40 Wash. 414 | Wash. | 1905
This action was begun by respondents, to recover damages and to restrain the appellant from maintaining a dam across an arm of Liberty lake in Spokane county. On the trial of the ease, the court below entered an order enjoining the use of the dam, and directing appellant within sixty days to commence an action for the condemnation of respondents’ littoral rights in and about the arm of the said lake extending upon the respondents’ premises. Lrom that order, this appeal is prosecuted.
The facts agreed to upon the trial are substantially as follows: Liberty lake is a body of water averaging about three-fourths of a mile in width, about one and three-fourths miles in length, and of an average depth of eighteen feet. There is no navigable inlet or outlet to this lake. To the northwest from the main body of the lake, an arm of the lake extends over and across lands owned hy respondents. These lands were acquired by a patent from the United States in October, 1886, before the adoption of the state constitution. LTo part of this arm of the lake lying upon respondents’ land has ever been navigable for any purpose. The appellant, or its predecessors in interest, in the year 1899, entered upon the arm of the lake to the east of rer spondents’ lands, between said lands and the main body of the lake, and constructed a dam across said arm and erected head gates therein, and to the west of respondents’ lands constructed a canal from the arm of the lake to lands to be irrigated. The effect of the dam and the said canal is to withdraw the water of Liberty lake entirely from respondents’ premises, so that respondents’ access to the water on their land has been entirely destroyed, except for water which
Appellant makes two contentions upon this appeal, as follows: (1) That respondents by their conduct have lost all right to any relief on the ground of estoppel, or, if not to all relief, at least to injunctive relief, and on this last assumption should have been granted only damages for trespass; (2) that, under the laws of this state-, the respondents have no legal right to have the waters of Liberty lake remain in their natural condition, and hence any harm they may have suffered by the withdrawal of the water from their riparian land was damnum absque injuria.
Upon the first question, the only facts which in any manner tended to create an estoppel are that the- respondents knew that appellant was building the dam, and constructing the head gates and .canal, and expending large- amounts of money, and that the next year after the- works were completed respondents cultivated about three acres of the land drained by said canal. Hone of the work of building the dam or head gates or canal was upon respondents’ lands and it is not shown that respondents- knew that these structures would entirely drain the water from their lands. It is fair to presume, in the absence of such showing, that respondents
“To constitute it [an estoppel] the person sought to he estopped must do some act or make some admission with an intention of influencing the conduct of another, or that he had reason to believe would influence his conduct, and which act or admission is inconsistent with' the claim he proposes now to make. The other party, too; must have acted upon the strength of such admission or conduct.”
Eone of the elements of estoppel, as thus defined, are found in this case. Eespondents are not shown to have done any act, or made any admission; which influenced, or was intended to influence, the appellant to construct the dam or head gates or canal where they were constructed. If the work had been done upon respondents5 lands, and they had stood by and encouraged the same by making no objections thereto, a different condition would have existed; hut' the work was done upon lands belonging to others, where respondents had no right to object, and where appellant no doubt had a right to he. The mere fact that respondents knew that appellant was constructing its dam, ditches, and head gates, was no notice to the respondents that appellant would damage or take lands for the purpose of using such improvements without first paying for such damages or lands. The case of Rigney v. Tacoma Light & Water Co., supra, fully discusses the point here made, and is decisive of this case upon the question. The fact that respondents, after the damage had been done; attempted to utilize a part of the land, did not amount to a waiver of their right to maintain the action.
“That the lake mentioned in the pleadings as Liberty lake is a body of water of the average width of about three-fourths of a mile, and the lake being about a mile and three-fourths in length and of an average depth of eighteen feet last year. That for several years last past there has been running on said lake a pleasure steamer that will carry about fifty passengers, and that said passengers are carried for hire during the camping season, said boat being propelled by steam. There are no cities or villages upon the lake, and the lake has never been used for business or commercial purposes, except as above stated, and there is no navigable inlet or outlet to the lake. That there is one hotel upon the east side of said lake, and one hotel on the west side of said lake, and one store, a general merchandise store, on the north side of said lake, being a small grocery store. The hotels are open only during the camping season in the summer.”
There can be no reasonable doubt that this lake, as above described, is navigable in fact and falls within the provisions of § 1, art. II, of the state constitution; but, in our opinion, the fact that the lake is a navigable body of water makes no material difference in this case. The title of respondents to their land was acquired from the United States prior to the adoption of the state constitution, which reserves the vested rights of the respondents. The irrigation act, under which appellant was organized, also provides that the right to take water for irrigation is “subject to rights existing at the time of the adoption of the constitution of this state-.” Laws 1899, p. 261. When it is conceded, as it is in this case, that
“The right of the state over the waters of Lake Whatcom is such as pertains to sovereignty alone. That is the right to use, regulate) and control these waters as a common highway for commerce, trade, and intercourse, and to grant the soil in the bed of the lake, so that it might become private property, subject to the paramount right of public use for navigation. In short, that the rights of the state in the navigable waters thereof are the same rights as pertained to the sovereign at common law in the sea, its bays, arms, and inlets. But conceding that by art. 17, § 1, of the constitution absolute ownership is now in the state, so that the state can dispose of the waters as well as the soil, the vested rights of the respondent, notwithstanding, are preserved to it-. That is the right to the use of the water in its natural flow as it existed before the adoption of the constitution, when the United States granted to Russell V. Peabody, under the ‘Donation Act’ the land over which Whatcom creek flows, of which the lands of the respondent are a part.. The constitution having reserved to the respondent its vested rights, the legislature, except under the power of eminent domain, upon making compensation, could not divest it of that right, either directly or indirectly, for a public or private use.”
The case from which this quotation is made is similar in all essential particulars to the case before us, and is in point. The principal difference in the two cases is that in this case the water which stood upon respondents’ land is an arm of the lake without a natural outlet, while in the New Whatcom case the water flowed from the land in a natural stream over
Under these considerations, the judgment of the lower court was right, and is affirmed.
Dunbab, Hadley, Cbow, Root, and Rudkin, JJ., concur.
Eullebton, J., took no part.