Gerber v. Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District

116 P. 104, 19 Idaho 765, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 65
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 10, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 116 P. 104 (Gerber v. Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District) 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
Gerber v. Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District, 116 P. 104, 19 Idaho 765, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 65 (Idaho 1911).

Opinions

MacLANE, District Judge.

This is an application for a writ of mandate to compel the defendant, an irrigation district, to supply plaintiff with water, a right to which he claims to have established by payment of rentals and actual use on his land during the years 1904, 1905 and 1906.

The case has been here before and is reported in 16 Ida. 1, 22, 100 Pac. 80, 88. The facts are fully stated in that opinion and the law applicable to those facts is established conclusively for the purposes of this case, at least. The case was there remanded for a new trial, and the only question which arises now is whether or not the trial court followed the law announced in the prior decision of this court as applied to the evidence adduced on such new trial. The testimony taken on the first trial was resubmitted by stipulation and additional evidence was also introduced.

A résumé of sufficient facts to make this opinion intelligible is as follows:

The plaintiff is the owner of land within the exterior limits of the defendant district, which purchased from the Boise City Irrigation & Land Company a canal locally known as the Ridenbaugh canal. During 1904, 1905 and 1906, the predecessor in interest to the plaintiff, one G. T. Kinzer, took water for the land now owned by the plaintiff, from two taps of the Ridenbaugh canal, designated in the evidence as Nos. 75 and 77. The water taken from tap 77 was applied directly to this land from the canal, but at tap 75 the water was carried from the tap through a lateral belonging to the Wilson Fruit Company and was emptied from a flume on this lateral into a ditch known as the Wilson drain, constructed for the purpose of carrying away the waste water from the Wilson orchard and other lands. It is undisputed that the only water used by Mr. Kinzer on the land in question during 1904 was waste water from the Wilson orchard, and he paid rental for it as such. Whether or not he received any “live water,” [768]*768that is, water not previously devoted to the use of some other tract, in 1905 and 1906, is a matter of dispute between the parties. It is conceded that he paid rental for water during those years. There is also a dispute between counsel as to whether dr not, conceding that Mr. Kinzer received live water during 1905 and 1906 through tap 77, there was any water which had not been already dedicated to other users.

On these facts this court, on the former appeal, held that the provision of art. 15, sec. 4, of the constitution, that a sale, rental or distribution of water, when once made, shall be deemed an exclusive dedication of the water to the use for which it is made, does not create a perpetual water right from a temporary delivery of water, belonging to prior consumers from the same canal whose rights exhausted the carrying capacity of the canal, at times when such prior consumers did not require the full amount of water to which they were entitled; that the dedication of water to a beneficial use, under this section of the constitution, does not extend beyond the character of the water so dedicated, and where all the waters have been appropriated and applied to a beneficial use but are furnished under a sale or rental to a subsequent applicant, the dedication to the latter extends only to the right to use the water when not required or needed by the prior appropriators; that where waste water only is furnished, it is a dedication only of such waste water, and the user can only maintain an action to compel the canal company to furnish him with such waste water, and cannot compel it to furnish a perpetual supply of water such as is required to be furnished to an original appropriator.

It was further held that on an application for a writ of mandate tq compel a canal company to furnish an applicant with water, the burden is upon him to show that there is unappropriated water in the canal, unless he has previously used water from the canal under sale or rental, in which event the burden is on the company to show why it has since cut ofE the water and refused to furnish the same.

As we read this decision, it construes sections 4 and 5 of article 15 of the constitution as creating a priority among [769]*769consumers from a canal analogous to that which exists among appropriators from a natural stream. Section 5 provides, in part, that “Whenever more than one person has settled upon, or improved land with the view of receiving water for agricultural purposes, under a sale, rental, or distribution thereof, as in the last preceding section of this article provided, as among such persons priority in time shall give superiority of right to the use of such water in the numerical order of such settlements or improvements.” After quoting this section, we said (p. 25):

“Where all the water of a canal has been appropriated and applied to a beneficial use under a sale or rental, and when not needed by such appropriators, is furnished under a sale and rental to a subsequent applicant and is used by such applicant for a beneficial use, the dedication extends only to the right to use such water when not required and needed by such prior appropriators. The rights of the prior appropriator must at all times be recognized; and in an action to compel the owners of a canal to furnish water to such subsequent applicant, the canal company can only be compelled to furnish the water so-dedicated by such applicant, that is, the waters applied to a beneficial use by him when not needed by the prior appropriators thereof.”

At the conclusion of the retrial, the judgment, from which this appeal was taken, was entered, and by it the defendant was ordered “to deliver, or cause to be delivered to the said plaintiff, John L. Gerber, his heirs, administrators, grantees and assigns, through the lateral leading from that certain canal system owned and operated by the said defendant at what is known as tap No. 75 of said system, one cubic foot of water per second of time, and two-fifths of a cubic foot of water per second of time through the lateral leading from such system at what is known as tap No. 77 .... , subject, however, to a proportionate reduction in common with all consumers of water from such irrigation system and within the said Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District, in the event of shortage of water in the Boise river.”

[770]*770It will thus be seen that by this decree the court established in the plaintiff’s favor a perpetual water right of the same grade of priority as that possessed by settlers prior to 1904, whose dedication dated back to the inception of the itidenbaugh canal system, which the evidence shows to have been in operation at least since 1894, and, in fact, as is well known, extended back for some thirty years prior to the dedication claimed by the plaintiff. In order to justify this decree, there must be sufficient evidence in the record to sustain the findings that the defendant’s predecessor, the Boise City Irrigation & Land Company, during the irrigation season of 1905, delivered water through its canal for the irrigation of the plaintiff’s land, under sale or rental thereof, and that the full capacity of the canal system, or the water carried by such system, had not been applied to a beneficial use by users of water prior to the plaintiff. To a consideration of these questions of fact we now address ourselves.

With reference to tap No.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
116 P. 104, 19 Idaho 765, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gerber-v-nampa-meridian-irrigation-district-idaho-1911.