70 P. 820 | Or. | 1902
Lead Opinion
delivered the opinion.
There are substantially three defenses set up in the answer: (1) That what plaintiffs designate as the eastern or McCall branch of Buck Creek is not a natural water course; (2) that their cause of suit is barred by the statute of limitations; and (3) that the defendants are entitled by prior appropriation to all the water that will flow within the banks of Buck Creek at the alleged point of division, when the banks are maintained at a uniform height.
The question as to whether there ever was a natural stream of water flowing from the land of defendants down to the land of plaintiffs is difficult to solve from the testimony in the record. The evidence upon that point is conflicting and unsatisfactory. Many of the witnesses testified with a map or plat before them, to which they and counsel referred, pointing out and designating certain places thereon; and, while testimony so taken is intelligible to the persons present, it is not always so to an appellate court, compelled to rely upon the record. Mr. Moore, however, a surveyor and engineer of intelligence, who made a careful survey about the time the suit was begun, testified that he found a small ditch or channel, about two feet wide and two feet deep, leading from the rock dam east for about nine chains, when it disappeared, and the water spread out over the defendants’ meadow in a pond or swale some four chains wide and a few inches deep; that about five chains further east the water, or a portion of it, gathered into another
But it is not necessary to decide that question, as the evidence clearly shows defendants’ right by prior appropriation to such of the water as would naturally flow from Buck Creek through the ditch or channel described. The land now owned by them was formerly swamp or overflowed land, granted to the state by congress in 1860. About the year 1877 one M. P. Martin made application to the state to purchase the land, and received a certificate therefor., which, in January, 1885, he assigned and transferred to W. C. Martin, to whom the state made a deed the same year. At the same time the deed was made, and for some time prior thereto, the latter Martin was and had been in possession of the premises, which he had inclosed, and on which he was using the water flowing in Buck Creek in the necessary irrigation of the same. The land now owned by the plaintiffs was then unoccupied public land, be- . longing either to the state or the general government. The evidence shows that the earliest possible settlement thereon or acquisition of any rights thereto by any of plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest was in July or August, 1886. Martin’s occupancy of and title to his land was therefore prior in time to any rights acquired by the plaintiffs or their predecessors.
In making the diversion or in conducting the water appropriated, use may be made of dry ravines or natural depressions, and, indeed, a natural stream may 'be so used: Simmons v. Winters, 21 Or. 35 (27 Pac. 7, 28 Am. St. Rep. 727); Pomeroy, Rip. Rights, § 48; Butte C. & Ditch Co. v. Vaughn, 11 Cal. 143 (70 Am. Dec. 769); Richardson v. Kier, 37 Cal. 263. So that Martin and the defendants are not prevented from acquiring the right to the use of the water by prior appropriation merely because they used a part of the natural channel of Buck Creek to convey the water diverted by them from the so-called eastern or McCall branch. All that is necessary to make a valid appropriation is that there be an actual diversion of the water from the natural channel or other source of supply, with an intent to apply it to some beneficial use, followed by an actual application to the use designed within a reasonable time: Low v. Rizor, 25 Or. 551 (37 Pac. 82); Nevada Ditch Co. v. Bennett, 30 Or. 59 (45 Pac. 472, 60 Am. St. Rep. 777 and note). The appropriation depends upon the actual capture of the water and its application to some useful or beneficial purpose, and not upon the mode or method by which the appro'priation or diversion is made. If one prevents a stream from overflowing its banks at the low places by means of dams or dilies., or by the same means prevents the water from flowing out through a natural channel or depression leading off from the main stream, thus confining it to the channel and conveying it down to his land below, where he uses it for necessary and reasonable irrigation, his acts will amount to as valid an appropriation of the water so diverted or confined as if he had in fact conducted it to his land through an artificial ditch or conduit. By the construction and maintenance of a dam at the point where plaintiffs allege that the stream divides, Martin and his successors in interest manifested an unmistakable intent to take and use the water which otherwise would have gone down the alleged'eastern channel, and, as they succeeded
Reversed.
Rehearing
On Petition for Rehearing.
delivered the opinion.
