Crockett v. Jones

249 P. 483, 42 Idaho 652, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 136
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 26, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 249 P. 483 (Crockett v. Jones) 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
Crockett v. Jones, 249 P. 483, 42 Idaho 652, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 136 (Idaho 1926).

Opinions

*654 BUDGE, J.

The statement of facts in appellants’ brief is not controverted, and is as follows:

This is an action brought by respondents to restrain the appellants from changing the point of diversion and use of 60' inches of water of .Rock Creek, a stream arising in the southern part of Twin Falls county and emptying into the Snake River. The cause was tried to the court and judgment rendered in favor of the respondents, and an injunction issued as prayed for by them. From the judgment this appeal is taken.

The amended complaint alleges that the respondents are the owners of certain lands with water rights from Rock Creek, under various court decrees; that these lands are arid in character and require irrigation for profitable cultivation, and have no source of water supply other than from Rock Creek; that the department of reclamation has issued a permit authorizing the transfer by appellants of 60 inches of Rock Creek water from the S. % of the NW. % and SW. i/4 of the NE. % of Sec. 20, Tp. 11 S., R. 19 E. B. M., to the W. % of the SE. % and SW. % of Sec. 31, Tp. 11 S., R. 19 E. B. M.; and that the appellants threaten to make such transfer. Respondents further allege that their vested rights to the use of the water of Rock Creek will be injured by the transfer in that the present point of diversion of said 60 inches is below all the lands of respondents, and is made up of the back flow of the waters after they have been diverted and used by respondents; that the new point of diversion and use is above the present point of diversion and most of the lands of respondents, and that the 60 inches of water will have to be supplied out of the waters theretofore used by some of the respondents.

Appellants’ answer denies all of the foregoing allegations of the amended complaint with the exception of the proposed transfer; alleges the issuance on August 19, 1921, by the department of reclamation of the permit for the proposed transfer; that there has been no appeal from such action of the department; that the new - diversion point is five miles *655 above tbe old one, and will save transmission losses caused by the necessity of conducting the water down five miles of stream channel to the original diversion point and will thus benefit respondents by making more water available to them.

The water rights involved in this action were acquired prior to the construction of the Twin Falls irrigation system canals, and the physical conditions are somewhat complicated by the fact that the high-line canal of that system circles around and through the lands of the respondents, crosses Rock Creek channel, is of earth construction for the most part, and has supplied considerable ground water not existing before its construction which has augmented the flow of water some distance below the point where the canal crosses Rock Creek.

Appellants make nine assignments of error. If we are correct in the conclusion reached, but two of the assignments need be considered. We shall first dispose of assignment of error No. 9, predicated upon the action of the court in refusing to hold as a matter of law that the respondents, not having appealed from the action of the department of reclamation in issuing a permit for the change of point of diversion within the time allowed by C. S., sec. 5582, were precluded from bringing this action.

A hearing was had before the commissioner of reclamation upon proper notice and application made by appellants to change the point of diversion, and the application was granted. No appeal was taken from the action of the department of reclamation in issuing the permit as provided for in C. S., sec. 5582, and appellants seek to make the point that, since the statute provides for a review of the holding of the commissioner of reclamation by appeal to the district court, the remedy so provided is exclusive. With this contention we are not in accord. We are of the opinion that the remedy so provided is cumulative; that the commissioner of reclamation is but an administrative officer, without judicial powers, and any party aggrieved by the decision of such commissioner may either appeal to the district court, as provided in C. S., see. 5582, or commence an *656 original action in said court for the determination of the question involved in the proceeding before the commissioner of reclamation. (Speer v. Stephenson, 16 Ida. 707, 717, 719, 102 Pac. 365.)

The next question involved is whether or not the change in the point of diversion or place of use injured other appropriators. C. S., sec. 5563, provides: “The person entitled to the use of water may change the place of diversion, if others are not injured by such change.” See, also, Hard v. Boise City Irr. Co., 9 Ida. 589, 76 Pac. 331, 65 L. R. A. 407; Bennett v. Nourse, 22 Ida. 249, 125 Pac. 1038; Hall v. Blackman, 22 Ida. 539, 126 Pac. 1045; Basinger v. Taylor, 30 Ida. 289, 164 Pac. 522.

From the record it appears that appellant Jones was decreed as of date April 20, 1880, a prior right of 60 inches of the waters of Rock Creek; that for years prior to the building of the Twin Falls system high-line canal through the lands of the respondents and subsequent thereto the 60 inches of water awarded to Jones as of the date of his priority was carried down Rock Creek and beneficially applied by Jones to his land; that after the construction of the high-line canal and by reason of the irrigation of lands thereunder and the nature of the construction of the canal, the waters of Rock Creek were, by underground flow, augmented and the flow materially increased below the point where the high-line canal crosses over Rock Creek. It further appears that the South Side Twin Falls Irrigation system, owning the Twin Falls high-line canal, had concreted, in the vicinity of the point where it crosses Rock Creek, a portion of its canal and that said work of concreting the canal will be further extended, which may materially decrease the flow of waste and seepage water into Rock Creek.

All of the lands of appropriators that are prior to appellant Jones’ appropriation are above the proposed new point of diversion except Nephi Larsen’s, the latter having a decreed right of 60 inches out of Rock Creek as of date 1879; D. P. Albee, 60 inches 1879; and the Utah Construction ■Company, 120 inches 1874-75. These rights, as well as any *657 other prior rights, would be supplied from the waters of Rock Creek before appellants 'would be entitled to any of the waters of said stream.

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Bluebook (online)
249 P. 483, 42 Idaho 652, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crockett-v-jones-idaho-1926.