9 N.M. 292 | N.M. | 1898
This is a suit in equity brought by the United States to restrain the Bio Grande Dam & Irrigation Company from constructing or maintaining a dam across 'the Eio Grande river, in the territory of New Mexico. The structure especially aimed at is a dam projected and about to be built by the defendant company at a point called “Elephant Eutte,” the object of which is to take water from the river, and store it in reservoirs, for the purpose of irrigation. 'The ground upon which the claim of the government is predicated is that the Eio Grande is a navigable river, and that the proposed dam will obstruct the navigation of the river, the flow of waters therein, and interfere with its navigable capacity; and that such obstructions would be contrary to the treaty with Mexico, and in violation of the acts of congress. A preliminary injunction was granted, and defendant ordered to shpw cause why it should not be continued. The defendant answered, denying that the Eio Grande is a navigable river, and also filed pleas justifying under its right of way for canals and reservoirs secured under the act of congress of 1891 and certain territorial laws. Upon the hearing the court below held that upon the facts presented by affidavit, as well as other facts ' of which it took judicial notice, the Eio GrarL(ie is not a navigable stream within the territory of New Mexico, and that the bill does not state a case entitling it to the relief prayed; and, upon the complainant’s declining to amend its bill further, the court dissolved the injunction and dismissed the bill. Erom that judgment the United States appealed to this court.
"We think the whole question turns upon the applicability of the acts of congress above mentioned. By their express terms these acts deal only with navigable waters. Unless the Eio Grande is a navigable stream, and its “navigation,” or “navigable capacity,” will be obstructed by tbe proposed dam, these statutes do not apply to tbe case, and can not be invoked to enable the government to stop the progress of tbe work by injunction. It is alleged in tbe original bill that tbe Eio Grande, from and including the site of tbe proposed dam, has been used to float logs for commercial and business purposes, and for affording a means for commercial traffic within and between tbe territory of New Mexico and tbe state .of Texas and tbe republic of Mexico. In tbe amended bill it is alleged that tbe said river is susceptible of navigation for commercial purposes up to La Joya, in tbe territory of New Mexico, about one hundred miles above Elephant Butte. In both tbe river is alleged to be navigable at certain points below El Paso. It is conceded that tbe navigability of waters is a matter of which courts take judicial notice., Tbe record contains a large mass of information, in tbe form of maps, reports of exploring and surveying expeditions made under tbe direction of tbe war and interior departments, and also reports of officers specially detailed to investigate tbe feasibility of rendering tbe river commercially navigable by improvements, and also its capability of supplying reservoirs for irrigation. Erom these and other data tbe following facts, as stated in tbe opinion of tbe court below, are well established:
Tbe course of tbe Eio Grande in New Mexico is through rocky canons and sandy valleys. In tbe valley it spreads out, shallow and between low banks, over fine, light, sandy soil, of great depth. Bars are continually forming, passing away, and reforming, and tbe quicksands in tbe bed of tbe stream and along its margin are perilous to life. Tbe fall is from four to fifty-two. feet to tbe mile, and tbe changes in its course are rapid, continual, and often radical. Tbe valley is scarred with low ravines made by its progress in different places. In all tbe period of time only two instances were shown when tbe river was actually utilized for tbe conveyance of merchandise, and these were of timbers. One of these instances occurred in 1858 or 1859, when a raft was sent down from Canutillo to El Paso, a distance of twelve miles; and the other recently, when some telegraph poles were floated from La Joya a “short distance.” “The water of the stream, especially in central and southern New Mexico, is heavily loaded with silt. The channel of the river through these valleys is usually choked with sand, and in times of low water the stream divided into a number of minor channels, and apparently a large percentage of the water is lost in these great deposits of fine material.” 12 Ann. Rep. Geol. Sur. 204. “From Bernalillo, N. M., to Ft. Hancock, Tex., the Pio Grande is in the highest degree spasmodic, with immense floods during a few weeks of the year, and a small stream during the remainder of it.” 10 Ann. Rep. Geol. Sur., p. 99. “Erom personal observation, I know that these seasons of flood and drouth (in the Pio Grande) were of about the same character thirty years ago.” Maj. An-son Mills, 10 U. S. Cav. Rep. Spec. Com. Sen., volumes 3, 4, p. 39. But, what is of more importance, we have reports of officials upon the exploration of the river, made under the direction of the government, for the special purpose of considering its navigability. From these it appears: “The stream is not now navigable, and it earn not be made so by open channel improvement. An accurate survey and hydrometric observations would be necessary to determine positively whether an improvement by locks and dams could be made or not, bufe the heavy fall of the river, the lowness of its banks, and the small discharge do not encourage the belief that such improvement would be financially, even if physically, practicable.' Certainly there is no public interest which would justify the expenditure of the many millions of dollars which such an improvement would involve. The irrigation of the valley is a matter in which the inhabitants are now deeply interested, while the possible navigation of the river receives little or no attention from them. * * * In my judgment, the stream is not worthy of improvement by the general government.” Report of O. H. Ernst, Major of Engineers, to Secretary of War, 1889. Again: “I consider the construction, not only of an open- river channel, but of any navigable channel, to be impracticable. * * * During the greatest part of the year, when the river is low, the discharge would be insufficient to supply any navigable channel, except, perhaps, a narrow canal with locks, the construction of which, on a foundation of sand, in places forty feet deep, would be financially, if not physically, impracticable.” Report of Gerald Bagnall, Assistant Engineer, to Secretary of War, 1889.
