Clark v. State

1917 OK CR 206, 170 P. 275, 14 Okla. Crim. 284, 1917 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 222
CourtCourt of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma
DecidedOctober 20, 1917
DocketNo. A-2778.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1917 OK CR 206 (Clark v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clark v. State, 1917 OK CR 206, 170 P. 275, 14 Okla. Crim. 284, 1917 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 222 (Okla. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

MATSON, J.

D. C. Clark, one of the managers of the Cordell Ice & Fuel Company, was convicted of the crime of petit larceny in Washita county, Okla., in that he caused a pipe to be attached to the water pipe in which the city of Cordell had stored, and was distributing, certain water to the Cordell Ice & Fuel Company for a certain price or rental, and by means of such attached pipe the said water was diverted so that it flowed around the *285 meter through which it was to be measured to said Ice ■& Fuel Company and into the pipes running into said plant, by means of which trick the city of Cordell was ■defrauded or deprived of said water and the value of the same unlawfully.

There is no controversy as to the guilt of this defendant if all the facts proved constitute the crime of larceny under our statute. There was no defense interposed. The defendant relies solely upon the insufficiency of the evidence to constitute the crime of petit larceny.

First, it is contended that, by reason of the provisions of our statute (article 4, c. 10, Rev. Laws 1910), a city or town acquires no ownership in the water which it may impound in its pipes for the purpose of distribution to consumers, but that only a privilege is created which permits the city to acquire by condemnation, purchase, rental, lease, etc., certain lands or water districts from which a supply of water may be obtained for distribution to consumers under fixed rates or taxes, and that if a person taps the mains or pipes in which the city has impounded its water and diverts it to a use for whifeh the city did not intend it, or diverts it so that it would not pass through the regular meter which the city uses for the purpose of measurement, the person so diverting such water and converting it to' his own use without the knowledge and consent of said city has only deprived the city of its regular rental charge or taxes, and is not guilty of stealing its property.

With this contention we cannot agree. The fact that the state has seen fit to permit a city or town to establish a waterworks system, and to serve the citizens of such city or town with water for private consumption, *286 and to charge a fixed rate for such service, does not change the water which the city has taken into its possession and under its control by impounding it within the confines of its mains and pipes, of its character as property. That water so confined.is personal property, capable of ownership, cannot be disputed. The courts have so held practically without dissent. The rule is stated in Cyc. vol. 40, p. 55, as follows:

“In the character of personal property, water, separated from its source or from the body of which it constituted a part, may be bought and sold like other commodities, as when it is supplied through artificial conduits for domestic use, or irrigation, or when it is solidified in the form of ice.”

Wiel, in his work on Water Rights in the Western States (3d Ed.) vol. 1, sec. 31, states the proposition as follows :

“In the civil law it is said: ‘Upon these principles, running waters are held by the Roman juris-consulti to be common to all men. But it also follows that this decision does not apply to waters, the appropriation of which (to the exclusion of the common enjoyment) is necessary for a certain purpose, as water included in a pipe or other vessel for certain uses.’ Yinnius says, in commenting on the passage in the Institutes above quoted,- regarding air, running water, and the sea: ‘First of all, these things are in their nature suited to the common use of all; and next, in case any of these things is such that in its nature it can be taken into possession, it belongs to the possessor so far as he does not injure the general use by such occupation.’ And, commenting upon the same passage in the Institutes, a Scotch case says: ‘Water drawn from a river into vessels or into pounds becomes private property.’ No one owns the air, but the inventor who liquifies it owns so much as is liquid in his laboratory; it is his private property while in his possession.
*287 “Pothier illustrates it as follows: ‘One may put the ease, for example, where I go to dip water from a river. I acquire the ownership of. the water which I have taken, and with which I have filled my pitcher, by title of occupancy; for this water, being a thing which belonged to no person, to which no person had any exclusive right whatever, I have been able, on taking it ¿Into my possession, to acquire the ownership of it by right of capture.' This is why, in case, on returning from' the river I have, for some purpose, left my pitcher standing on the road, with the (ijntention of returning later to fetch it where I left it — if, in the meantime, a passer-by, having found my pitcher, proceeds (to save himself the trouble of going to the river) to pour into his piteher the water that was in mine, he has committed against me an actual theft of that water, which water was a thing of which I was actually the proprietor, and of which I retained the possession through the intention I had of returning for it at the place where I left it. Note that the flow of the stream must not be confounded with the running water itself, which is designated aqua profluens.’
“The common law is stated in identical terms: ‘None can have any property in the water itself, except in the particular portion which he may choose to abstract from the stream, and take into his possession, and that during the time of his possession, only.’ In a well known case in the House of Lords, it is said that no one can have any property in the running water of the stream, ‘which can only be appropriated by severance, and which may be lawfully so appropriated by everyone having a right of access to it (the riparian proprietors). Lord Campbell declared that water in a citetem is- private property, and, in a very recent case in House of Lords, the Chancellor said that water in an artificial pond is ‘water with somewhat of a'proprietary right.’ In a New York case it is laid down: ‘Water, when reduced to possession, ffs *288 property, and it may be bought and sold and have a market value, but it must be in actual possession, subject to control and management.’ ”

Running water has ofttimes been compared to wild animals, birds, and fishes, which, before capture and confinement, belong to no one, but after capture belong to him who captures them.

Nor can it be successfully contended that water confined within the mains and pipes of the city’s water system may not be the subject of larceny. It was such at common law. Ferens v. O’Brien, 11 Q. B. D. 21, Cox’s Crim. Cases, 332; 25 Cyc. p. 13, note 11. Neither is there anything in the contention that, because by section 2665, Rev. Laws 1910, the Legislature provided a special act making it a misdemeanor for any person to pipe gas so that it may be consumed without passing through a meter, so as to avoid paying therefor, the general larceny statute does not cover an offense of this kind. A similar contention .was made in the case of Ferens v. O’Brien, supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1917 OK CR 206, 170 P. 275, 14 Okla. Crim. 284, 1917 Okla. Crim. App. LEXIS 222, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clark-v-state-oklacrimapp-1917.