Boyd v. Motl

236 S.W. 487, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1296
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 7, 1921
DocketNo. 6447. [fn*]
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 236 S.W. 487 (Boyd v. Motl) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Boyd v. Motl, 236 S.W. 487, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1296 (Tex. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

BRADY, J.

This is an appeal from an orejer overruling a motion by appellants to dissolve a temporary injunction, which had theretofore been granted upon the petition of appellees, on an ex parte hearing. The motion was heard upon the pleadings and evidence. The issues made by the pleadings are set out in a statement in appellants’ brief, which is conceded to be substantially correct, with the exceptions hereinafter noted. Therefore we copy such statement her,e:

“The pleadings of the plaintiffs in substance set up that about the year 1888 one John R. Nasworthy was the owner of the land now known as ‘Twin Mountain farm,’ and agreed with ffm. Lackey, if the said Lackey would put the irrigable land in cultivation and under irrigation by means of a dam and ditch from Spring creek, the said Nasworthy would convey him the land, and that they went to P. C. Lee, who was then the owner of the defendants’ lands located some four miles up the creek' from said Twin Mountain farm, and asked Lee for permission to construct the dam across the creek and abutting on one of the surveys now owned by defendants, and permission to construct a ditch leading out from said dam through the lands of the said Lee to said Twin Mountain farm, and that the said Lee consented to such arrangement, and thereupon the said Lackey constructed an earthen and brush dam and a ditch to divert water from the reservoir made by said dam, and in 1888 or 18S9 began the irrigation of something like 050 acres of said land.
“That on October 15, 1888, the said Lackey conveyed said Twin Mountain farm to J. S. Fowlkes, who prior to November 21, 1889, completed the construction of the dam and ditch, and that on said date the said Fowlkes, being then the owner and in possession of said land and utilizing said dam and ditch for irrigation purposes, in compliance with the provisions of chapter 88 of the General Laws of Texas, passed by the Twenty-First Legislature and approved March 19, 1889, filed his affidavit and map of said Twin Mountain farm, dam, and ditch, as required by said act, with the county clerk of Tom Green county, which said map and affidavit was recorded in the Irriga *489 tion Ditch Records of said county, and was correct except that such affidavit stated that the headgate of said ditch was situated on survey No. 656, when as a matter of fact it was situated on survey No. 655 in the name of German Emigration Company.
“That thereafter on November 13, 1899, Fowlkes conveyed the land and his irrigation rights to the father of the plaintiffs, using the following language in his deed with reference to the dam and ditch: ‘Also the dam and irrigating ditch which supplies said lands with water for irrigating the same, known as the Twin Mountain farm dam and ditch and all water rights and privileges secured by said dam and ditch, except, however, the right of W. M. Johnson to irrigate his farm, being six hours of water every eight days, to which said Johnson is entitled, and except said right Of said Johnson hereby reserved, the entire right to said dam and ditch and the water supply of same is hereby conveyed to said Motl.’
“And that thereafter, the plaintiffs, as the owners of said farm, on the 18th day of December, 1920, in compliance with the Irrigation Acts of 1913 and 1917, made and filed the affidavit and map required by said acts, such filing having been made in the office of the county clerk of Tom Green county on December 20th, 1920, and duly recorded by him in the Deed Records of Tom Green County, Texas, and that thereafter, the plaintiffs filed a certified copy of the map and affidavit with the board of water engineers at Austin, Tex.
“Plaintiffs allege that during the year 1904 or 1905 their ancestor, at his own cost and expense, replaced the original earthen and brush dam constructed by Lackey with a concrete dam at an actual outlay and cost to him of some $1,500, and that the surface area covered by the reservoir formed by said concrete dam is approximately 105 acres, and has a holding capacity of 750-acre feet, and that the ditch used by plaintiffs for purpose of irrigating said Twin Mountain farm emanating from said dam is so constructed that it will take out of said creek and reservoir above the same the water accumulated therein down to a point 8 to 12 inches below the top of said dam, but that on account of rock and gravel obstructions immediately in front of said ditch, after the water is lowered to a point below 12 inches from the top of said dam, no water will run down said ditch.
“Plaintiffs allege that they and their predecessors in title had been continuously and notoriously using the water out of said creek and reservoir by means of said dam and ditch for the purpose of irrigating their lands for more than 30 years preceding the filing of their petition, and that their use and appropriation of the water had been adveise and uninterrupted.
“They allege that they had growing on said Twin Mountain farm between 40 and 50 acres of corn, about 150 acres of cotton, and about 200 acres of hay, maize, garden and feed stuff, and that irrigation was necessary for the proper cultivation of said crops.
“Plaintiffs allege in their petition, by reason of the facts above stated, a right to the use of the water in said creek and reservoir to the full extent that same would run into their ditch, and , an exclusive control or right to all the water backed up by said dam, by prescription and by limitation, and further allege that on an application of the defendants, made to the board of water engineers of the state of Texas in January, 1921, for permission to use water out of said creek and reservoir for irrigation purposes, which said application was resisted by the plaintiffs and other lower riparian owners, the board of water engineers upon a hearing refused the defendants a permit to use any water for irrigation purposes, and that the plaintiffs, in compliance with the Acts of 1913 and 1917 had filed with the board of water engineers at Austin a certified copy of said original affidavit and map made by Fowlkes, and had thereby acquired dominion over said water to the exclusion of defendants.
“Plaintiffs allege that, notwithstanding the refusal of the board of water engineers to grant any permit to the defendants, said defendants nevertheless during the spring of 1921 prepared 80 acres of their land for cultivation and irrigation, and in April, 1921, began to pump water out of said creek and reservoir to irrigate their land, and at the time of filing the petition for injunction had irrigated something like 20 acres, and by reason of pumping the water out of said creek had lowered the level of the water therein to a point where it would not run down the ditch claimed by plaintiffs in sufficient quantities to irrigate plaintiffs’ crops.
“In their supplemental petition plaintiffs also allege that defendants are estopped from claiming or using any water for irrigation purr-poses to the detriment of plaintiffs, because their predecessors in title stood by and saw Motl and his predecessors in title use and divert the water for 30 years, and expend time and labor on the dam and ditch, and never protested nor objected thereto.

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Related

State v. Valmont Plantations
346 S.W.2d 853 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1961)
Motl v. Boyd
286 S.W. 458 (Texas Supreme Court, 1926)
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261 S.W. 542 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1923)
Humphreys-Mexia Oil Co. v. Arsenaux
244 S.W. 280 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1922)

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Bluebook (online)
236 S.W. 487, 1921 Tex. App. LEXIS 1296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boyd-v-motl-texapp-1921.