The navigability of a river does not depend upon its susceptibility of being so improved by high engineering skill and the expenditure of vast sums of money, but upon its natural present conditions. In The Daniel Ball, 10 Wall. 557, the supreme court'says: “Those rivers must be regarded as public navigable rivers in law which are navigable in fact, and they are navigable in fact when they are used or are susceptible of being used, in the ordinary condition, as highways for commerce, over which trade 'and travel are or may be conducted in the customary modes of trade and travel on water.” In The Montello, 20 Wall. 431, the court says: “If it be capable in its natural state of being used for purposes of commerce, no matter in what mode that commerce may be conducted, it is navigable in fact, and becomes a public river or highway. * * * The vital and essential point is whether the natural navigation of the river is such that it affords a channel for useful commerce.” The court approves the language of Chief Justice Shaw in Rowe v. Bridge Corp., 21 Pick. 344, who said: “In order to give it the character of a navigable stream, it must be generally and commonly useful to some trade or agriculture.” See, also, Morrison v. Coleman, 6 South. Rep. (Ala.) 374. Of course, it need not be perennially navigable, but the seasons of navigability must occur regularly, and be of sufficient duration and character to subserve a useful public purpose for commercial intercourse. While the capacity of a stream for floating logs, or even thin boards, may be considered, yet the essential quality is that the capacity should be such as to subserve a useful public purpose. Ang. Water Courses, 335. In a recent case the supreme court of Oregon says (Haines v. Hall, 20 Pac. Rep. 835), per Thayer, C. J.: “Whether the creek in question is navigable or not for the purposes for which appellant used it depends upon its capacity in a natural state to float logs and timber, and whether its use for that purpose will be an advantage to the 'public. If its location is such, and its length and capacity so limited, that it will only accommodate but few persons, it can not be considered a navigable stream for any purpose. It must be so situated, and have such length and capacity, as will enable it to accommodate the public generally as a means of transportation.” And in the same case, Lord, J., said: “It must be susceptible of beneficial use to the public,” be “capable of such floatage as is of practical utility and benefit to the public as a highway.” And of the stream then in question he says: “It is not only not adapted to public use, but the public have made no attempt to use it for any purpose.” Haines v. Hall (Oregon), 3 L. R. A. 609. The supreme court of Alabama says: “In determining the character of a stream, inquiry should be made as to the following points: Whether it be fitted for valuable floatage; whether the public or only a few individuals are interested in transportation; whether any great public interests are involved in the use of it for transportation; whether the periods of its capacity for floatage are sufficiently long to make it susceptible of use, beneficially to the public.” Rhodes v. Otis, 3 Ala. 578; Peters v. Railroad Co., 56 Ala. 528. Indeed, in the letter of inquiry by tlie Honorable Richard Olney, secretary of state, in respect to the facts as to the navigability of the Bio Grande, in interstate commerce, among other essential qualities, he says: “It should be remembered that a mere capacity to float a log or a boat will not alone make a river navigable. The question is whether the river can be used profitably for merchandise. I have been informed that wood is sometimes brought down the river to Oindad Juarez, in flatboats, and that logs are rafted or floated down from the timbered lands on the upper river, for commercial purposes.” Letter January 4, 1897. The secretary of state seems to have been misinformed as tó such use for commerce. This letter was addressed to Col. Anson Mills, at whose request it appears that applications for right of way for irrigation by the use of waters of the Rio Grande, and all its tributaries, were suspended throughout New Mexico and Colorado. The answer of Col. Mills deals almost wholly with the river internationally. The river in its relation to interstate commerce is dismissed by him with the instance of the floating of a raft of logs, in 1859, from a point eighteen miles above El Paso, and the qualifying remark, “It would now hardly be practicable to do so.” Letter January 7, 1897.
