Branson v. Miracle

687 P.2d 1348, 107 Idaho 221, 1984 Ida. LEXIS 511
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 9, 1984
DocketNo. 14813
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 687 P.2d 1348 (Branson v. Miracle) 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
Branson v. Miracle, 687 P.2d 1348, 107 Idaho 221, 1984 Ida. LEXIS 511 (Idaho 1984).

Opinion

BISTLINE, Justice.

This case of first impression addresses several important questions: the status of water developed through mining operations, as either public water subject to appropriation or non-appropriable private water; and the rights of owners of a mining claim to exclusive enjoyment of water situate thereon.

The Bransons, appellants, and the Miracles, respondents, were joined as parties in the 1969 Payette River Basin water rights adjudication. In August and September of 1977, the parties filed notices of claims to water rights as follows:

Source
Bransons Water originating from mine tunnel owned by app.
Miracles Unnamed creek
Priority Date Use Amount
1957 Domestic .04 cfs
Mining .5 cfs
1965 Domestic 100 gal/day

The water in question was developed as a result of and emanated from the Bransons' mining tunnel on their “Birthday # 24” mining claim.

The Idaho State Department of Water Resources (Water Resources) filed its Proposed Findings of Water Right on April 26, 1979, which adopted the water rights as claimed by the parties, with the exception of allocating to the Miracles .02 cfs rather than the 100 gallons per day as claimed. No objection by either party was made within the 60-day period provided in I.C. [224]*224§ 42-1410 1 which expired on June 25, 1979. However, in November of 1979, the Miracles filed in the district court a motion to permit a late filing of objection to the report and a motion to permit the late filing of an amended notice of claim changing their priority date from 1965 to 1943. On April 1, 1980, the court denied the Miracles’ motions and made a final adjudication of the parties’ water rights in accordance with the Proposed Findings of Water Resources. On motion for reconsideration, the court vacated its order and allowed the Miracles to file late objections to the Bransons’ claim for water for mining purposes. At the same time the court allowed the Bran-sons to file objections to the Miracles’ claim. The court passed the Miracles’ motion to permit filing an amended notice of claim.

On May 20, 1982, the district court issued its findings and decree allocating to the Miracles a water right of .02 cfs for domestic purposes with a priority date of 1943. The court allocated the Bransons 50 gallons of water per year for mining purposes with a priority date of July 1, 1957, based on its finding that the mine had not been operating continuously since 1942 except for a three-week period in 1974 and that the Bransons had used 50 gallons per year in their panning operations for assay purposes. The Bransons’ claim to .04 cfs of water for domestic purposes was uncontested and this right was decreed with a priority date of June 1, 1957. The court found that the source for all of the claims was a mining tunnel stream known as the Birthday Mine # 24, which waters were and at all times are from an underground source and that “all waters coming out of said Birthday # 24 mining claim tunnel are groundwaters____” R., p. 63. The court found that there was enough water emanating from the mine to fill the two domestic claims but that there was not enough to fill both the domestic claims and the mining claim.

I.

The first issue presented on appeal is the effect of I.C. § 42-1410 which provides that:

“Any claimant who desires to object to the report [proposing findings of water rights] shall file his objections with the court within 60 days ____ Where no objection is filed with regard to any right found to exist by the director of the department of water resources as evidenced by his report, the district judge shall affirm the right as therein found.”

The Bransons argue that this provision is jurisdictional and precludes the district court from considering any objections to Water Resources’ report filed later than 60 days after the date of mailing. They argue that the district court is required in this case to affirm the rights found in that report since the objections were not made within the statutory period. We disagree. Although the statute states that claimants shall file objections within 60 days, we interpret this provision as requiring district courts to hear objections raised within that time period but leaving them with discretion to hear objections thereafter. The second provision requiring affirmance where no objection has been filed does not mandate a contrary result. That provision does not require affirmance where the claimant has failed to object within 60 days, but only where the claimant has failed to raise any objections. Such was not the case here. We find no error in the district court’s exercise of discretion in allowing the Miracles to present objections to the report after the 60-day period had elapsed.2

II.

The next issue presented on appeal is whether an open flow of water emanating [225]*225from a mine portal which would not exist absent development of the mine is non-appropriable private water or appropriable public water.

I.C. § 42-101 provides that “All the waters of the state, when flowing in their natural channels, including the waters of all natural springs and lakes within the boundaries of the state” are public waters subject to appropriation. I.C. § 42-226 similarly provides that ground waters are public waters subject to appropriation. I.C. § 42-230 defines ground water as “all water under the surface of the ground whatever may be the geological structure in which it is standing or moving.” The water emanating from the mine portal falls clearly within this definition of ground water. The water is from an underground source which has been brought to the surface through the excavation of the mine. The district court found in its decree that “all waters coming out of said Birthday # 24 mining claim tunnel are groundwaters,” R., p. 63, which we find to be supported by the statutes cited above and by the evidence.

The Bransons, however, argue that the water falls within I.C. § 42-212 which defines those waters in the state as private and thus not appropriable without permission from the owner of the land situated thereon. I.C. § 42-212 defines such private waters as “the waters of any lake not exceeding five (5) acres in surface area at highwater mark, pond, pool or spring in this state, which is located or situated wholly or entirely upon the lands of a person or corporation.” We are not persuaded by the Bransons’ arguments. The evidence offers no support for the water flow being either a lake, pond or pool; the waters here involved are running waters. The Bran-sons’ argument that the mine water is a spring similarly is not persuasive. As the Oregon Supreme Court stated in Beisell v. Wood, 182 Or. 66, 185 P.2d 570 (1947), “[a] ‘spring’ is a place where the water issues naturally from the surface of the earth.” See Holman v. Christensen, 274 P. 460 (Utah 1929), for the same rule. There was no dispute but that the water flow emanating from the mine was created as a result of the mining operations. See Finding of Fact VIII, R., p. 53. The water flow did not issue naturally from the surface of the earth; thus it was not a spring.

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Joyce Livestock Co. v. United States
156 P.3d 502 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2007)
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Branson v. Miracle
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
687 P.2d 1348, 107 Idaho 221, 1984 Ida. LEXIS 511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/branson-v-miracle-idaho-1984.