Collins v. Twin Falls North Side Land & Water Co.

152 P. 200, 28 Idaho 1, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 101
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 152 P. 200 (Collins v. Twin Falls North Side Land & Water Co.) 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
Collins v. Twin Falls North Side Land & Water Co., 152 P. 200, 28 Idaho 1, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 101 (Idaho 1915).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, C. J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff, who is a settler on a Carey Act project, against the defendant, the construction company upon such project, for [4]*4damages caused to crops by reason of the various alleged breaches of contract on the part of the construction company with the state in the construction of the irrigating works upon said project, which failure, it is alleged, impaired the water supply and caused the plaintiff certain losses in his crops for the years 1909 and 1910.

The complaint sets forth two causes of action: One occurring in the year 1909 in the sum of $2,195, and the other in the year 1910 in the sum of $700. After a trial in the district court, judgment was rendered against the defendant corporation for the sum of $3,109.50, a part of the judgment •being interest on the'sum awarded as damages. A motion for a new trial was denied and the appeal is from the judgment and the order denying a new trial.

The breaches of contract on the part of the construction company in both causes of action, according to the allegations of the complaint, arise out of (1) the failure of the construction company to properly construct said irrigation system, and (2) a failure to supply the water as agreed.

We gather from the complaint that the failure to supply the water was because of the alleged improper construction of said irrigation system. It is provided in the contract of the construction company with the state that the construction company shall construct said canal system so that the water conducted through the same may be available at a point not to exceed one-half mile measured in a direct line from each quarter section of land described in the contract. To make water available, under the provisions of said-contract, simply meant to bring it to the half-mile point from a quarter section of said land, measured in a direct line, in such a way that the water could be taken from the canal or lateral, to and upon the ’land to be irrigated, so that it may be used there for purposes of irrigating the land through the ditches to be constructed by the settler, under a gravity system.

Under said state contract, while the construction company retained control of the canal system, water should be measured to users at the place of diversion from the main laterals of said system in such quantities and at such times as the con[5]*5dition of the crops and water might determine. Under said contract, a main lateral is defined as “a lateral taken from the main line of the canal. ’ ’ In many eases the construction company, in order to make the water available within a half mile of each quarter section, had to construct sublaterals from the main laterals, as was done in the case at bar. The evidence shows that the water for the irrigation of the east eighty acre tract of respondent’s land was taken from what is known as “B” coulee, which was used as a conduit or lateral by the construction company for conducting its water to users.

Under said state contract it is provided that “a coulee or draw used as a main lateral or subordinate lateral shall also be included within these terms.” Said “B ” coulee was a natural channel where water evidently ran during the wet season before the construction of the canal system, and was dry at least a part of the year. It does not appear whether the “B” coulee, from whence the respondent procured water to irrigate his east eighty, was a main or subordinate lateral. The record does not show where the point of measurement for the east eighty tract was located; however, plaintiff’s service ditch was connected with said coulee and water taken therefrom to irrigate said land.

There were other users of water from said coulee, and it is clear that the construction company is not responsible for the misapplication of water by users themselves from a common or service ditch constructed and owned by themselves, since after the water is taken out into a service ditch from a main or subordinate lateral by irrigators, the construction company has no control over it.

As we gather from the record, the real matter complained of at the trial of the case was the alleged failure of the company to construct a cheek in said “B” coulee at the point where the plaintiff diverted his water. It appears from the evidence that from and after April 6, 1909, the construction company had running in said coulee a stream of water sometimes ten feet wide, carrying water four inches deep, and sometimes forty feet wide, carrying in the middle of the stream [6]*6a foot and a half of water, at the point where the appellant had connected his ditch with said coulee from which to convey water to the east eighty of said land.

The evidence shows that the plaintiff did not complete his service ditch to a sufficient depth to take the water out of said “B” coulee without placing a check in said “B” coulee to raise the water into his ditch, at least not prior to May 26, 1909. During the month of May he lowered the bottom of his ditch about six inches, but it still required a check to get a satisfactory head of water into his ditch. He then put in another check in “B” coulee, which was not quite satisfactory to him. The evidence shows that said coulee at said point did not present any unusual difficulty in putting in a small check to raise the water, since said coulee carried water at times ten feet wide and at other times forty feet wide. The testimony shows that his check leaked or washed out under varying heads of water in the coulee.

The state contract required the construction company to construct and place in position all headgates, flumes, weirs and other devices for the control and measurement of water in the main canals and reservoirs, and in the main laterals, and it was intended that the settler should, under the direction of the chief engineer of the construction company, build and furnish one gate or other device for his own use, thus requiring the entryman to furnish one headgate, and if more were required, they were to be furnished at the expense of the construction company. It was contemplated that each settler would require at least one service ditch and would be required to put in at least one headgate. By the construction of a deep or shallow service ditch, the settler might control the question as to whether a check should be placed in the canal at the point of diversion of his water. If, because of constructing a shallow ditch, a check was required to be put in the lateral, the settler would be required to put in such check; and if a check in the canal or lateral was made necessary by the failure of the settler to construct his ditch as low as it ought to be constructed to carry water to his land, or by placing his headgate at a height that a cheek was nec[7]*7essary, it was the duty of the settler to put such check in the main or sublateral from which he took his water. The settler was required to use reasonable care in the construction of his ditch, and to avoid placing cheeks in the main or sub-lateral, hé ought to construct the bottom of his ditch as low as the bottom of the lateral from whence he took his water, if that could reasonably be done.

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Bluebook (online)
152 P. 200, 28 Idaho 1, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-v-twin-falls-north-side-land-water-co-idaho-1915.