It is perfectly clear that the Rio Grande above El Paso has never been used as a navigable stream for commercial intercourse in any manner whatever, and that it is not now capable of being so used. On the other hand, it has been, from the earliest times of which we have any knowledge, used as a source of water for irrigation. Its valley has always been the center of population in New Mexico. It was the first portion of this region to be occupied and settled by civilized men, and the population of this valley has always been, and is now, absolutely dependent for means of livelihood and subsistence upon the use of the waters of this river for irrigation of their fields and crops. Dams have been erected and maintained at El Paso for nearly 200 years, by which the river has been obstructed, and its waters diverted for irrigation to both sides of the Rio Grande. But never until the present time, so far as we can ascertain, has any question been raised by any one as to interference with any use of the river for purposes of navigation. Indeed, it appears from the affidavits and reports presented in support of the bill in this case that the objection now raised to the construction of the defendant’s dam grows out of the proposed construction of an international dam and reservoir at El Paso, to be constructed under the auspices of the two governments. The investigation of the feasibility of such an international dam and reservoir is being made on behalf of the United States under the authority of congress,thus evincing the deliberate intention of the government, by its political department, to take measures, not for the purpose of improving the navigability of this river, but of permanently obstructing it at a point far below tbe site of defendant’s works, and thus to devote tbe stream to irrigation instead of navigation. One of the affidavits in support of tbe bill is made by the commissioner of the United States engaged upon this investigation, the object of which he states to be “the study of a feasible project for the equitable distribution of the waters of the Rio Grande to all persons residing on its banks or tributaries, having equitable interests therein.” And he also states in one of his reports that “the probable flow of water in the river here (El Paso) is likely to be ample for the supply of the proposed international reservoir, * * * but that the flow will not be sufficient to supply the proposed international reservoir here and allow for the supply for the proposed reservoir of the Rio Grande Irrigation Company, at Elephant Butte, in New Mexico, or any other similar reservoirs in New Mexico, and but one of these schemes can be successfully carried out.” That is to say, in order to render feasible the storage of water for irrigation at El Paso, it is essential to prohibit all similar structures along the river at points above.
From these extracts it seems clearly apparent that the work at El Paso to which the United States has committed its-self, tentatively at least, is not designed to preserve or improve the navigable capacity of the river, but to facilitate the distribution of the waters which may be gathered by obstructing the stream for the benefit of riparian occupants, and that the object of this proceeding is not to secure a public benefit from the navigation of the Rio Grande, but rather, under the guise of a question of navigability of the stream, to- obtain an adjudication of the interests of rival irrigation schemes, in aid of one locality against another. Manifestly, neither the acts of congress cited nor the provisions of the treaty, have any application to questions of this kind, and they can not be invoked to settle conflicting local interests, whose determination must necessarily depend upon entirely different considerations.
The Rio Grande, as we have said, flows, through a region dependent upon irrigation. It is a part of what is known as the arid region of this country, embracing, according to the report of the director of the geological survey, about four-tenths of the entire area of the United States in which the rainfall is not sufficient for the production of crops. Here the paramount interest is not the navigation of the streams, but the cultivation of the soil by means of irrigation. Even if, by the expenditure of vast sums of money in straightening and deepening the channels, the uncertain and irregular streams of this arid region could be rendered to a limited extent navigable, no important public purpose would be subserved by it. Ample facilities for transportation, adequate to all the requirements of commerce, are furnished by the railroads, with which these comparatively insignificant streams could not compete. But, on the other hand, the use of the waters of all these streams for irrigation is a matter of the highest necessity to the people inhabiting this region, and, if such use were denied them, it would injuriously affect their business and prosperity to an extent that would be an immeasurable public calamity. • These conditions have been distinctly recognized in the legislation of congress; for while it has refrained from any attempt to render streams like.the Rio Grande navigable by artificial works, and has not in any way treated them as navigable waters, congress has, by the reservation or survey of reservoir sites along its valley, and the appropriation of large sums of money for the prosecution of investigations and surveys to this end, clearly indicated its purpose to treat these waters as suitable only for irrigation, and to consider such a use of them as the one of commanding importance.
