94 P. 39 | Or. | 1908
Opinion by
The main issue between the parties is the priority of their respective rights. In 1858, Simon Messenger and J. C. Duncan entered upon the southwest quarter of section 12, township 38 south, range 5 west, then vacant and unappropriated lands of the United States, in Josephine County, through which Williams Creek runs in a northeasterly direction. Near the left or west bank of the stream they erected a sawmill, and appropriated and used 1,000 inches of water from the creek to operate their mill, and incidentally, in a small way, for irrigation of adjacent lands. The head of their ditch intersected the stream on the west side near the southwest corner of the section, and about one quarter of a mile above the mill. After its use at the mill, the surplus water was turned back into Williams Creek. The amount of water furnished by the stream is not definitely determined by the record. It does appear, however, that there was sufficient water during the flood season to operate the mill; but that in occasional seasons of drought it was reduced to between 250 and 300 inches. Messenger afterwards homesteaded the land upon which the mill and ditch are situated, and a patent therefor was issued in 1875, but in the meantime he had sold’ and conveyed his rights, and the title and possession had passed through several hands until it rested in J. T. Layton in 1876. Prior to that time, Layton had also owned and operated some placer mines a mile or more
A right to the use of 32 inches of water was conveyed by Watts to a Mrs. McDaniels for the right of way for his ditch through her lands; and the use of 16 inches to a Mrs. Payne for the same consideration; the water in each case being used for irrigation of arid land. The remainder of the water was divided equally between Watts and his coplaintiff, successor in interest to Knox. In addition to the amount claimed through the extension ditch, Watts permitted Simon Messenger to appropriate 10 inches of the water from the mill ditch, in consideration of his doing one fourth of the repair work from the latter’s home to the head of the ditch. All the remainder of the 1,000 inches originally appropriated appears to have been abandoned by Watts. About the year 1876 Layton, after his sale and surrender of possession of the mill property to Jones, pro
Defendants have objected to the admission or consideration of plaintiffs’ testimony of the oral sale and transfer by Layton to Jones. The objection is that, the legal title and possession of the ditch and mill property being in Layton, after the patent was issued, the transfer of his
“That such an agreement might be specifically enforced, and was a sufficient memorandum in writing to give effect to the contract, we think cannot be disputed. That, by force of such agreement and the possession taken under it, the plaintiff McDonald acquired an equitable estate in the premises, giving him a present right to its full enjoyment, we think clear, and this right, being united with a present possession, enabled him to maintain any action for an interruption of the possession or an injury to the property.”
That case was an action of damages for the diversion of the water of Bear River, to the injury of the plaintiff’s saw and grist mills, situated on that stream, and a judgment awarding damages was affirmed.- Certainly, then, a court of equity, the peculiar province of which is to protect equitable as well as legal estates in real property, ought to grant the extraordinary power of injunction as readily to protect the one as the other.
Moreover, in 1889, when there was a deficiency of water, plaintiffs resisted defendants’ user, and, to assert their rights, tore out the dam maintained by some of these defendants and their predecessors in interest, who thereupon sought by a suit in equity to have plaintiffs enjoined from a continuance of their acts. This litigation terminated in favor of these plaintiffs and in the dismissal of the suit.
The decree of the lower court should be affirmed.
Affirmed.