199 F. 495 | D. Or. | 1912
In February, 1909, the Legislature of Oregon passed an act for the regulation, control, distribution, use, and determination of the existing rights to the use of the waters within the state. Laws 1909, p. 319. It divides the state into two water-divisions, provides for election of a state engineer and a superintendent for each division, authorizes the creation of the necessary number of water districts, and the appointment of a water master for each district. All applications for the use of the unappropriated waters of the slate are to be made to and approved by the state engineer. It is the duty of the water master to divide the water of the natural streams or other sources of supply in his district among the several ditches and reservoirs according to their respective rights, and in general to supervise and control the use and distribution thereof, subject to the general supervision of the superintendent and the hoard of control. The division superintendent is given general control over the water masters and the execution of the laws relating to the distribution of' water within his division with authority to make such reasonable regulations to secure the equal and fair distribution thereof in accordance with the determined rights as may he needed, not inconsistent with the laws of the state. His actions are subject to appeal to the board of control. The state engineer and the two division superintendents constitute a hoard of control, and, under such regulations as may be prescribed by law, are given supervision over the application, distribution, and division of the waters of the state and the several officers concerned therewith. The decisions of the board are subject to appeal to the courts. Whenever a petition signed by one or more users of water on a stream is filed with the board of control, requesting the determination of the relative rights of the various claimants to the waters of such stream, it is made the duty of the board, if upon investigation it finds the facts and conditions such as to justify, to make a determination of such rights and to fix a time for the beginning of the taking of testimony and the making of such examination as will enable it to determine the rights of the various claimants. And, in case suit is brought for the adjudication of the right to the use of the water in any of the circuit courts of the state, it may be, in the discretion of the court, transferred to the board for consideration as in the act provided. In case the hoard concludes to proceed with the determination of the rights of various claimants to water on any stream, it is required to give notice by publication of the date when the state engineer will begin investigating the flow of the stream and the ditches diverting water therefrom, and the time and place where the division superintendent will begin the taking of testimony. Service of such notice is required to he made by registered mail on each person, firm, or corporation claiming a right to use any of the waters of the stream, or owning or being in possession of lands bordering on or having access thereto, in so far as they can reasonably be ascer
Within six months from the date of the decree, or if appealed from, within six months from the decision of the Supreme Court, the board of control or any party interested may apply to the circuit court for a rehearing.
The determination of the board of control as confirmed or modified by the court is made conclusive as to all prior rights and the right of all existing claimants upon the stream or body of water lawfully embraced in such determination, and it is made the duty of the secretary of the board to issue to each person, corporation, or association represented in such determination a certificate signed by the president of the board and attested by its seal, setting forth its rights as so determined, and such certificate is entitled to record in the office of the county clerk of the proper county.
In November, 1911, R. R. Sitz, Fred Otley, and M. B. Hayes filed a petition with the state board of control, stating that they were users of the waters on Silvies river and its tributaries, and requesting a determination of the relative rights of the several claimants to such waters. The board thereupon made an order granting the petition and fixing a day when the state engineer
The Attorney General of the state in his official capacity and as representing Sitz, Otley, and Hayes and all the other claimants to whom notice has been sent except the Live Stock Company moves to remand the cause to the state board of control on the ground (1) that the proceeding before the board was not at the time the petition for removal was filed a suit of a civil nature at common law or in equity within the meaning of the federal statutes, because the board is essentially an administrative and not a judicial body; (2) that the Live Stock Company and Sitz, Otley, and Hayes are not-the only parties whose rights are involved in the controversy, and that such controversy cannot be fully determined as between them, and complete relief afforded without the presence of all the other claimants to the water; and (3) the proceeding sought to be remanded is in effect one instituted by the state for a judicial determination of the rights of the various claimants to
Xow the preliminary proceedings before the state board of con.trol. in taking testimony and making findings of fact concerning the rights of the various claimants to the waters of a given stream, are, in my judgment, not judicial, but rather administrative. The powers of the board are not brought into action by the filing of a paper in the nature of a complaint setting up asserted rights, but
In so far as the board has jurisdiction over the adjudication of water rights, it is in effect a standing examiner, created by the state, charged with the duty, when requested by the users of water, of examining into and reporting to the court the facts on which the rights of the various claimants'are based, so that such rights may be authoritatively settled and determined by a judicial tribunal. Until the report is made and filed with the court, there is no action or suit within the meaning of the removable statute.
It seems to me, therefore, the motion to remand is well taken on the ground that the proceeding at the time the petition for removal was filed was not an action at law or suit in equity within the meaning of the statute, and the controversy is not wholly between the petitioners and the Rive Stock Company, and is therefore not separable.
Motion to remand is therefore allowed.