Brown v. Baker

65 P. 799, 39 Or. 66, 1901 Ore. LEXIS 47
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 65 P. 799 (Brown v. Baker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Baker, 65 P. 799, 39 Or. 66, 1901 Ore. LEXIS 47 (Or. 1901).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Moore

delivered the opinion.

This is a suit to enjoin interference with the flow of water in the channel of a nonnavigable stream to the head of plaintiffs’irrigating ditches. The facts are that Willow Creek rises in the Blue Mountains, flows in an easterly direction, in a well-defined channel, through the defendants’ and plaintiffs’ arid lands in Baker County, and empties into the East Fork of Powder River. In the spring the snow melts in these mountains, filling the banks of the creek, when it carries about four hundred inches of water, miners’ measurement, but in the summer only about thirty inches. In 1864 one Abel Morrison, plaintiffs’ predecessor in interest, diverted the water of said creek, which he used in irrigating about one hundred and seventy-five acres of his cultivated land, but, said diversion proving inadequate for the purpose, he, with others, in 1866 dug a ditch in a southerly direction from Rock Creek, and diverted water therefrom, and used it in irrigating his said lands. Plaintiffs’ predecessors thereafter diverted water from Marble and Spring Creeks, and from a swamp at the head of the North Fork of Willow Creek, which was also used in irrigating the same. [68]*68In 1892 the defendants, having purchased one hundred and twenty acres of land situate above plaintiffs’ on Willow Creek, diverted therefrom in that year and in 1896 twenty-five and forty inches, respectively, of water, which they have used in irrigating their premises ; whereupon plaintiffs, claiming that such use was a wrongful infringement upon their rights, instituted this suit, and the court, having found upon the trial thereof that they had one hundred and thirty acres in cultivation lying under the ditches tapping Willow Creek, rendered a decree awarding them one hundred and ninety-five inches of water from that stream each year to July 15, and one hundred and thirty inches thereafter, and enjoining the defendants from interfering with the flow of that quantity in the channel of the creek through their premises, from which defendants appeal.

1. It is maintained by defendants’ counsel that, in order to secure priority in the appropriation of water, the stream or lake from which it is taken must be tapped at some point on the public domain, and that, the plaintiffs having alleged that they and their grantors diverted the water of Willow Creek at points on their own pi’emises, shows that no such appropriation had been made, and hence the court erred in overruling the demurrer to the complaint, and in awarding to plaintiffs the use of any water from said stream. The water of a nonnavigable stream is an incident to the soil through which it flows, and, as the United States is the primary proprietor of public lands, its grant of the waters thereof, in the Pacific Coast states, to the person having the priority of its possession (14 Stat. U. S. 253, c. 262), in the absence of a constitutional provision or statute declaring water to be public property, necessarily cuts off the right of a subsequent settler to divert the water under a claim of prior [69]*69appropriation. Title by relation gives to the first settler upon the public land the priority of possession of the water flowing through the same (Faull v. Cooke, 19 Or. 455, 26 Pac. 662, 20 Am. St. Rep. 836; Larsen v. Oregon Ry. & Nav. Co. 19 Or. 240, 23 Pac. 974 ; Johnson v. Bridal Veil L. Co. 24 Or. 182, 33 Pac. 528 ; Cole v. Logan, 24 Or. 304, 33 Pac. 568), though he may never appropriate the water to a beneficial use. If a lower riparian proprietor had acquired a right to the waters of Willow Creek prior to plaintiffs’ diversion, such right would necessarily defeat their appropriation of the water, because the stream at the time of the diversion was not flowing through public lands. The right of prior appropriation is limited to the use of water by the pioneer settler before any adverse claims of riparian proprietors attach to the stream from which the water is taken, and not to-the points of diversion, which may be either within or beyond the boundaries of the tract selected by such settler. Upon principle this must be so, for, if the settler could not divert the water except at points on the stream above his boundary, in order to make a valid appropriation, the cost of conducting it to his premises might be so great as to prohibit its use, thereby defeating the very object of congress, and depriving those entitled to the reward offered for the encouragement of mining, agriculture, and manufacturing, notwithstanding the pioneers in these industries might, with but little expense, be able to appropriate the water to some beneficial use through conduits constructed wholly upon their own premises.

2. The complaint asserts a right only to the use of a given quantity of water from Willow Creek, acquired by. prior appropriation, but by the reply the plaintiffs claim the right to the entire flow thereof through their premises by reason of their riparian proprietorship, whereupon [70]*70the defendants moved to strike out the averment of new matter in the reply on the ground that it was redundant, immaterial, sham, frivolous, and irrelevant; but, the motion having been overruled, a demurrer was interposed to the entire reply on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense, and to said averment of new matter therein for the reason that the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of suit, which was also overruled, and it is insisted that the court erred in these particulars. The first settler upon public land through which a stream of water flows may either divert the water, and use it for a benéficial purpose, or exercise the common-law right prevailing in the Pacific Coast states, where the modified rule of riparian ownership is still in force, and insist that the stream shall flow in its natural channel undiminished in quantity, except when applied to the natural use of the upper riparian proprietors, and for irrigation, if the stream affords a sufficient quantity of water for the latter purpose : Low v. Schaffer, 24 Or. 239 (33 Pac. 678); North Powder Milling Co. v. Coughanour, 34 Or. 9 (54 Pac. 223).

3. The right of appropriation is incompatible with the doctrine of riparian proprietorship (Kinney, Irr. § 272; Pomeroy, Rip. Rights, § 132), and hence the allegation of new matter in the reply constitutes a departure from the averments of the complaint: 6 Ency. Pl. & Pr. 462 ; Mayes v. Stephens, 38 Or. 512 (63 Pac. 760). A depax’ture in a pleading in a suit in equity can not be so prejudicial to a party as in an action at law ; for in the former, the cause being tried by the court, it can segregate the testimony applicable to the allegations of the complaint, and reject the immaterial testimony in suppox't of the inconsistent averments of the reply, which a jury can not well do.

[71]*714. The departure being manifest, the question to be considered is whether the attention of the trial court was properly called to the defect. Sham, frivolous, and irrelevant replies may be stricken out on motion and upon such terms as the court, in its discretion, may impose : Hill’s Ann. Laws, § 79. It will be remembered that the motion assails only the new matter in the reply, while the statute contemplates an attack upon the entire reply for the reasons assigned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
65 P. 799, 39 Or. 66, 1901 Ore. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-baker-or-1901.