconvenience amounts to a deprivation, he should not have to bear it. Short of this, it should go where it is easiest borne. Applying this to the case in hand, the action of the trial court in absolutely enjoining the maintenance of a dam across the north channel by defendant seems unwarranted, and a compelling of defendant to
It is recommended that the injunction be so modified as to permit defendant to put a dam across the north channel, between Willow Island and the north bank of the river, and across the south channel at the head of the island, but perpetually enjoining defendant, in times when no more than plaintiff’s allotted supply is going down the north channel, from so taking water as to leave less in the north channel than would go there if defendant’s dams were not maintained.
By the Court: For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, it is ordered that the decree of injunction entered by the district court be so modified as to permit defendant to put a dam across the north channel, between Willow Island and the north bank of the river, and across the south channel at the head of the island, but perpetually enjoining defendant, in times when no more than plaintiff’s allotted supply is going down the north channel, from so taking water as to leave less in the north channel than would- go there if defendant’s dams were not maintained.
Judgment accordingly.