Gates v. Settlers' Milling, Canal & Reservoir Co.

1907 OK 77, 91 P. 856, 19 Okla. 83, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 161
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedSeptember 4, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 1907 OK 77 (Gates v. Settlers' Milling, Canal & Reservoir Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gates v. Settlers' Milling, Canal & Reservoir Co., 1907 OK 77, 91 P. 856, 19 Okla. 83, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 161 (Okla. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion of the court by

Burford, C. J.:

This action involves the question of priority of right to divert water from the Cimarron river for irrigation purposes. Oklahoma has not so far been credited to the arid belt, and agriculture has been successfully conducted by the aid of nature's supply of moisture; but in some localities, in the higher altitudes pertaining to the extreme western counties of the territory, irrigation upon a small scale lias been profitably resorted to, and an increasing public interest is being developed in not only the expediency, but the necessity, for extensive irrigation of agricultural and meadow lands in the fertile valleys of western Oklahoma. In the year 1897 our legislature passed an irrigation act. (1 Wilson's Rev. & Ann. St. 1903, p- 814, c. 44, §§ 3282-3304). This, statute was repealed in 1905, and a more comprehensive law substituted, which is still in force. (Laws 1905, p. 274, c. 21, art. 1.) It is conceded that neither of the parties to this litigation proceeded under either of these statutes; but both, as we understand the case, base their claims upon the general rule of.law applicable to such cases. Yet, if any rights were acquired and be *85 came vested under the statute of 1897, the statutory provisions must control as to such rights.

It appears from the record that the- plaintiff in error, Gates, commenced his suit in the district court of Woodward county against the Settlers’ Milling, Canal & Reservoir Company, on November 6, 1903, to enjoin the defendants from diverting water from the Cimarron river, on the ground that such diversion was a material interference with a prior right acquired by him to the use of the water for irrigation purposes. Gates bases his claim of priority upon an appropriation made by J. H. Williamson, through a ditch constructed in the early part of the year 1901, which was about three miles in length and took the water from the river about two miles below the point where the defendant’s ditch connected with the river. Williamson sold his land and ditch and his water rights to Gates in July, 1902. A portion of the flow of water in the Cimarron river was actually appropriated to beneficial uses for agricultural purposes during the years 1901 and 1902. The irrigating ditch used by the defendants, which is made the subject-matter of this controversy, was commenced about the year 1902, and has its headgate above the point where the plaintiff procures his water supply. But it is contended that this ditch is but a continuation and change of work begun in 1896 and continuously carried on until the time of the bringing of this suit. The Settlers’ Milling, Canal & Eeservoir Company was incorporated under the laws of the territory of Oklahoma on June 4, 1895, for the purpose, as shown by its articles of incorporation, of “constructing a ditch to convey water to lands to be used for milling purposes, or for the purpose of irrigation of farming-lands.” The stockholders and officers of this company were farmers and land owners whose lands were to be benefited by the irrigation project, and the capital stock paid in consisted almost entirely of the work done by the individual stockholders in constructing the ditch, dam, flumes, and other necessary work in repairing the same. The year the company was incorporated it *86 did some work in repairing and strengthening a dam in'the Cimarron river which had been partially constructed and used by Mr. Maphet, one of the stockholders and the president of the company. About 150 loads of stone were hauled and dumped into the riverbed to strengthen the old dam. The purpose of the company was to divert the water from this, point and make use of the old Maphet ditch, which it seems the corporation succeeded to by common consent. In the spring of 1896 100 loads more of stone were put in to support the old dam. Later on in the year a break occurred in the dam, and piling was driven in and supported by more stone put in for that purpose. The dam was completed across the river, 225 feet in length. Owing to frequent rises in the river that year, heavy timbers and sod were used to strengthen and repair the work, which was completed at an estimated cost of $2,000. This improvement was a distance of twelve miles from a railway station, in a sparsely settled country, and forty miles from where some of the timbers and piling had to be obtained and hauled. The company also caused a survey to be made from the old Maphet headgate, along the old Maphet ditch, in an easterly course a short distance, and thence continuing east to Horse creek, where it was necessary to construct a flume to carry the water across this creek. The old ditch was cleaned out, and a new portion constructed and completed, a distance of one mile, from the old headgate to Horse creek. In the spring of 1897 work was begun upon the flume, which was constructed by driving three rows of cedar piling into the ground from 8 tó 11 feet, upon which was built of lumber an aqueduct 100 feet long and 16 inches deep to carry the water over the creek. The ditch was extended another half mile beyond this flume, and a full head of water turned in and conducted through the flume and into the laterals, carrying the water to the farms of T. C. Maphet and G. C. Maphet, and by them applied to about 40 acres of land and crops. The company also in 1897 applied to the secretary of the interior for reservoir and right of way’privileges over the public lands, which *87 application was granted and confirmed. It also gave notice, nnder the provisions of the statute of 1897, of its intention to appropriate water, which notice was recorded in the office of the register of deeds for Beaver county.

During the year 1898 water was flowing through this ditch and flume until April or May, when a flood in ITorse creek swept the flume away and carried it down the river. Instead of rebuilding the flume, the ditch was extended up the west side of Horse creek oné-fourth of a mile to a point where the ditch and bed of the creek were on the same grade, and the water was conducted across the bed of the stream, by throwing up a sand barrier, and back down the east side of the stream, through a new ditch, until it again connected with the old ditch, and was applied during the season to crops east of Horse creek, consisting of sixty acres of. kaffir and forty acres of wheat. The ditch and levees across Horse creek were washed out and repaired a number of times-during the season of 1898. In 1899 the levee across Horse creek was rebuilt, and the water was applied to 70 acres of land, some of which was meadow. A rise in the river wrecked one end of the dam, and it was repaired by putting in rock and piling. In 1900 the ditch was completed to Eed Bluff, making 3 1-3 miles of ditch built by the defendant company, and 130 acres prepared for crop, which it was the purpose to irrigate, and water was applied to 100 acres. On April 8, 1900, an unprecedented rise in the river caused it to cut a new channel, running straight across and cutting oif the Horseshoe bend, and leaving the diversion improvements of the Settlers’ company a mile south of the new channel, and completely, cutting off its water supply. An attempt was made by the company to turn the river back into its old channel by damming the cutoff, and about 400 loads of stone, sand, brush, and other obstructions were placed in the channels, without beneficial results.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1907 OK 77, 91 P. 856, 19 Okla. 83, 1907 Okla. LEXIS 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gates-v-settlers-milling-canal-reservoir-co-okla-1907.