Clements v. Watkins Land & Mortgage Co.

82 S.W. 665, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 339, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 233
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJune 11, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 82 S.W. 665 (Clements v. Watkins Land & Mortgage Co.) 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
Clements v. Watkins Land & Mortgage Co., 82 S.W. 665, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 339, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 233 (Tex. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

SPEER, Associate Justice.

This is an action by appellant against appellees for damages and for injunction, growing out of a controversy over their respective rights to the use of the water of Toyah Creek. The following are the findings of fact of the trial court, upon which judgment was rendered for the appellees, and from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted:

“(1) I find that Toyah Creek is a natural water course with banks and bed, and has its source in the so-called head spring situate on survey Ho. 256 in Beeves County, Texas, and that same, with the lands in controversy in this cause, are located in the arid portion of Texas, where irrigation is necessary and beneficial for agricultural purposes.
"(2) I find that said head spring furnishes a continuous flow of twelve heads of water, and that the Saragosa Springs which join the creek below the head spring furnish a continuous flow of two and one-.half heads of water, and that a head of water as measured in that locality is as much water as will flow unobstructed through an orifice one foot square per second of time.
*340 “(3) I find that a spring situated above the head spring of Toyah Creek on survey No. 20, the waters of which are used exclusively by the defendant Griffin, for irrigation purposes, furnishes a continuous flow of one and one-half heads of water.
“(4)’ I find that plaintiff is the owner of sections Nos. 98, T17, 128, and that part of section 97 lying south of Toyah Creek, containing about 40 acres, all of block No. 13, H. & G. N. Ry. Co. surveys in Reeves County, Texas, and that parts of section 97 and section 98 border on said creek.
“(5) I find that section No. 98 and that part of No. 97, owned by plaintiff, consisting of 40 acres, are riparian to Toyah Creek, and that sections Nos. 117 and 128 are not riparian to Toyah Creek. And I further find that plaintiff is now receiving and diverting, and has for a long time prior to the filing of this suit received and diverted, two and one-half heads of water from Toyah Creek, for the purpose of irrigating said part of survey 97 and said section 98.
“(6) I find that plaintiff’s irrigation ditch was constructed in the year 1876, by the Saragosa Irrigation and Manufacturing Company. ■ That said company was duly organized and incorporated in accordance with the laws of'the State of Texas, to wit, the’Act of March 10, 1875. That said corporation accepted the charter and the provisions "of said act and operated thereunder. I find that said corporation furnished water and watered the said part of section 97 and section No. 98 now owned by plaintiff in 1876 from said ditch, and from that time the said lands have been watered through said ditch for agricultural purposes. That all. the rights acquired by the Saragosa Irrigation and Manufacturing Company are now owned by plaintiff, Clements. I further find that plaintiff, since the year 1892, has continuous^ irrigated for agricultural purposes parts of sections Nos. 117 and 128, from said ditch, and at times the water in said ditch for said sections 117 and 128 was supplemented by waste water from the Murphy ditch.
“7. I find that the plaintiff has, until the year 1902, had sufficient water from said creek, supplemented at times by waste water from the Murphy ditch, to irrigate for agricultural purposes 1400 acres of said lands; that in the year 1902 he was forced to abandon the cultivation of 300 acres of said lands, and in 1903 an additional 400 acres of said land, because of the diminution of his water supply aforesaid; and that before said diminution sufficient water flowed in plaintiff’s said ditch to run a mill owned by plaintiff on section 98 from the water power in said ditch;' but that since said diminution in his water supply he has not been able to run said mill during the irrigation season in a manner to make it profitable because of the irregularity of said water supply. That the plaintiff had reconstructed said mill at a cost of $700 previous to said failure in his water supply, and that the operation of said mill was¡ valuable to said plaintiff.
*341 "(8) I find that one head of water is sufficient to irrigate 300 acres of plaintiff’s lands for agricultural purposes.
"(9) I find that the Watkins Land Company owns 300 acres of seetian No. 256, all of sections 257, 258, 259, 260, 265, the south 429 acres of survey 38, all of 37, the south one-half of 78, all of 92 and 52, and that they and their grantors have owned and been in possession of same from various periods ranging from 1873 to 1891, and to this time, and that Daniel Murphy in 1875 commenced and in 1877 completed an irrigation ditch or canal by means of which he diverted water from Tojrah Creek to some of said lands for irrigation purposes. That in 1879 said canal was extended to the head spring of Toyah Creek, by means of which canals then constructed said Murphy diverted water from said head spring for irrigation purposes aforesaid. That said Watkins Land Company now owns and is in possession of said irrigation canal and all the rights acquired thereunder by said Daniel Murphy.
"(10) I find that in October, 1879, Daniel Murphy conveyed to S. R. Miller 541% acres of land, more or less, out of the Antonio Ball survey No. 256, lying on both sides of Toyah Creek, and a one-half interest in the head spring of Toyah Creek, the dividing line running through the center of said spring in an easterly direction; also 36 2-3 acres, more or less, of land out of survey No. 257. That C. W. Griffin now owns said land. That some time in the year 1895 patent issued to C. W. Griffin for 172 acres of land adjoining the Antonio Ball survey No. 256 on the north and east, which he now owns.
"(11) That in the years 1872, 1874, 1876 and 1880, S. R. Miller constructed irrigation ditches or canals by means of which he diverted water from Toyah Creek and from the head spring of Toyah Creek to a portion of the lands now owned by said Griffin for irrigation purposes. That defendant C. W. Griffin is now the owner of said irrigation ditches or canals, and is the owner of all the rights acquired by said S. R. Miller' thereunder.
"(12) That the other defendants herein own a certain number of acres of land out of school survey No. 26, awarded to R. E. Lyle and Lacy Duncan in the year 1885. That said defendants irrigate about 300 acres of said land from Toyah Creek and have done so for more than ten years prior to the institution of this suit.
"(13) That the Watkins Land Company diverts by means of its canal one-half of the waters of the head spring of Toyah Creek into ditches on its part of survey No. 256, and carries the waters thereof through its lands and to lands below them. That the Watkins Land Company irrigates about 1200 acres of its said lands for agricultural purposes, and delivers and sells to other parties water to cultivate about 1400 acres of land from the one-half of said head spring.
“(14) I find that the Watkins Land Company sells and delivers for irrigation purposes water as follows: to A. J. Carpenter for 75 acres of land, situate south of section No.

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Bluebook (online)
82 S.W. 665, 36 Tex. Civ. App. 339, 1904 Tex. App. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clements-v-watkins-land-mortgage-co-texapp-1904.