98 F. 327 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon | 1899
The complainant, a corporation of California, seeks by its bill to enjoin numerous defendants, citizens of Oregon, from diverting the waters of Sil vies creek, in Harney county, in the state of Oregon. The bill alleges that the complainant is engaged in the business of buying, selling, and raising cattle, sheep, and horses; that it is the owner of large tracts of land in the county of Harney, in the state of Oregon, situated in and about the region lying between the forks of Bilvies river and Malheur Lake, and adjacent to those forks, which lands are described as nearly level, sloping gently towards the south, watered by the Bilvies river, a sluggish stream, with low banks, and, through numerous sloughs, minor channels, and swales, connected with the main channels of the river and its forks; that the waters of said river, when not obstructed or diverted, in their natural How spread over and irrigate and sub-irrigate the complainant’s lands, and produce thereon abundant and valuable crops of wild grass. The bill then sets forth ihe st.eps whereby the complainant obtained title to its lands at various dates, beginning with the year 1874., and avers that a portion (hereof was acquired as desert lands, a portion as swamp and overflowed lands, a portion as university, agricultural, college, and indemnity school lands, and the remainder under the public land laws of the United States. The bill alleges that in 1874 one of the complainant’s predecessors in interest entered into the possession of the lands which lie' between the forks of Silvies river and Malheur Lake, together with
It follows from the foregoing view of the relation of the various parties defendant to the causes of suit that the objection which is urged against the jurisdiction, on the ground that it is not shown that the amount involved as to each defendant exceeds 82,000 exclusive of interest and costs, is not well taken. The liability of the defendants, upon the facts stated in the bill, is not the sum total of a number of individual items, each of which is definitely calculable. The injury is single, and the proportion which each defendant contributes to it is not in the nature of things ascertainable. It may not be demonstrated that any single defendant, because of his diversion of a certain or definite portion of the water, is responsible for that proportion of the damage which is complained of in the bill. The defendants cite and rely upon certain decisions of the supreme court in which it has been held that, in a suit to restrain various state officers from collecting taxes in different counties of the state, the amount in controversy as to each defendant must not be below the jurisdictional limit. Those decisions rest upon grounds which have no application to the present suit. There is no concerted action between state officers in collecting such taxes, and the fact that their rights are to be determined by the construe
It is contended that the bill is subject to a general demurrer for want of equity, for the reason that it fails to allege specifically and with certainty the dates when the defendants first diverted the waters of Silvies river and appropriated the same, and that it fails to state facts sufficient to show that the complainant’s rights are anterior in point of time to such appropriation. On consideration of all the allegations of the bill, I think it sufficiently appears therefrom that the diversion of the water, by the various defendants is averred to be subsequent. in point of time to the appropriation thereof by some of the complainant’s grantors, and the use thereof by the complainant and others of its grántors for the purposes alleged in its bill. Enough is alleged to show such use of the water from the year 1874, and that in 1885 and 1890 various dams and ditches were constructed for further appropriation thereof. The bill asserts the right of the complainant to have all the water flow as it was accustomed to flow before the diversion thereof by the defendants, and charges that, in violation of such right, the defendants have wrongfully entered upon the channels of said river’s forks above the complainant’s lands, and have wrongfully constructed, and are now wrongfully maintaining, divers dams in said channels, with ditches leading therefrom, whereby the water has been diverted from the channels of the river, and the complainant has been deprived of the use thereof. Enough is alleged to show that the complainant is entitled to relief, as against the acts of the defendants, and a general demurrer for want of equity cannot be sustained. If the allegations of the bill are not sufficiently definite and certain, the defendants’ remedy was by a special demurrer. Wescott v. Wicks, 72 Ill. 524; Pogue v. Clark, 25 Ill. 308; Chouteau v. Rice, 1 Minn. 106 (Gil. 83); Stewart v. Flint, 57 Vt. 216; Wilson v. Hill, 46 N. J. Eq. 367, 19 Atl. 1097; Tallman v. Green, 3 Sandf. 437. The demurrer will be overruled.
For jurisdiction of federal courts, as determined by amount in controversy, see noie to Auer v. Lombard. 19 C. C. A. 75, and, supplementary thereto, note to Shoe Co. v. Roper, 30 C. C. A. 459.