The riparian rights of the United States were surrendered in 1866. R. S., sec. 2339. Prior to that time it had become established that the common-law doctrine of riparian rights was unfitted to the conditions in the far "West, and new rules had grown up, under local legislation and customs, more nearly analogous to the civil law. Recognizing that the public domain could not be utilized for agricultural and mining purposes without the use of water applied by artificial means, and that vast interests had grown up under the presumed license of the federal government to the use of such waters, congress confirmed the rights of prior appropriation of waters by the act above mentioned, where the same “are recognized and acknowledged by the local customs, laws and decisions of the courts.” Section. 2339. The supreme court of the United States, in passing upon this act, observes: “It is evident that congress intended, although the language used is not happy, to recognize as valid the customary law with respect to the use of the water which had grown up among the occupants of the public lands under the peculiar necessities of their condition.” Atchison v. Peterson, 20 Wall. 507; Basey v. Gallagher, Id. 671. And since 1870 patents for lands expressly except vested water rights. Congress has manifested a purpose to extend the largest liberty of use of waters in the reclamation of the arid region, under local regulative control. Following in line with the act of 1866, the act of 1877 authorized the entry of desert lands in the arid region by those who intend to reclaim them by conducting water upon them. This act again distinctly recognized the validity of the right of prior appropriation, and also provided that “all surplus water over and above such actual appropriation and use together with the water of all lakes, rivers and other sources of water supply upon the public lands and not navigable shall remain and be held free for the appropriation and use of the public for irrigation, mining and manufacturing purposes, subject to existing rights.” This act was limited to states and territories in the arid region. 1 Supp. Rev. St., p. 137. Colorado was included in 1891. Id., pp. 941, 942. By the act of 1888 (an appropriation bill) an investigation was directed as to the extent to which the arid region might be redeemed by irrigation. It provided for the selection of sites for reservoirs for the storage and utilization of water for irrigation, and the prevention of overflows, and that the lands designated for reservoirs, ditches, or canals, and all lands susceptible for irrigation therefrom, be reserved from sale or entry. Id., p. 698. In 1890 the reservation from sale or entry of lands, except as to reservoir sites, was repealed. Reservoir sites remained segregated. Id., pp. 791, 792. In the same year it was provided that patents for lands west of the 100th meridian should reserve the right of way for ditches and canals. Id., p. 192. In 1891 public lands were opened to private location for the right of way to the extent of the ground occupied by the water of the reservoir, canals and laterals and fifty feet on the margin. In this act it was provided that “the privilege herein granted shall not be construed to interfere with the control of the water for irrigation and other purposes under authority of the respective states or territories.” Id., p. 946. On the twenty-sixth day of Febuary, 1891, congress opened the reservoir sites, reserved by the government under the act of 1891, to private location, and the local legislators were authorized to prescribe rules and regulations and fix water charges. 18 Decisions Department Interior, p. 168.
