45 Wash. 621 | Wash. | 1907
The plaintiff, Nesalhous, is the owner of 160 acres of land in the Kittitas valley. He filed his pre-emption declaratory statement April 1, 1871, made final proof September 16, 1873, and patent issued July 1, 1874. The intervener, Caroline B. Walker, is the owner of 160 acres adjoining the lands of the plaintiff and lying immediately to the south thereof. The Caroline B. Walker lands were entered by John Goller, June 11, 1870, and final proof was made September 21, 1870. The intervener has succeeded to the title and all the rights of Goller by mesne conveyances. The defendant, Sophia Walker, is the owner of 160 acres in the form of an “L,” lying immediately to the east and south of the intervener’s land. All three tracts are arid, and to produce agricultural crops, require artificial irrigation. Dry Gulch creek runs in a southerly direction through the several tracts, and the present controversy arose over the right to use the waters of the creek for irrigation purposes. The plaintiff alleged his ownership of the land along the creek, his appropriation and diversion of 160 inches of the water flowing in the creek in the year 1870 for the purpose of irrigating and reclaiming his land and for stock and domestic purposes, the continued use of the water thus appropriated from the date of original diversion up to the present time, that the defendant claimed the right to enter upon his premises and divert the waters of the creek to her own land, depriving him of the use thereof, that the water in the creek was very low at the time of the commencement of the action, and that he required the whole thereof for the proper irrigation of his lands. The prayer of the complaint was for a decree adjudging the plaintiff the first appropriator and the first riparian owner, and enjoining the defendant from diverting the waters of the stream to his prejudice.
The defendant, after denying certain allegations of the complaint, by way of affirmative answer and cross-complaint, set forth and deraigned title to the lands claimed by her, alleged an appropriation and diversion of the waters of the
The court below in its findings and conclusions applied the doctrine of prior appropriation, and if its ruling in that regal'd is correct, the decree should be affirmed, as the findings of the court are sustained by the testimony. If, on the other hand, the rights of the parties are governed by the common law doctrine of riparian rights, the decree is erroneous and must be materially modified. The right to appropriate water for mining and agricultural purposes from water courses on
“According to the common law doctrine of riparian ownership as generally declared in England and in most of the American states, upon the facts in the case at bar the plaintiffs would be entitled to have the waters of Harrison Canon continue to flow, to and upon 'their lands as they were naturally accustomed to flow without any substantial deterioration in quality or diminution in quantity. But in some of the western and southwestern states and territories, where the year is divided into one wet and one dry season, and irrigation is necessary to successful cultivation of the soil; the doctrine of riparian ownership has by judicial decision been modified, or, rather, enlarged, so as to include the reasonable use of natural water for irrigating the riparian land, although such use may appreciably diminish the flow*625 down to the lower riparian proprietor. . . . Of course, there will be great difficulty in many cases to determine what is such reasonable use; and ‘what is such reasonable use is a question of fact and depends upon the circumstances appearing in each particular case.5 . . . The larger the number of riparian proprietors whose rights are involved, the greater will be the difficulty of adjustment. In such a case the length of the stream, the volume of water in it, the extent of each ownership along the banks, the character of the soil owned by each contestant, the area sought to be irrigated by each— all these and many other considerations must enter into the solution of the problem; but one principle is surely established, namely, that no proprietor can absorb all the water of the stream so as to allow none to flow down to his neighbor.55
In Smith v. Corbit, 116 Cal. 587, 48 Pac. 725 it was held that riparian owners are entitled to have their natural wants supplied by using so much of the water as is necessary for strictly domestic purposes, and to furnish drink for man and beast, before any can be used for purposes of irrigation; and after their natural wants are supplied, each party is entitled to a reasonable use of the remaining water for irrigation, and where the interests of the parties will be conserved thereby, the court may apportion the flow of the water of the stream to the respective owners by periods of time, so that each may have the full flow during the designated period. See, also, Jones v. Conn, 39 Ore. 30, 64 Pac. 855, 65 Pac. 1068; Pomeroy, Riparian Rights, § 134.
While the distribution of the water of a stream among riparian owners, according to common law principles, is most difficult, where the stream is long, the riparian owners numerous, and the quantity of water limited, yet in this case each of the parties own the same quantity of land of substantially the same character, their necessities and conditions are substantially the same, and an equal distribution of the water of the creek between them will mete out substantial justice as nearly as substantial justice can be attained.
The decree of the court below is reversed with directions to enter a decree distributing the waters of the creek equally between the plaintiff, the intervener, and the defendant, and quieting the title of the respondent, Sophia Walker, in the ditch over the appellant’s land through which her portion of the water is and has been conducted.
Hadley, C. J., Fullerton, Root, Crow, Mount, and Dunbar, JJ., concur.