Blaine County Investment Co. v. Mays

291 P. 1055, 49 Idaho 766, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 174
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1930
DocketNo. 5080.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 291 P. 1055 (Blaine County Investment Co. v. Mays) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blaine County Investment Co. v. Mays, 291 P. 1055, 49 Idaho 766, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 174 (Idaho 1930).

Opinion

*769 GIVENS, C. J.

This action was commenced by respondent to quiet title to certain waters of Little Lost River claimed by it. Various water users of Little Lost River or its tributaries, other than the original defendants, were joined so the action has become in effect an adjudication of all the water rights upon Little Lost River and its tributaries. Honorable L. E. Glennon, an attorney of this court, was appointed referee and held numerous hearings. After a preliminary report of the referee was tendered, hearings were had upon it, arguments made, further evidence taken and then a final report submitted which in turn was argued before the court who thereafter entered a decree based in the main upon the final report of the referee. It is apparent the referee, the learned trial judge and the attorneys gave the entire controversy their most painstaking, careful and studied attention.

The earliest appropriations of water for irrigation on Little Lost River date from 1879. The respondent is a Carey Act segregation of originally some 15,000 acres; only 7,500 have been reclaimed and irrigated. The two principal water rights of the respondent, about which the chief controversies in this action revolve, are two permits numbered 1119, dated January 23, 1905, for 12 second-feet, and 3399, dated January 8, 1908, for 145 second-feet. These permits came by mesne conveyances to respondent. The theory of these permits, as finally evolved, was the construction of a reservoir on Dry Creek and the conveying of the stored water thereof and some of the natural flow of said stream through a pipeline and the natural channel of Corral Creek to Wet Creek, thence into Little Lost River and down the same to the points of distribution.

Dry Creek in its original state flowed only occasionally and at high water into Little Lost River, and it was thought *770 that-there was therein an excessive stream-bed loss which would in large part he corrected by such diversion. Prior to these permit appropriations certain early settlers, whose interests are now held by Perry Basinger, O. P. Williams, the Williams Estate, E. B. Jones and others, having appropriations out of Dry Creek, had constructed what is known as the Farmers’ Canal from Dry Creek to Wet Creek, along an elevation below the pipe-line and Corral Creek. This was done for the purpose of saving water and conveying it more directly to their respective places of use. This canal was constructed about 1891 to 1893. The two permits now belonging to respondent above mentioned were not in effect until after 1905. After the Farmers’ Canal was constructed, but before respondents had completed their operations, J. B. Taylor and Samantha Taylor acquired certain rights in Dry Creek for irrigation purposes and domestic use, their farm lying approximately at the place where the Farmers’ Canal was taken out of Dry Creek. When the respondents constructed their pipe-line they entered into an agreement with the users of the Farmers’. Canal whereby it was agreed that the company would carry the water of the users of the Farmers’ Canal through the pipe-line, it being the theory and purpose of the company that there would then be a saving of water otherwise lost in seepage between the intake of the pipe-line some miles above the intake of the Farmers’ Canal and the outlet of the Farmers’ Canal into Wet Creek, and that this saving would be available for the respondent company. Respondent’s reservoir has always lost a considerable amount of water by seepage and percolation. The reservoir as finally constructed, with a dam eighty-five feet in height, was designed to store some 5,000 acre-feet of water. It has never been possible to hold that amount of water in the reservoir. The reservoir is filled twice during any one year; the water first stored during the late fall and winter is used by the company for early spring irrigation. The reservoir is again filled to the extent possible by the spring run off which generally occurs along between March and June. The water thus stored is used for summer consumption.

*771 Appellants claim that the work under these two permits was not done within the time prescribed; that a quota of work only sufficient to prove up on one permit was used as proof for both permits; in other words, as they express it, the proof was pivoted, and the rights claimed under these permits and appropriations were lost because not asserted in previous litigation resulting in decrees previously rendered and adjudicating the waters of Little Lost River.

There is in the record a judgment-roll of the adjudication of the waters of Little Lost River ending in a decree rendered in 1901. Therein, but without any further pleadings, record or files in connection therewith, or without any explanation in the record, appear findings of fact and conclusions of law and a decree dated 1907 in an action evidently including the same parties. The burden of proof was upon the appellants to show a former adjudication, and this record is insufficient to show either that there was such a disposition of the rights of the parties under these two permits or that the rights thereunder should have been litigated so as to make these decrees, without having passed upon these permits, adversely binding upon the respondent herein. Unless, therefore, the water decreed under No. 3399 was excessive in amount, the court properly found in favor of respondent in connection with these permits. The question of whether the award was excessive will be further considered in connection with the duty of water, and the question of whether or not any water has in fact been conserved by respondent’s activities on the stream.

It is also contended that the awarding of 600 inches with a priority of January 23, 1905, under permit 1119, was prejudicial to the Little Lost River Land and Livestock Company which was given a priority of June 1, 1905, for 280 inches. While conflicting, the evidence was sufficient to sustain the finding and conclusion of the referee and trial court, that the work under this permit had been done in time and that respondent’s rights thereunder had not been lost; the determining of these relative priorities was therefore not incorrect. Syster v. Hazzard, 39 Ida. 580, 229 Pac. 1110, holds *772 that where permits have been transferred from one party to another each successive holder has the original time within which to complete the work. Under the doctrine of this ease the referee and the court were justified from the evidence in holding that the work necessary to comply with the requirements of the statute, in connection with these permits, was completed within the required time.

As the water flowed down Dry Creek prior to the construction of respondent’s reservoir and the diversion of water from Dry Creek through the company’s pipe-line from Corral Creek to Wet Creek, there was sufficient water either flowing in Dry Creek or rising in springs above their place to supply the irrigation rights of J. B. and Samantha Taylor, and also to furnish an underground flow of water sufficient through springs and wells to furnish them with a domestic supply throughout the year. It is their contention that the diversion from Dry Creek has affected the surface flow as well as the subsurface flow of this stream so as to deprive them of both irrigation and domestic water.

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Related

Charboneau v. State
102 P.3d 1108 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2004)
Brian v. Fremont Irr. Co.
186 P.2d 588 (Utah Supreme Court, 1947)
State v. Mundell
158 P.2d 799 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1945)
Blaine County Canal Co. v. Faris
45 P.2d 796 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1935)
Blaine County Investment Co. v. Mays
15 P.2d 734 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
291 P. 1055, 49 Idaho 766, 1930 Ida. LEXIS 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blaine-county-investment-co-v-mays-idaho-1930.