78 P. 1031 | Or. | 1905
delivered the opinion.
The question to be considered is whether or not it was necessary, as a condition precedent to the assertion of the right sought to be invoked, to allege in the complaint that plaintiff was the sole owner of all the land bordering on both sides of Catherine Creek, from the. head gate of the proposed ditch to the lower terminus thereof, or had secured from the riparian proprietors on that stream the exclusive right to divert and use the surplus waters thereof. A general statement of some of the. provisions of the statute ;on which this action is based, so far as they relate to the power of a corporation to condemn rights of way for ditches, and to appropriate the surplus water of a nonnavigable stream, is deemed essential to a proper understanding of the inquiry involved.
An examination of the statute, the substance of which has been stated, shows that the legislature has given corporations organized to furnish electrical power for all purposes authority to condemn
It will be observed that the phrase quoted refers to the preceding sections of the act, upon a strict compliance with which the right to appropriate water is acquired. The word “appropriate,” in the arid region of the United States, is generally understood to mean an application of water to a beneficial use; but, in the section of the statute to which attention is called, the word under consideration cannot be so construed, where the rights of riparian proprietors have attached to a stream. If a corporation organized to generate electrical power for all purposes was the sole riparian proprietor on a stream, a strict compliance by it with the provisions of Sections 5026,' 5027, B. & C. Comp., would probably confer upon it the right to appropriate all the water flowing in the channel, and authorize the maintenance of an action to condemn a right of way for a ditch in which to conduct the water across the lands of other persons. In case such corporation owned all the land bordering on a stream between the point of diversion and the lower terminus of its proposed ditch, the word “appropriate.” might probably be used in its ordinary acceptation. That the legislative assembly intended it should receive such meaning only in case the plaintiff in an action to condemn a right of way for a ditch was the sole riparian proprietor to be affected by the diversion of water from a stream, is evident from the fact that Section 5030, B. & C. Comp., authorizes the maintenance of an action to condemn the rights of the bank owners between the points of diversion and the lower terminus of the. proposed ditch. ■ To hold otherwise would in some instances defeat the very purposes sought to be subserved by the passage of the act, a fair construction of which in its entirety authorizes, in our opinion, the maintenance of an action either to condemn land for a ditch, or to condemn the right to have the water flow in the channel of a stream through the prem
It follows from these considerations that the judgment is reversed, and the cause remanded, with directions to overrule the demurrer, and for such further proceedings as may be necessary, not inconsistent with this opinion. Reversed.