121 P. 961 | Or. | 1912
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The complaint of plaintiffs is practically based upon
In 1898, when the plaintiffs first made the survey for their irrigation ditch, it appears that there was a depression, called a slough or “by-wash,” on the lower part of the ground upon which defendants deposited the mining debris and over which the mining water ran, and in the vicinity of where the plaintiffs established their headgate, extending from that point northerly to the place where the river then ran. In this by-wash much of the mining water coming from the flume found its way to the river. The first line of survey for the irrigation ditch was run up this slough or by-wash and across a portion of the dumping grounds used by the defendants. J. T. Layton, now deceased, was then the owner of the mine, and also the owner of land some distance below, over which the plaintiffs desired a right of way for the ditch. In the negotiations pertaining thereto, Layton objected to the line of the ditch extending in the by-wash. At this point he requested the plaintiffs to abandon the line of the first survey and to construct a flume over this by-wash to the north side thereof, extending the line of survey along the gravel bar on higher ground, so that his mining water and debris would not interfere with the ditch. To all of this the plaintiffs agreed. On January 27, 1899, a deed was executed by Mr. Layton and wife granting the right of way desired by plaintiffs, in which the consideration was expressed as follows:
“The sum of one dollar to them paid and the relinquishment of a certain survey of the south side of the old*62 channel of Applegate Creek on the N. i/2 of S. of the N.W. Vé of S.E. Sec. 17, T. 38 S. R. 4 W. by taking a survey made this day, * *”
The plaintiffs thereupon accepted the deed and changed the line of survey for the ditch. They built a flume across the slough and extended the survey near the northerly side thereof to where the river then flowed. In 1899, the ditch was constructed on the second survey where it remained for about three years, when the river, in its shifting, washed away the flume and head of the ditch, and at the same time washed away a small bar at the head of the old slough connecting the latter with the south channel of the river. The ditch company never rebuilt the flume across the slough or channel, and they located their headgate farther to the southwest, about 150 feet from the south bank of the north channel of the river. They ran the ditch from the south channel of the river down the old by-wash for a short distance to where they constructed a dam, turning the water into the regular ditch. Mr. Layton died in 1905. Up to that time, the mining water mixed with the entire water of the river, did no appreciable harm and there were no tailings or mining debris deposited in the stream sufficient to injure the plaintiffs or interfere with the irrigation ditch.
In mining, the defendants worked out the Farris gulch to about the width of from 100 to 125 yards, and they claim that for several years they deposited the heavier part of the mining debris up the gulch on the ground that had been worked. For two or three seasons prior to the commencement of this suit, the amount of tailings and debris reaching the river seems to have increased. During the season of 1907, there was a deposit of debris, a few feet deep, in the south channel of the river, which was carried away the next winter by the high water. In 1908, there was deposited in this channel near the end of the flume, tailings and debris forming a bar about
In other words, the defendants should be allowed to deposit the debris from their mine upon the land adjacent to the river, substantially as their predecessor, J. T. Layton, did for some time prior to and after the construction of the irrigation ditch by plaintiffs.
The evidence shows that for about two years prior to the commencement of this suit, large quantities of rock, gravel or tailings from the defendants’ mine have been deposited in the Applegate River above the lands belonging to several of the plaintiffs, and near the ditch of the Bridge Point Ditch Company. It is practically uncontradicted that the result of such a discharge, if continued, will be to fill the channel of the stream and cause the same to change its course, and inundate and wash away plaintiffs’ lands. In order to avoid this threatened injury, the defendants should be enjoined from
The decree of the circuit court restrained the defendants from discharging into the river, any sand or silt carried in suspension, during the months of April to September, inclusive. To this extent, the decree should be modified, so as to eliminate from the inhibition “sand and silt carried in suspension,” and should otherwise be affirmed as herein indicated. The plaintiffs should recover costs in the lower court, and each party pay their own costs in this court, and it is so ordered.
Modified.