Considering the discussions in congress, the reports of committees, and the labors and reports of officials in the interior and war departments, made under congressional directions, it seems quite manifest that'the purpose by the federal government to hold and further redeem the great arid region had become the recognized policy 'and the measure of the highest public importance and necessity. It would seem that at first it was the design to establish and maintain an elaborate system of irrigation at public expense, but the immense cost of such an enterprise seems to have induced its abandonment, temporarily, at least, and in its stead another system has been provided by irrigation at private cost. The system may be incomplete in many of its details, but, such as it is, reservoir sites have been located, surveyed, and established along the streams, navigable and non-navigable, under the immediate directioh of government officials and by authority of congress, and the right to make private entries of others, under the supervision of the secretary of the interior, is also authorized. Bums of extensive irrigation systems, scattered all over New Mexico and Arizona1, of a prehistoric people, show that conditions which have confronted the present age were conditions encountered in the remote past, and apparently overcome. The cultivation of the Bio Grande valley by acequias from the river is mentioned by the earliest of Spanish priests and explorers, and is established by authentic historical memorials, extending back more than two centuries. The law of prior appropriation existed under the Mexican republic at the time of the acquisition of New Mexico, and one of the first acts of this government was to declare that “the laws heretofore in force concerning water courses * * * shall continue,in force.” Code proclaimed by Brigadier General Kearney, September 22, 1846. One of the first acts of the local legislature (1852) after the organization of the territory provided that “all rivers and streams of water, in this territory, formerly known as public ditches or acequias, ¡are hereby established and declared to be public ditches or acequias.” Comp. Laws, see. 6. In 1814 it was provided that “all of the inhabitants of the territory of New Mexico, shall have the right to construct either private or common acequias, and to take the water for said acequias from wherever they can, with the distinct understanding to pay the owner through whose land said acequias have to pass, a just compensation for the land used.” Comp. Laws, sec.- II. In 1881 an act was passed giving authority to corporations to construct reservoirs and canals, and for this purpose to take and divert the water of any stream, lake, or spring, provided it does not interfere with prior appropriations. Sess. Acts 1886-81, chap. 12. Other acts have been passed since upon the subject, in regard to the ¡acquisition of water rights. But this legislation is not peculiar to New Mexico. Its general characteristics are common throughout the west, where the doctrine of prior appropriation prevails. This was the character of local legislation which congress recognized, confirmed -and authorized by the various acts to which reference has been made. The doctrine of prior appropriation has been the settled law of this territory by legislation, custom and judicial decision. Indeed, it is no figure of speech to say that agriculture and mining life of the whole country depends upon the use of the waters for irrigation, and, if rights can be acquired in waters not navigable,none can have greater antiquity and equity in their favor than those which have been acquired in the Eio Grande valley in New Mexico.
It is contended that, because the Eio Grande is capable of navigation- to ®i limited extent several hundred miles below the point of the proposed dam, its construction will, by arresting the flow of ivater in the stream, interfere with its navigable capacity, and that it is therefore prohibited by the act of 1890. From the foregoing discussion of the legislation of congress,and the conditions prevailing in the region under consideration, it would seem to follow that, if there were a conflict between the interests of navigation and agriculture in relation to a stream like the Eio Grande, that of the latter would prevail. Certainly, it should be held to-be under the protection of the courts against any doubtful interpretation or application of a penal statute. If the waters of the Eio Grande are not navigable in New Mexico, which we hold to be the case, then they can not be said to be waters in respect of which the United States has jurisdiction. And certainly, in the absence of some express declaration to that effect, it can not be supposed that congress intended to strike doivn and destroy the most important resource of this vast region, in order to promote the insignificant and questionable benefit of the navigation of the Eio Grande for a short distance above its mouth; for the construction contended for does not limit the prohibition of the act of congress to the Avorks proposed by the defendant. It applies to the maintenance, as well as the original creation, of obstructions. If defendant’s dam at a point where the river is not navigable, is an obstruction to the navigable capacity of the river several hundred miles beloAV, the same must be said of every dam and irrigation ditch which diverts Avater from the river or any of its confluents to their primary sources. If, upon this ground it is competent for the United States to prohibit the erection of defendant’s dam, it is equally competent for it to compel the removal of every dam and headgate heretofore constructed in the Eio Grande and its tributaries, and prohibit the use of their waters for irrigation throughout this entire valley. It is true that courts must administer the law as they find it, and, if it is clear and free from doubt, the consequences, however disastrous, can not be considered as affording grounds for non-enforcement. But in a case like this, where it is sought by intendment, to give to the statute a meaning not apparent on its face, it is the duty of the courts to give full weight to these considerations in determining what was the intention of congress; and in view of the condition and history of the region which would be affected, the unimportance of the Bio Grande as a water way for commercial intercourse at any point, its non-navigability at the place of the proposed construction and for hundreds of miles below, and the evident purpose of congress, by its legislation, to promote irrigation throughout this portion of the country, even to the extent of further obstruction of this very stream. It would, in our opinion, be unreasonable to hold that legislation, which has a definite and well understood purpose, in furtherance of the public interest in those portions of the country to whose conditions it is applicable, was intended to operate to the detriment of the public interests in regions to whose conditions it is not applicable, and where its enforcement would be destructive of the very interests which the legislation of congress has otherwise undertaken to promote.
We, therefore, hold that the work sought to be enjoined in this action is not in violation of any law of the United States, or any treaty, and that the judgment of the district court dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill should be affirmed; and it is so ordered.