delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a bill in equity to enjoin a proceeding before the State Water Board of Oregon looking to the ascertainment and adjudication of the relative rights of the various claimants to the waters of Silvies River in that State, the grounds dpon which such relief is sought being (a) that it is essential to protect a jurisdiction previously acquired by the District Court, and (b) that the local-statute, 3 Lord’s Oregon Laws, Title XLIII, chap.;6; Laws 1913, chaps. 82, 86 and 97, authorizing and controlling the proceeding, is repugnant to the due process of law; clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. An interlocutory injunction was denied by the District Court’ three judges sitting, 217 Fed. Rep. 95, and motions to dismiss the bill as disclosing no right to relief were afterwards sustained.
The plaintiff, a California corporation, owns large tracts of land along the river and claims a vested right to use upon these/ lands a portion of the waters of the stream for irrigation and other beneficial purposes. The defendants are the members of the State Water Board and a few out of many persons and corporations claiming similar rights in the waters of the river. The statute under which the proceeding assailed is being conducted was enacted in 1909 and amended in 1913, and most of the rights affected by the proceeding are claimed to have arisen prior to the
A general outline of the statute, as it has been construed by the Supreme Court of the State,
1
will serve to simplify the questions to be considered. It recognizes that in Oregon rights to use the waters of streams for irrigation and other beneficial purposes may be acquired by appropriation, . adopts a comprehensive scheme for securing an economical, orderly and equitable distribution of the waters among those entitled to their use, incidentally prescribes a mode of determining the relative rights of the various claimants to the waters of each stream, and in large measure commits the administration of the scheme to the State Water Board and officers acting under the supervision of its members.- When one or more users of water from any stream request it the board, if finding that the conditions justify it, is required to set in motion a proceeding looking to an ascertainment and adjudication of all rights to the waters of that stream. Every material step in the proceeding is to be attended with notice and an opportunity to be heard, the adequacy of which is manifest. In the beginning each claimant is required to present to the division superintendent a sworn statement of his claim showing its nature, inception and extent and all the particulars upon which it is based. These statements are to be exposed to public-inspection, so that every claimant may determine whether there is occasion for him to oppose or contest the claims of others. The State Engineer, or a qualified assistant, is to measure the flow of the stream, the carrying capacity of the several ditches taking water
At the time the statute was adopted, and continuously until this suit was begun, there were pending undetermined in the District Court 1 two suits in equity brought by the present plaintiff, one against two Oregon corporations and the other against another corporation of that State, in each of which suits the relative rights of the parties thereto in the waters of Silvies River were in controversy. These rights are reasserted and again brought in controversy in the proceeding before the board.
When that proceeding was first set in motion, the Pacific Live Stock Company, the plaintiff in this suit, presented to the board a petition and bond for the removal of the proceeding, or a part of it alleged to involve a separable controversy, to the District Court of the United States
Thereafter the plaintiff presented to the division superintendent a sworn statement of its claim, accompanied by the fee prescribed, — at the same time protesting that the fee was extortionate, that the matter should be adjudicated in the Federal court and that the local statute was. repugnant to the Fourteenth Amendment. More than two hundred other claimants also appeared and submitted statements of their claims, all being described as higher up the stream than that of the plaintiff. When the statements were opened to public inspection many contests wére initiated. Several of these were against the plaintiff’s claim; a large number were by the plaintiff against other claims, and there were others in which, it is said, the plaintiff was not directly concerned. It was at this stage of the proceeding, and before any evidence was taken in any of the contests, that this suit was brought.
Upon the ássumption (1) that the removal proceedings were effective, (2) that the proceeding before the. board is substantially identical with the pending suits, and (3) that that proceeding is essentially judicial in its nature, the plaintiff insists that the continued prosecution 'of the proceeding before the board constitutes an inadmissible interference with the District Court’s jurisdiction and that this jurisdiction should be maintained and protected by an appropriate injunction.
1
The insistence must
Nothing was accomplished by the removal proceedings. The District Court did not take jurisdiction under them, but, on the contrary, by its remanding order adjudged that they were unauthorized. That order is not subject to review, either directly or indirectly, but is final and conclusive. Jud. Code, § 28;
Missouri Pacific Ry.
v.
Fitzgerald,
The rule that where the same matter is brought before courts of concurrent jurisdiction, the one first obtaining jurisdiction will retain it until the controversy is determined, to the entire exclusion of the other, and will maintain and protect its jurisdiction by an appropriate injunction, is confined in its operation to instances where both suits are substantially the same, that is to say, where there is substantial identity in the interests represented, in the rights asserted and in the purposes sought.
