89 P. 752 | Idaho | 1907
This action was originally commenced in the district court in and for Custer county in the year 1898, to determine the rights and priorities of the plaintiffs in and to the waters of Warm Springs creek within that county. Issue was thereafter joined and a stipulation was filed by counsel, whereby judgment was authorized in favor of the plaintiffs and was thereafter accordingly entered. On the twenty-second day of June, 1898, the defendant, having in the meanwhile discharged his former counsel and employed other counsel, began proceedings to have the judgment set aside and vacated. After a hearing, Hon. C. O. Stockslager, then judge of the fourth judicial district, granted the application and set aside the judgment. The case appears to have then taken a long -rest until 1901, when it was again tried, but findings and judgment were not made and entered until June 24, 1902. A motion for a new trial was thereafter made and a statement to be used on motion for a new trial was prepared, served and thereafter settled. The case was then transferred to the judge of the third judicial district for hearing upon the motion for a new trial, and on the sixth day of January, 1906, an order was duly made granting a new trial, and this appeal is from that order.
Our examination of the entire record and the briefs and arguments of counsel satisfies us that the ease does not demand any lengthy or extensive consideration in this opinion. We will, therefore,-briefly mention the leading questions presented and announce our views thereon.
It is first insisted by counsel for appellant that the statement on motion for a new trial should not have been considered by the court on the motion for new trial, for the reason that it had not been filed for some four to six months after it was settled and allowed. The statement bears two dates of settlement; first, October 7, 1902, and, second, December 31, 1902. This statement does not appear to have been filed until April 22, 1903. There is nothing disclosed in the record that would have justified the court in rejecting the statement, although not filed for several months after settlement. (Reay v. Butler, 69 Cal. 572, 11 Pac. 463.) It is the duty of the party preparing a statement to serve the same on the adverse party, and in due time it must be “presented to the judge who tried or heard the case for settlement, or be delivered to the clerk of the court for the judge.” (Rev. Stats., secs. 4430 4441.) When settled, it
It is argued here, however, that the statement clearly fails to contain all the evidence introduced in the case, and for that reason alone it should not have been considered for the purpose of passing on the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the findings and judgment. It is true that it does appear that some documentary evidence was introduced that is not contained in the record or brought up, but it is also true that the judge in settling the statement certified that it is “correct and contains all the evidence introduced or considered herein.” With this certificate from the judge and counsel on both sides chargeable with knowledge thereof, we must assume that whatever was left out was unimportant and immaterial, and in no way influenced the decision of the trial judge.
On the question of reviewing the action of the judge of the third district in granting a new trial, counsel for appellant urge that under the rule heretofore considered and announced by this court in Roby v. Roby, 10 Idaho, 139, 71 Pac. 213, we should review and weigh all the evidence contained in the record, the same as if the case were here in the first instance for determination on the weight and preponderance of the evidence.
It will be remembered that the judge who heard the motion and granted a new trial did so entirely on the evidence as it appeared in the statement of the case; the trial had not taken place before him, and he had not seen nor heard any of the witnesses while testifying. In this condition of the case, we agree with counsel that it becomes our duty to examine and weigh the evidence the same as the nisi prius court should do.
If the defendant who lives above plaintiff is entitled to a priority for forty-five inches of water, he may unquestionably divert that quantity, but when he has once done so, he may not dam the stream below or hinder or impede the flow of the remaining stream to the plaintiff’s headgate. The fact that such dams and impediments hold the water and cause a subirrigation of the adjacent meadows cannot of itself justify the maintenance of such obstructions. Whatever amount of water defendant shows himself entitled to for the irrigation of his meadows or other lands as a prior right over the plaintiff, the judgment should so decree, but beyond that he cannot go under any other pretext or claims for the natural condition of the stream. ■“
In this arid country where the largest duty and the greatest use must be had from every inch of water in the interest of agriculture and home-building, it will not do to say that a_ stream may be dammed so as to cause subirrigation of a few acres at a loss of enough water to surface-irrigate ten times as much by proper application.
The order granting a new trial is affirmed. Costs awarded ' in favor of respondents.