59 P. 561 | Idaho | 1899
— This action was brought by the plaintiff to settle the right to certain waters to which both plaintiff and defendants assert claims. From the judgment of the district court, as well as from the order denying a new trial, plaintiff appeals.
The district court finds that the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest own and have been in possession of three hundred and twenty acres of land, as claimed in his complaint; that the same have been owned and possessed by plaintiff and his predecessors in interest since 1870; that in 1870 the predecessor in interest of the plaintiff appropriated forty inches of the waters in dispute, and diverted them to and upon the said lands. Said court also finds that in the month of May, 1893, the predecessor in interest of the defendants appropriated twenty-five inches of said water for use upon the lands owned by them, and the judgment of the district court is based upon such findings. It seems from the evidence that the water in question flows from certain springs upon the land of the defendant J ones, lying adjacent to the lands of plaintiff, but which lands were a part of the public domain at the time the predecessors of the plaintiff located and appropriated said waters. It appears that from 1870 until 1897 the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest used the entire volume of water flowing from said springs in irrigating the lands cultivated by them, but that — as very frequently occurs in this country — the lines of survey not yet being established, or, if established, not clearly understood, the plaintiff’s predecessors had conducted a part of said waters upon some adjoining land not included in the tract owned by them. The tract so included (as shown by the map in evidence) amounted to something over twenty acres, and is a part of the tract of land now owned by the defendants, and of which their predecessor became possessed in 1893. There is no question but the running of the waters upon the lands now owned by the defendants occurred through a mistake as to the location of the lines of plaintiff’s lands. The con