148 N.W. 1045 | S.D. | 1914
Plaintiff, Henderson, also known as Cushing, and the defendants, Goforth, Nelson, Arnott, and Westgate, are owners of riparian lands along a stream known as False Bottom creek, in Lawrence county. The lands of the respective defendants and the plaintiff are situated .upon said stream in the following order, commencing with the land farthest up stream: The defendants, Goforth, Nelson, Arnott, Westgate; plaintiff, Henderson. All of said lands were settled upon and occupied as lands belonging to the public domain, and title thereto acquired by the parties or their grantors through patent from the federal government. The legal rights of parties, plaintiff and defendants, as present owners, are such as were acquired by their own acts, or those of their grantors, from the time of original settlement on these lands as government lands, and for convenience and ‘brevity, in considering their respective rights, each of the parties to this action, plaintiff and defendants, will be spoken of and considered as having made the original settlements and as having performed the acts done, either by themselves or their grantors.
The plaintiff, Henderson, settled on the lands owned by him on September 15, 1877, and has been continuously in possession since that time. On January 1, 1878, he made a valid water right location at a point on False Bottom creek convenient for irrigation of his said lands, claiming 1,000 miner’s inches of said stream, and thereupon constructed a ditch and diverted the waters upon his land in the spring of 1878, irrigating about eight acres that spring, and within a reasonable time thereafter diverted and appropriated
On June 15, 1877, the defendant Irving Westgate settled on the lands claimed by him, and in 1879 located a valid water right on said -stream and constructed a ditch, by means of' which he diverted waters upon his own land, from July, 1881, down to the time of the trial. On the 18th day of April, 1878, the. defendant Arnott settled on the lands claimed by him, and in 1879 located a valid water right on said stream, and constructed a ditch to- divert water upon his land, and since July, 1881, down to the time of the trial, has diverted and used the waters of said creek. The defendant Nelson settled on the lands owned by him in 1879, and in 1887 constructed a ditch for the purpose of irrigating his lands, and has irrigated the same from 1887 down to the beginning of this action. Nelson made no water right location, and his rights are those of a riparian owner and none other. The defendant Goforth in March, 1877, settled upon the lands claimed by him, and ever since has been in possession and became the owner by United States patent issued -in June, 1884. In 1887 Goforth constructed a ditch for the purpose of irrigating his lands, by means of which he diverted a portion of the waters of said stream, and used the same for irrigation from that time to the beginning of this action. He also constructed the ditch and diverted the waters of said stream without a water right location, and his rights are those of a riparian owner and none other. Plaintiff Henderson for more' than 20 years irrigated 50 acres of his land; defendant Westgate has irrigated 20 acres; defendant Arnott 18 acres; defendant Nelson 14 acres; and defendant Goforth 15 acres — each having used said water for a period of more than 20 years.
The trial court found the plaintiff Plenderson to be the owner of a valid water right located January 1, 1878, to- the extent of 50 miner’s inches of water, but found that his rights were junior and inferior to prescriptive rights acquired by the several defendants. The court also made a conclusion of law that the rights of the defendants to the use of the waters of said stream for irrigation purposes, as riparian owners, are equal, and that the rights of plaintiff Henderson, as riparian owner, are subject to the prescriptive rights of the defendants, and each of them, to the extent of the waters
In effect, the decision of the trial court holds that the rights of plaintiff and appellant I-Ienderson, both as riparian owner and as locator of the water right of January i, 1878, have been lost to the extent of, and are barred by the prescriptive rights of defendants to, the amount of water used and appropriated by each, respectively, on the theory that the appropriation by defendants was at all time open, notorious, continuous, and adverse to plaintiff’s rigiits, and extended over a period of more than 20 years. Taken as a whole, the record presents a somewhat peculiar state of facts. The trial court found the normal flow of water in False Bottom creek to be approximately 100 miner’s inches, and that each miner’s inch of water was sufficient to irrigate one acre of land. The court also found as a fact that the plaintiff, for more than 20 years, had actually used and appropriated 50 miner’s inches; the defendant Westgate 20 miner’s inches; defendant Arnott 18 miner’s inches; the defendant Nelson 14 miner’s inches; the defendant Goforth 15 miner’s inches — the total aggregating 117 miner’s inches, in all 17 inches more than the normal flow of the stream. It .must be conceded that 50 inches of the water of said stream reached and was appropriated upon plaintiff’s land. The discrepancy of 17 inches above the normal flow of the stream is accounted for by a finding of the trial court that a surplus portion of the waters diverted by the defendants or some of them was returned to the stream at some point above plaintiff’s lands. Just in what way defendants or any of them acquired a prescriptive right to this 17 inches of water actually returned to the stream and used by plaintiff is not apparent, and yet the trial court appears to have held that the right of defendants, or some of them, to this water was superior to' the right of plaintiff, who in fact at all times received and appropriated it to his own use, as the lower proprietor on the stream.
