Cottonwood Water & Light Co. v. St. Michael's Monastery

162 P. 242, 29 Idaho 761, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 120
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 22, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 162 P. 242 (Cottonwood Water & Light Co. v. St. Michael's Monastery) 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
Cottonwood Water & Light Co. v. St. Michael's Monastery, 162 P. 242, 29 Idaho 761, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 120 (Idaho 1916).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, C. J.

This action was brought to determine the priority of the use of the waters of the Rustemeyer springs, which are tributary to what is known as the south fork of the Cottonwood creek, in Idaho county.

Upon the issues joined, and after the trial of the case, the court found as follows: “That the appropriation and diversion of the waters of the said springs by the said Rustemeyer, as hereinabove found, was prior to any and all other appropriations made by the plaintiff or anyone else from the waters of said springs or the stream to which they are tributary.”

Upon that and other findings, judgment was entered in favor of the respondent. However, under the provisions of conclusion of law No. 6, the court found that during the months of July, August, September and October the defendant was required to allow the plaintiff the uninterrupted flow of water from said springs daily from 5 o’clock P. M. until 4 o’clock A. M., and that from 4 o’clock A. M. until 5 o’clock P. M. of each day during said period the defendant should have the unobstructed use-of the waters of said springs. The plaintiff appealed from the first part of said decree, and the defendant appealed from that part of the decree allowing the [764]*764plaintiff the use of said waters during the months of July, August, September and October. Hence we have an appeal by the plaintiff and a cross-appeal by the defendant.

At the outset we are met with a motion to strike the statement found in the transcript from the record, and also a motion to dismiss the appeal upon several grounds going to laches and negligence of the plaintiff in prosecuting its appeal. The court will overrule 'both of said motions without making further comment in regard to them.

Numerous errors are assigned, most of which go to the insufficiency of the evidence to support the findings of the court. The following facts appear from the record:

The plaintiff is a water corporation organized for the purpose of providing and supplying water to the inhabitants of the city of Cottonwood, Idaho county. The defendant is an eleemosynary corporation organized and existing for the chief purpose of conducting an educational institution and promoting religious teaching. In the year 1905, one Fred Rustemeyer entered 160 acres of land on which the springs involved are located. Thereafter, on the 14th of June, 1910, he sold and conveyed said land with the appurtenances to Reverend Father Berthold, who received the title thereto in trust for the defendant corporation and thereafter conveyed the title to said corporation. On said tract of land there is situated one main spring and two or more smaller ones, where the water comes to the surface of the ground. In the year 1905 said Rustemeyer made an excavation in the ground at or near the main spring and constructed troughs and placed the same in the ground so as to divert the entire volume of water from said main spring, and thus carried the entire volume of water a distance of about 75 feet to a larger watering-trough near his residence, and used the water for domestic and other purposes. Said springs are tributary to what is known as the south fork of Cottonwood creek, and ordinarily the water from said springs would flow down the hillside and find its way into said creek, except in very dry seasons, when it would not reach the stream. The Reverend Father Berthold purchased said described lands for the special purpose of [765]*765securing the water flowing from said springs for and on behalf of the defendant, and caused a ditch to be dug and pipes to be laid conducting the water from said springs down the canyon a distance of about one and one-half miles to the building and premises owned by the corporation defendant. The construction of said pipe-line was begun on September 5, 1910, and completed before December 25, 1910, and the water from said springs was diverted and carried through said pipes and used for the purpose of watering livestock and for domestic and irrigation purposes. Prior to September 9, 1910, the plaintiff corporation was supplying the town of Cottonwood and its inhabitants with water and charging rates therefor, and was maintaining a pump station in the town of Cottonwood for such purpose. Prior to said date the plaintiff purchased a tract of eleven acres of land lying across what is known as the south fork of the Cottonwood creek and a short distance from the property known as the monastery property, owned by defendant and through which property the defendant’s pipe-line runs. On September 9, 1910, the plaintiff procured from the state engineer a permit to divert and appropriate one-fourth of one cubic foot per second of the waters from the south fork of said creek, with permission to make the diversion at a point on the south fork of said creek on plaintiff’s eleven acre tract of land. Plaintiff thereupon constructed an earthen reservoir by excavating from the bed of the stream and by banking and diking, and constructed a pipe-line from said reservoir to the town of Cottonwood and completed the same about December 25,1910, and began conveying water through said pipe-line. The same workmen and contractor built and constructed the pipe-lines for both plaintiff and defendant. The contract had been entered into for building defendant’s pipe-line prior to entering upon the work for plaintiff.

Defendant’s diversion basin is built of concrete at the spring on the Rustemeyer place, and its storage basin or reservoirs are built on the monastery property. The basin, together with the pipe-line, was constructed at a total cost of $4,600. The directors and officers of the plaintiff corpora[766]*766tion knew of defendant’s claim to the water of said springs and the expenditure that the defendant was making, and knew all the conditions of said streams and its tributaries. The plaintiff, through its officers and agent, applied to defendant to purchase water from its pipe-line, and defendant sold to plaintiff water for the months of August and September, and tapped its pipe-line at the point where it crosses plaintiff’s said eleven acre tract of land, and supplied plaintiff with water during said months, for which plaintiff paid defendant the rental sum of fifty dollars. Thereafter, during the summer of 1914, the months of August and September were unusually dry and plaintiff then for the first time made claim to the waters of said springs, and when defendant objected and protested against plaintiff’s claim, the plaintiff thereupon applied to defendant to again purchase water for said months and was given the right to tap defendant’s pipeline at the same place that it had been tapped during the summer of 1911, and plaintiff promised to pay defendant a reasonable sum for the use of said water during those months. Plaintiff at no time asserted any right to the waters of said springs and never claimed, or intended to claim, the same until the summer of 1914, at which time its officers and agents made their claim to said waters.

The above-stated facts are substantially the same as found by the court.

The fourth finding of fact is as follows: “That the appropriation and diversion of the waters of the said springs by the said Rustemeyer, as hereinabove found, was prior to any and all other appropriations made 'by the plaintiff or anyone else from the waters of said springs or the stream to which they are tributary.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
162 P. 242, 29 Idaho 761, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cottonwood-water-light-co-v-st-michaels-monastery-idaho-1916.