‘ ‘ That the whole of said lands are valuable agricultural and farming lands; that for more than seventeen years next preceding the filing of the complaint herein the defendants and their grantors have possessed, occupied, cultivated, used, and improved all of the aforesaid lands, and during all of said times have annually harvested therefrom large and valuable crops of hay, grain, and vegetables, and have pastured large numbers of horses and cattle thereon; that the climate in which said lands are situated is arid, and irrigation is necessary thereon during the months of April, May, June, July, August, September, and October of each year, in order to produce thereon a valuable or any crops, and that said months constitute the irrigating season in the district in which said lands are situated; that with proper irrigation said lands yield annually large and valuable crops of the aforesaid staple products, which without such irrigation they would not do, but would become barren, sterile, and worthless; that immediately west of south of said lands there is a spur or branch of the Yampsay Mountains, known as the ‘Buck Creek Range,’ upon and among which springs and melting snow give rise to and form a stream commonly called ‘Buck Creek,’ which flows and has flowed always in a north and northeasterly direction to and upon defendants ’ said lands; that the said Buck Creek is the same and identical natural stream described in the plaintiffs’ amended complaint herein; that said Buck Creek has a natural and well-defined bed and banks to and upon the lands of the defendants herein described, and that the natural channel of said Buck Creek from its source reaches and extends to defendants ’ said lands, and that the waters of said Buck Creek naturally flow, when unobstructed in their natural channel, to, upon, and over the lands of the defendants, and naturally irrigate and water the said'lands of the defendants, and have so flowed in their natural channel and course ever since the memory of man, and now do in their natural channel flow down said Buck Creek to,; upon, and over the lands of the said defendants hereinbefore described, and that by reason of such natural flow, seepage, and percolation, irrigate and- moisten*60 and make fertile and valuable the said lands, and that the defendants’ said lands are riparian lands on and to the said Buck Creek; that, in addition to such natural flow as aforesaid, the defendants and their grantors, at various points and places on their said lands above described, have placed in the natural channel of said Buck Creek, at varioirs points on their said lands, small dams, and made head ditches therefrom, to assist and increase the irrigation of said lands, in addition to the natural flow thereof, and thereby have made fertile and valuable and irrigated the said lands with the natural flow of the waters of said Buck Creek, and have thus used of the waters of said Buck Creek, for the irrigation of their said lands, during all the times of their occupancy and use thereof, by themselves and their grantors, a sufficient amount thereof to irrigate about 650 acres of land, and that said quantity of land last named has been thus irrigated of and from the natural flow of the waters of Buck Creek as aforesaid during all of said time, and that the necessary amount of water thus to irrigate said land is about 300 inches, measured under a six-inch pressure, and that the use of the waters of Buck Creek, as aforesaid, through their natural flow, is a reasonable and necessary use thereof; that at the point and place designated in plaintiffs’ amended complaint herein is but a break in the bank of the natural channel of Buck Creek, and that all the defendants, or either of them, have had or done to the said break, as well as their grantors, was to keep and prevent said break from washing out to such an extent as to destroy the natural channel of said Buck Creek, and to prevent the waters of Buck Creek from flowing on and over the other portions of defendants’ said lands in the natural channel thereof as hereinbefore described • that said break is not a natural channel or a branch of Buck Creek; and that there was no natural channel of Buck Creek at the time of the commencement of this suit, or at any time before, extending to or upon the lands,, or any part of the lands, of plaintiffs, described in the amended complaint herein. ’ ’
The substance of the defense so alleged is that for more than seventeen years prior to the commencement of the suit the defendants and their grantors have possessed, occupied, and used the land now owned by them', through which Buck Creek flows, and have maintained dams in the stream at various points on their land, including the place designated as the east-
The third separate defense set np in the answer relates to alleged appropriations made by the defendants personally after they acquired title from Martin. Nor can we agree with counsel that there is no evidence to show that Martin actually appropriated and used the waters diverted from the so-called McCall branch by his dam for irrigating purposes. The record is voluminous, and the testimony in some respects confusing, and it may be that the effect of the evidence of one or two of the witnesses is stated in the opinion more strongly than a critical examination of their testimony would seem to justify. But however that may be, it .quite clearly appears from all the testimony that from 1881 down to the time of the commencement of the suit' a dam had been maintained at the head of the so^alled McCall branch, and the water thereby diverted from such branch, and caused to flow down the main channel, and it has been used by Martin and the defendants for the necessary and reasonable irrigation of their land.
A contention is made that, prior to the construction of the rock dam by the defendants, enough water flowed down the so-called McCall branch to supply the plaintiffs’ needs, and therefore they could not complain of the construction or maintenance of the sod dam. The stream at the point where the sod dam was located is only 2 or 2y2 feet deep, and such dam was built as high as the banks, so that any water that went down from that point toward the McCall place must have been from the overflow. The evidence shows that the rock dam complained of is located at the same place where the dirt dam was; that it is no higher, and therefore can prevent no more water from flowing down toward McCall’s than the dirt dam did, so that, if plaintiffs have had less water since the construction of the rock dam than before, it was not because of such dam, but perhaps, as intimated by some of the witnesses, because settlers on the stream above have been diverting and using larger quantities of water than heretofore, and consequently the overflow has been lessened. The petition for rehearing is therefore denied. Rehearing Denied.