Buck
v.
Colbath,
Referring to a situation resembling that to which this proceeding is addressed, the Supreme Court of Maine said in
Warren
v.
Westbrook Manufacturing Co.,
88 Maine, 58, 66: “To make the water power of economic value, the rights to its use, and the division of its use, according to those rights, should be determined in advance. This prior determination is evidently essential to the peaceful and profitable use by the different parties having rights in a common power. To leave them in their uncertainty, — ■ to leave one td encroach upon the other, — to leave each to use as much as he can, and leave the other to sue at law after the injury,- — is to leave the whole subject matter to possible waste and destruction.” In considering the purpose of the State in authorizing the proceeding the Supreme Court of Oregon said in
In re Willow Creek,
74 Oregon, 592, 613, 617: “To accelerate the.development of the state, to promote peace and good order, to minimize the danger of vexatious controversies wherein the shovel was often used as an instrument of warfare, and to provide a convenient way for the adjustment and recording of the rights of the various claimants to the- use of the water of a stream or other source of supply at a reasonable expense, the state enacted the law of 1909,.théreby
The Supreme Court of the State holds that while the proceeding is pending before the board it is merely pre-
A serious fault in this contention is that it does not recognize the true relation of the proceeding before the board to that before the court. They are not independent or unrelated, but parts of a single statutory proceeding, the earlier stages of which are before the board and the later stages before the court. In notifying claimants, taking statements of claim, receiving evidence and making an advisory report the board merely paves the way . for an adjudication by the court of all the rights involved. As the Supreme Court of the State has said, the board’s duties are much like those of a referee. (And see
Oregon R. R. & N. Co.
v.
Fairchild,
Upon examining the statute and the decisions of the Supreme Court’ of the State construing and applying it we are persuaded that it is not intended that the board shall accept and act upon anything as evidence that is devoid of evidential value , or in respect of which the claimants concerned are not given a fair opportunity to show its true value, or the want of it, in an appropriate way. On the contrary, the statute discloses a fixed purpose to secure timely notice to all claimants of every material step in the proceeding and full opportunity to be heard in respect of all that hears upon the validity, extent and priority of their claims. And while it is true, according to the concessions at the bar, that the sworn statements of claim aré taken
ex parte
in the first instance, it also is true that they .are then opened to public inspection, that opportunity is given for contesting them and that upon the hearing of the contests full opportunity is had for the examination of witnesses, including those making the statements, and for the production of any evidence appropriate to be considered. Thus the fact that the original statements are taken
ex parte
becomes of no moment. And while it is true that the state engineer’s report is accepted as evidence, although not sworn to by him, it also is true that the measurements and examinations shown therein are made and reported in the discharge of his official duties and under the sanction of his oath of office, and that timely notice of the date when they, are to begin is given to all claimants. The report becomes a public document accessible to all and is accepted as
prima facie
evidence, but not as conclusive.
In re Willow Greek,
74 Oregon, 592, 628. Of the occasion for such a report, the Supreme Court of the State says in that case, p. 613: “In a proceeding
The provision that the water shall be distributed in conformity with thfe board’s order pending the adjudication by the court has the sanction of many precedents in the legislation of Congress and of the several States, notably in the provision in the Interstate Commerce Act directing that the orders of the commission shall be effective from a date shortly after they are made, unless their operation be restrained by injunction. These legislative precedents, while not controlling, are entitled to much weight, especially as they have been widely accepted as valid. Although containing no provision for an injunction, the statute under consideration permits the same result to be reached in another way, for it declares that the operation of the board’s order “may be stayed in whole or in part” by giving a bond in such amount as the judge of the court in which the proceeding is pending may prescribe, conditioned for the payment of such dam
Decree affirmed.
Notes
See Wattles v. Baker County, 59 Oregon, 255; Pringle Falls Power Co. v. Patterson, 65 Oregon, 474, 484; Claypool v. O’Neill, ibid. 511; Pacific Live Stock Co. v. Cochran, 73 Oregon, 417; In re Willow Creek, 74 Oregon, 592; In re North Powder River, 75 Oregon, 83.
The suits were begun in the Circuit Court and when it was abolished were transferred to the District Court.
See Rev. Stat., § 720;
Taylor
v.
Taintor,
