118 P. 769 | Idaho | 1911
This is an appeal from an order granting a temporary injunction. The plaintiff, Frank D. Ryan, commenced an action in the trial court against the Weiser Valley Land & Water Co. for an injunction enjoining and restraining the company from maintaining a dam and flooding plaintiff’s land.
Respondent’s land is situated in what is known as Lost Valley. Lost creek flows through the valley, and at a short distance below the lands of the respondent enters a canyon, forming a natural reservoir site in the basin above where these lands are located. The appellant company built a dam across the creek at the point where it enters the canyon for the purpose of creating a reservoir or storage basin for collecting water to be used for irrigation purposes on the desert lands several miles below. An action was subsequently commenced by the company to condemn these lands and at that time the respondent, being a resident of the state of Kansas, removed the action from the state to the federal court. The case proceeded in the federal court to final judgment. The land and water company was dissatisfied with the judgment and prosecuted an appeal to the circuit court of appeals. When the condemnation suit was first called in the federal court, the
The company has prosecuted this appeal, and now argues that the lower court was without jurisdiction, for the reason that the case was pending in the federal court, — a court of concurrent and co-ordinate jurisdiction and which had first acquired jurisdiction of the matter; and, secondly, appellant contends that the respondent was estopped from maintaining this action by reason of laches. It is also argued that the order was in the nature of a mandatory injunction, and should not have issued until after a final hearing. We will deal with these questions in the order in which they have been suggested.
In the first place, there is no conflict of jurisdiction between the state and federal court in this case. The federal court obtained jurisdiction in the condemnation proceeding, and so far as the record here shows, the case is proceeding in the regular way in the courts of the United States looking to a final determination of the matter on appeal. That fact, however, cannot, under any known principle of law, give the condemnor any right to the possession of the land sought to be condemned until it first pays such just compensation as may be ascertained in the manner prescribed by law. (Sec.
This leads to the other question as to whether the respondent was guilty of such laches as would estop him from prosecuting this action for a writ of injunction. The only facts which it is claimed constitute the estoppel were these: The company constructed the dam sometime during the autumn of 1909, and had not completed the same at the time of the commencement of the action for condemnation. The land owner at no time objected to the construction of the dam or forbade the same. The dam was not on the respondent’s land,
Counsel for appellant cite New York v. Pine, 185 U. S. 93, 22 Sup. Ct. 592, 46 L. ed. 820, Fresno St. Ry. Co. v. S. P. R. R. Co., 135 Cal. 202, 67 Pac. 773, Lewis on Eminent Domain, p. 1516, N. P. Ry. Co. v. Smith, 171 U. S. 260, 18 Sup. Ct. 794, 43 L. ed. 157, Miocene Ditch Co. v. Jacobsen, 146 Fed. 680, 77 C. C. A. 106, and a long list of other cases to the effect that one cannot stand by and see valuable improvements erected on his land and keep silent, and thereafter successfully prosecute his action to enjoin the maintenance of such improvements. These cases hold that “the right to an injunction may be lost by delay during which the defendant has expended large sums of money and the public have acquired an interest,” and this doctrine is particularly strong and particularly applicable in cases where it is shown that the land owner had full notice of the work that was being done and that his land was being taken, and that the work was of a permanent character and of a public or qwasi-public nature in which the public had acquired certain rights. ,We have
Considerable has been said in this case about the value of the respondent’s land and the comparative damage and injuries that would be inflicted as between the land owner on the one side and the water company and the water consumers on the other. No question of valuation can enter into a case where a man is the absolute owner of a tract of land and is seeking to obtain or protect the possession and occupation of the same as against a trespasser who shows no right thereto. In such a case, it becomes a plain and simple proposition of protecting property rights. We have endeavored in a long line of cases in this state to make it so plain that everyone may know and understand that property rights in Idaho are sacred, and that it does not make a- particle of difference whether it be of the value of a dollar or a million, it must, in the ultimate judgment of the court, all amount to the same thing in the matter of its protection and preservation to its owner.
In La Veine v. Stack-Gibbs Lumber Co., 17 Ida. 51, 134 Am. St. 253, 104 Pac. 666, we had occasion to consider this question as it was sought to be applied to a land owner, and in dealing with a lumber company which had entered upon the lands of another without right or authority, and said:
In Shephard v. Coeur d’Alene Lbr. Co., 16 Ida. 293, 101 Pac. 591, this court, in passing upon the right of a land owner abutting on the Coeur d’Alene Lake to have her property protected against the booming of lumber and logs on the waterfront, said:
“Whether-this right of ingress and egress is of any particular value to respondent or not can make no difference to the appellant; it is a property right of respondent’s that must be respected, and she had a perfect right to resort to the court for the remedy she sought in this case.”
In Meyer v. First National Bank, 10 Ida. 175, 77 Pac. 334, this court, in discussing the right of the property owner to have injunction as a proper relief where his property was being trespassed upon and appropriated to the use of the trespasser, said:
“A party is not under the necessity of waiting till his property has been damaged and destroyed -and his business disorganized and his premises encroached upon to the extent of his own ouster, and then resorting to an action at law for redress. ’ ’
Many other cases might be cited from this court which hold substantially to the same effect as enunciated in the foregoing excerpts. The courts of this state have endeavored to supplant the use of force for the protection of property by orders and decrees in equity which have been found to be equally as- effective as violence, fully as protective, much less destructive, and a great deal more orderly. We feel that in this
The order appealed from should be, and it is hereby, affirmed. Costs awarded in favor of the respondent.
Petition for rehearing denied.