17 P.2d 693 | Nev. | 1933
Lead Opinion
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.]
The remedy by certiorari cannot be resorted to where the right of appeal is afforded. Chapman v. Justice's Court,
The decree filed June 17, 1931, settles and determines the questions involved — that Taylor et al., and Ruddell are tenants in common, and, as between themselves, there is no priority to the water after it has been diverted into said Last Chance or Irish-American Ditch; therefore it was final in that respect. W.C. Ruddell, Sr., was an aggrieved party; he appealed from and had a right to appeal from said decree. Kondas v. Washoe County Bank,
Respondent court had jurisdiction of the subject matter and parties. Sections 7928, 7929, 7930 N.C.L.; In *364
Re Water Rights in Humboldt River,
Neither could petitioner appeal from the decree of October 20, 1931, he not being an aggrieved party.
The respondent court was without authority to enter a final decree in form adjudicating but eight out of over five hundred rights presented to it for determination. The intent of the legislature that there shall be but one final decree is, we think, very clearly expressed in sections 36 and 36a of the water law, 7923 and 7924 N.C.L.
The water law has been repeatedly declared by this court to be a special statutory proceeding. Humboldt Land Cattle Co. v. District Court, supra; In Re Humboldt River,
It is further averred in said application that thereafter and on June 5, 1930, John G. Taylor, F.E. Baker, J.H. Hart, Chris Hansen, Alice Taylor, Ada E. Kafader, L. Arobio, C. Arobio, and T.C. Johnson filed a verified petition in said cause and proceeding, wherein it is averred that the said parties last named and the applicant herein, W.C. Ruddell, Sr., for more than forty years have been tenants in common in and to the diverting works necessary to conduct the water of the Humboldt River in and upon certain lands, and in and to such water diverted from said river by and through said ditch; that notwithstanding the objections, demurrer and motion to strike said petition of Taylor and others, made and interposed by applicant, the said presiding judge, after a hearing, on June 17, 1931, made and entered his findings of facts, conclusions of law, and judgment and decree, which in form finally adjudicates and determines the relative rights of the said Taylor and others and this applicant in and to the waters of the Humboldt River stream system and its tributaries, which judgment and decree is in favor of said petitioners Taylor and others and against this applicant; that on October 20, 1931, the said presiding judge made and entered and filed in said court a further and final decree in the *366 same cause; that the said last mentioned decree is a decree which adjudicates all of the relative rights of all of the claimants named in said order of determination to the waters of the said Humboldt River stream system and its tributaries "and in so far as the matters and things alleged in said petition of Taylor and others are concerned, is in favor of your applicant and affiant and against said petitioners John G. Taylor et al."; that said Taylor and others, nor any of them, has appealed from said final decree of October 20, 1931, nor moved to amend, modify, or correct said last mentioned final decree in so far as the subject matter of their said petition is concerned; and that the time allowed by law to so appeal or move expired on April 19, 1932.
The application avers that the respondent court was without jurisdiction and exceeded its jurisdiction in entertaining, hearing, and determining the said petition of the said Taylor and others, or any issue or issues tendered to it by said petition, in that the water law of the State of Nevada, pursuant to which said court acquired jurisdiction in said matter, is a statutory proceeding, and that the same does not provide for the proceeding sought to be initiated by the filing of the petition of the said Taylor and others.
1. The respondents have moved to quash and to dismiss these proceedings for the reason, among others, that it does not appear from the application for the writ that applicant has no right of appeal, nor any plain, speedy, and adequate remedy.
The motion to dismiss and to quash must be denied for the reason that the so-called judgment of June 17, 1931, was not a judgment from which an appeal might be taken. In Re Waters of Humboldt River Stream System,
2-4. We pointed out in Re Water Rights in Humboldt River Stream System,
These provisions of the law seem perfectly clear, and not only to lay down the method of procedure but strictly to limit it to that provided.
We have held in three distinct cases that the water law and all proceedings thereunder are special in their character (Scossa v. Church,
The purpose of the water law is perfectly obvious. It seeks not only to have the water rights adjudicated but to have them adjudicated in such a proceeding as to terminate for all time litigation between all such water users. If the petition of Taylor and others can be permitted, then what is to prevent the filing at some future date further petitions by water users upon the stream system? We can see no escape from the language of the law providing that "there shall be no other pleadings in the cause" than those therein provided for.
The inquiry in this proceeding is limited to a determination of whether or not the inferior court has regularly pursued its authority. Section 9237 N.C.L.; Wilson v. Morse,
A consideration of the unambiguous language of the water law, and of the spirit thereof, leads us inevitably to the conclusion that the respondent court had no authority to entertain the petition of Taylor and others.
It is ordered that the alternative writ be made permanent.
It is further ordered and adjudged that the "Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law and Final Decree Re Claimants under the Last Chance or Irish-American Ditch," dated March 2, 1931, and filed in the above respondent court on June 17, 1931, in the cause entitled: "No. 2804. In the Sixth Judicial District Court of the State of Nevada, in and for the County of Humboldt. In the Matter of the Determination of the Relative Rights of Claimants and Appropriators of the Waters of the Humboldt River Stream System and its Tributaries," be and the same is hereby annulled and declared void and of no effect whatsoever.
And it is further ordered that the petitioner, W.C. Ruddell, Sr., recover his costs herein expended.
Addendum
Rehearing denied. *369