Cook v. Maremont-Holland Co.

344 P.2d 198, 75 Nev. 380, 1959 Nev. LEXIS 164
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1959
DocketNo. 4173
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 344 P.2d 198 (Cook v. Maremont-Holland Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. Maremont-Holland Co., 344 P.2d 198, 75 Nev. 380, 1959 Nev. LEXIS 164 (Neb. 1959).

Opinion

[382]*382OPINION

By the Court,

Badt, J.:

Appellant Lyle Cook, defendant below, is referred to as Cook. Holland Livestock Ranch, a copartnership and the corporations named as Maremont-Holland Co., Bright-Holland Co., and Nemeroif-Holland Co., respondents herein and plaintiffs below, are referred to as Holland.

Holland sued Cook under our old trespass statute, now NRS 568.300, for unlawful trespass by Cook’s herding of his sheep upon Holland’s land in Washoe County, particularly described in the complaint, and for an injunction against the threatened continuing trespass. The statute involved provides simply: “It shall be unlawful for any person to herd or graze any livestock upon the lands of another without having first obtained the consent of the owner of the lands so to do.” Section 2 fixes liability for damages done by such trespassing livestock. The complaint alleges the trespass to have occurred in the spring and fall of 1956 and the spring of 1957 by Cook’s herding on Holland’s lands of 2,000 head of sheep. The complaint alleges Holland’s demand that Cook desist from such trespassing, Cook’s refusal, and his threat to continue, the irreparable damage that will result, as well as the resulting necessity for a multiplicity of suits, the inadequacy of continued and repeated suits for damages, and the lack of an adequate remedy at law, otherwise than through an injunction. The damage already suffered is asserted in detail at the acreage value of the feed alleged to have been consumed on Holland’s land by Cook’s sheep, the loss of weight of a fixed number of Holland’s cattle “sheeped off” Holland’s land, the expense of employing additional riders at a fixed amount per day for a fixed period to gather Holland’s livestock to return them to their range, and the cost of hauling a fixed amount of hay at a fixed price to the property known as Stone Corral to feed Holland’s [383]*383saddle horses because the pasture where the caviata1 was usually held had been fed off by the sheep. The aggregate of the damages thus prayed for was $23,336. The amount of the proved damage as found by the court and fixed in the judgment was $646.

Cook’s answer denied the trespass and denied damage, and set up the following affirmative defenses:

1. It is first asserted that the court has no jurisdiction over the subject matter of the action or to grant the relief demanded, for the reason that Holland’s land, upon which Cook’s sheep are alleged to have been herded, and certain lands belonging to Cook (Holland’s land as well as Cook’s land being unfenced) were all situate within federal grazing district C2N, Bureau of Land Management, Department of Interior, and that both Cook and Holland had been granted a license or permit to graze within this area — Cook with his sheep and Holland with his cattle; that the public domain in this area adjoins and surrounds Holland’s land as described in his complaint; “that defendant’s sheep could not graze in and upon the public domain surrounding defendant’s land without using the creek and springs therein and upon plaintiff’s lands” (emphasis supplied); that Holland in the exercise of his license is grazing cattle upon the public domain and upon Cook’s unfenced private lands and water adjacent to said public domain; “That the Bureau of Land Management in granting plaintiff and defendant’s grazing licenses has jointly considered dependency by use of plaintiff and defendant’s lands and water by the use of the federal range for grazing and the relative dependency by use of each of the base properties have been proportionate to the annual use actually and properly made of the federal range under the plaintiff’s and defendant’s respective grazing licenses”; that issuance [384]*384of an injunction would be control by the court of Cook’s use of water on and near plaintiff’s lands contrary to the right of control of the public domain by the federal government.

2. Here Cook repeats his allegations of the issuance of licenses or permits to both Cook and Holland for grazing in the same area — Cook with his sheep and Holland with his cattle, and the ownership by both Cook and Holland of unfenced lands within the grazing area, and that the Bureau of Land Management in granting such licenses or permits “has jointly considered dependency by use of plaintiff and defendant’s lands and water”, etc., as alleged in the first affirmative defense, and that “the defendant’s sheep could not be grazed in and upon the public domain surrounding defendant’s land without using the creek and springs therein and upon plaintiff’s lands” (emphasis supplied). It is then alleged that Cook and his predecessors since 1917 have run 2,000 sheep on the public domain involved, both before and after the enactment of the Taylor Grazing Act in 1934, 43 U.S.C.A., sec. 315 et seq., including the springs and creek “crossing plaintiff’s land and has a right to the use thereof”; that in order to exercise such rights and water his sheep at Rola Springs and the creek at Stone Corral, he has continuously since 1917 “utilized an easement and right of way over the lands of plaintiff”; that such use “has been continuous and uninterrupted, open and visible, adversely and of definite right”; that he has a vested right of access to the waters at Stone Corral and Rola Springs, and an easement for such right of access. Cook prays that Holland’s demand for injunctive relief be denied and that, on the contrary, Holland be restrained from interfering with Cook’s exercise of his right to go upon Holland’s land with his (Cook’s) sheep.

The case was first heard, by the court without a jury, on Holland’s motion for a temporary injunction. It was later tried on the merits, to the court without a jury, and the evidence taken at the preliminary hearing was by stipulation made a part of the record of the trial. [385]*385The learned district judge signed a written decision in which he incorporated certain findings of fact, and his judgment in favor of Holland for a permanent injunction and damages followed the decision without further findings or conclusions. The district judge said: “From the very first it is and has been apparent to me that a trespass occurred on properties owned by the plaintiffs.” This is so clearly demonstrated by the record and by the admissions of the defendant that discussion of the evidence on the point is unnecessary. In the trial court, as here, Cook relied upon Ansolabehere v. LaBorde, 73 Nev. 93, 310 P.2d 842, as to which the district judge, with entire justification remarked: “I cannot believe that there has ever been any idea on the part of our Supreme Court that it should be extended to include the right to use private property without just compensation. Accordingly, I hold that Ansolabehere v. LaBorde does not justify the defendant’s trespassing upon the lands of plaintiffs.” Attacking this holding as error, Cook’s opening brief asserts: “The evidence is without dispute that Lyle Cook in common with plaintiff, has a valid grazing license to graze his sheep upon all the surrounding private lands of plaintiff in C2N grazing district in the area involved in this suit.” All that can be said as to this contention is that it is without foundation in law, in anything that may be found in the Taylor Grazing Act or in any statement or inference made by this court in Ansolabehere v. LaBorde.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
344 P.2d 198, 75 Nev. 380, 1959 Nev. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-maremont-holland-co-nev-1959.