The single specific question presented is whether, upon the facts disclosed by the record, the trial court was correct in holding that the defendants, by continuous adverse use of the waters of False Bottom creek for more than 20 yeans, have acquired prescriptive rights which are superior to and must be held to defeat .plaintiff’s rights, under his water right location. We are not called upon, therefore, to determine the effect of the proviso' in the Federal Desert Band Act of March 3, 1877, or to consider the decisions of the courts construing the same. Under the decision of the trial court, the location rights and the riparian rights of defendants are material only in that they were held to have ■ initiated the adverse claims and alleged prescriptive rights of the defendants.
Plaintiff’s action was to quiet title to his water right as against the defendants. The complaint sets up his water right location on January 2, 1878, the construction of ditches, and the appropriation of go miner’s inches of water and the irrigation of 90 acres of his lands. The defendants, by their several answers, allege ownership of their respective tracts of land, their respective rights as riparian owners and locators of water rights, and their adverse use and
“To constitute title to a part of the water from the same stream, something more must be shown than a continuous use of the water by the adverse claimant, as 'contended by defendants. Such use must be an invasion of the other’s use, and thus give the owner of the prior right a cause of action against such diversion. The fact that many appropriators may use part of the water without invading each other’s right distinguishes the use of water from a stream, under such circumstances, from cases of adverse occupation of real estate, or even the diversion of - water as against a riparian owner, in both of which cases the occupation or use is an infringement of the rights of the true owner, for which an action will lie. * * * But more must be shown in the case of adverse title to water as against a prior appropriator from the same stream, as the latter has no remedy or cause to complain until his use is infringed. One is not called u-pon to defend or assert his title until his rights are invaded * * * that is, it must be adverse, hostile to the title of the owner; and the burden is on the adverse claimant to show that it was hostile and asserted in such a way that the owner may know of the claim.”
The record in this case nowhere discloses that plaintiff ever had reason to suppose that the defendants or either of them ever entertained the slightest thought of making adverse claim to any part of the 50 miner’s inches of water which he actually diverted and used for more than 20 years, nor is there anything in the findings showing that the defendants, or either if them, ever did in fact make such adverse claim. The Supreme Court of Oregon, in the Ison Case, quoting from Britt v. Reed, 42 Or. 76, 70 Pac. 1029, said:
“ ‘Nor is defendant’s claim to the use of the water by adverse possession supported by the record, as there is no testimony showing or tending to 'show that the use thereof by him in any way injured or deprived the plaintiffs of any substantial right until*449 1899’ — thus placing the burden upon the adverse claimant of showing an invasion of the owner’s use.”
Quoting from Bowman v. Bowman, 35 Or. 279, 57 Pac. 546, that court also said:
“No adverse user (of water) can be initiated until the persons possessing the superior use are deprived of its benefit in such a substantial manner as to notify them that their rights are being invaded.”
As removing any doubt of the application of these principles to the case at bar, it may be noted that there is no finding that the water in False Bottom creek was ever at any time, within 20 years preceding the commencement of the action, insufficient to- supply each of the parties all the water to which he was entitled, through beneficial use, while, on the contrary, there is an express finding that all parties, both plaintiff and defendants, have had all the water which each is claiming for more than 20 years prior to the summer of 1911, when the water in the stream for the first time became insufficient to supply all parties, and the claims of the defendants first became adverse to plaintiff’s rights.
In the case of Egan v. Estrada, 6 Ariz. 248, 56 Pac. 721, the Supreme Court held, as stated in the syllabus, that:
“When there is sufficient water in the river to supply all parties, there can be no such thing as adverse use of the water to start the statute of limitations running. Each is entitled to the use, and it is only when the water becomes so scarce that all of the parties cannot be supplied and that one appropriator takes water which by priority belongs to another appropriator, that there is an adverse use.”
This court in the case of Redwater Land & Canal Co. v. Jones, 27 S. D. 194, 130 N. W. 85, recognized the same rule when it said:
“The trial court found that said claim was never made adversely as against the defendant until the year 1901, in which year, for the first time, the said plaintiff diverted all of the waters of the said- Redwater river. The court further- found, in substance, that until the year 1901 there had always been sufficient water in the Redwater river to supply the wants of defendant as riparian owner. Defendant could claim no more than this, and could not*450 complain unless deprived of it. The evidence conclusively shows that plaintiff in the year 1901, for the first time, made adverse claim to appropriate all the waters of Redwater river as against the riparian rights of the defendant. Plaintiff’s use and appropriation of 4,000' inches of water from this stream for 20 years, without detriment to respondent’s riparian rights, did not constitute an adverse user or appropriation.”
In Egan v. Estrada, 6 Ariz. 253, 56 Pac. 722, supra, the reason for the rule is well stated:
“■When there is a sufficiency of water in the river, the prior appropriator is not entitled to the water used by the subsequent appropriator, and the subsequent appropriator can use under his appropriation without being an -adverse user.”
In discussing the adverse use of water, the Supreme Court of Montana in Bullerdick v. Hermsmeyer, 32 Mont. 541, 81 Pac. 334, said:
“In no case does such use become adverse until some superior right is infringed and the owner of it suffers deprivation. If it becomes and continues adverse and exclusive for the full period prescribed by the statute, and the owner suffers the consequent deprivation, such use ripens into a right by prescription.”
The same rule is recognized in Talbott v. Butte City Water Co., 29 Mont. 17, 73 Pac. 1111; Anaheim Water Co. v. Semi-Tropic Water Co., 64 Cal. 185, 30 Pac. 623. In Bossard v. Morgan, 7 Idaho, 215, 61 Pac. 1031, the court says:
“The findings established that, during the time that defendant was appropriating, diverting, and using the waters claimed by him, the plaintiffs were appropriating, diverting, and using for beneficial purposes (not wasting) the waters claimed by them, respectively. Plence there was ik> adverse user of the waters claimed by the plaintiffs by the defendant. As against the plaintiffs, the use of waters from Stockton creek lacked every essential element of adverse use and possession. There was no deprivation of possession or use as against plaintiffs, and no' claim of adverse title asserted against them by defendant. Without these essentials, there was and could be no adverse possession or user of the water claimed by the plaintiffs on the part of the defendant. Hence his plea of the statute of limitations must fail.”
In Kinney on Irrigation and Water Rights, § 463, the author-says:
“Without here going into the question of the rights which may •be acquired to the exclusive use of the water under the Arid Region doctrine of appropriation, regardless of the locality or the place of use, in reference to the natural stream, the rule of 'reasonable use,’ which absolutely governs those rights to water founded wholly upon the common-law doctrine of riparian rights, does not permit one riparian proprietor to irrigate or otherwise use the water from the natural stream, where the equal or correlative rights of other riparian proprietors upon the same stream are injured or infringed upon thereby. The place where the water may be used is restricted only by the duty to refrain1 from injuring others, and the limit of the right is at the point where it infringes upon the rights of others.”
See, also, Redwater Land & Canal Co. v. Reed, 26 S. D. 466, 128 N. W. 702.
Under this rule, any one of the parties might be entitled, as a riparian owner, to more or less than one-fifth of the water. The fact of equal acreage does not raise a presumption that the riparian rights are equal. There are no facts found which sustain the conclusion of the trial court. We think that we would not be justified in affirming the judgment as to the defendants Westgate and Goforth, based upon their riparian rights without a specific finding as to what would be a reasonable riparian' use of the 'waters for
It follows that a new trial must be ordered.