Glavin v. Salmon River Canal Co., Ltd.

258 P. 532, 44 Idaho 583, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 125
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 28, 1927
DocketNo. 4545.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 258 P. 532 (Glavin v. Salmon River Canal Co., Ltd.) 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
Glavin v. Salmon River Canal Co., Ltd., 258 P. 532, 44 Idaho 583, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 125 (Idaho 1927).

Opinion

BRINCK, Commissioner.

Plaintiff is the owner of land in the Salmon Carey Act Segregation, the defendant being the operating company for the project, which at the time this suit was commenced embraced some 35,000 acres of land, *585 in connection with which project water rights existed. Plaintiff owns a water right for his land purchased from the Carey Act construction company, and is by virtue thereof a stockholder in the defendant corporation.

The duty of water on this project is fixed, according to a stipulation in the record, at two and one-third acre-feet per acre, and the water for the project, which is practically all storage, is usually insufficient to supply that amount. Indeed, it is stipulated that the average supply does not exceed 76 per cent of said amount, and a year in which a full supply has existed has more than once been followed by a year in which less than one-half of the required amount has been available. In 1919, a by-law hereinafter referred to as Rule 5 was adopted by the defendant company, providing in part as follows:

“In order to encourage the greatest practical economy by individual water users from year to year, each water user will be entitled to carry over for use the following season as individual or personal storage, such water as has been allotted to him but not used, subject, however, to the restrictions hereinafter set out. Water held as ‘individual storage’ shall become a part of ‘general storage’ in case maintenance charges become delinquent upon the shares for which water has been reserved. Bach water user shall be considered as having used the minimum allotment, whether any water has been used or not.”

Deliveries of water were made under the rule in 1920, 1921 and 1922. In the year 1923, some of the water users had left over from the preceding years, varying amounts of the so-called individual storage. According to the allegations of the complaint, of a total of some 36,000 acre-feet of water in the reservoir in December, 1922, about 16,000 acre-feet was so recognized by defendant as individual storage to the persons entitled thereto under the rule, notwithstanding the fact that the amount of water in the reservoir was entirely inadequate for proper irrigation of the lands within the project, even if distributed pro rata without reference to individual storage rights. If distributed under Rule 5, the *586 lands not having individual storage would of course suffer still more. To enjoin distribution in accordance with Rule 5, this action is brought, the rule being alleged to be illegal and void and contrary to public policy. The trial court found facts to be as alleged, and, as a conclusion of law, found that Rule 5 was illegal and void; and by its decree enjoined distribution in accordance with said rule or on any other basis than on a pro rata acreage basis for all the water contained in the reservoir. From the decree the defendant appeals, the assignments of error in general attacking the conclusion of law above mentioned and the decree based thereon.

The provisions of Rule 5, in addition to those above quoted, are carefully worked out to protect, so far as possible, the rights of the owners of general storage against any encroachment upon the general storage by those claiming individual storage; deductions being provided from the individual storage for transportation, evaporation, and other losses. How definitely the natural losses properly chargeable to the individual storage can be determined, does not appear from the record. Apparently, however, a loss of from 30 to 33 per cent per year is thus deducted, so that owners carrying over individual storage for two years, as some have done, suffer upwards of 50 per cent natural losses in the amounts originally conserved by them. In addition, there is deducted and considered as general storage the minimum allotment fixed by the defendant’s board of directors for each year, which minimum varies from year to year, being as high during one of the years involved as one acre-foot per acre.

The theory of the appellant is that this rule tends toward conservation of water, and gives the careful user an advantage, to which he is entitled, over the more prodigal user; that unless the rule is given effect, each water user will use all the water he is entitled to in any one year, even though by conservation and careful handling, a portion of the water stored in a year of full supply might be saved for the following year, in which the supply will probably be scant; *587 that unless any water user can himself have the benefit the following year of such conservation, there is no incentive to save the water, and he will use his whole allotment; and that, under the conditions obtaining in the project, it is highly desirable that as great an amount as possible be carried over. It is pointed out that some water users are willing to sacrifice some of their crops in one year with the expectation of raising more profitable crops the succeeding year; and that others acquire individual storage to enable them to plant classes of crops which they know would be an utter failure in event of a short water supply. It is further argued that no one of the settlers is entitled in any one year to more than his proportion of the water stored, and that he therefore has no rights in the portion of the water stored belonging to another water user, and is in nowise injured by the application of the rule, and that Rule 5 has resulted in a higher degree of efficiency in the use of water than any other scheme that might have been adopted.

Viewing the question with reference only to the considerations urged by appellant, there is considerable reason in support of the rule. If a farmer irrigating the whole of a specific tract in an unusual year of full supply, by careful handling of the water allotted to him conserves a portion of it against the following season, in which the supply is apt to be insufficient, it may appear unjust to grant his neighbor who had the same opportunity of conserving a like portion of his own supply, but who failed to do so, the right to share in the conserved water. But the by-law in question as it now exists seems to admit of many other contingencies which are not consistent with the reasonable use of water contemplated by our law of appropriation. Under the rule, it is entirely possible for a land owner to allow his land to remain entirely idle, thus carrying over all of his water supply in excess of the minimum allotment to the next season, at a loss of 30 per cent thereof, or to the second ensuing season, at a loss of 50 per cent thereof, and so on indefinitely with an ever increasing loss; and to still maintain his right to hoard the same as against other users who could *588 and would have made beneficial use of the water in the year of its original storage; and as a matter of fact the record shows that this is done to some extent.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P. 532, 44 Idaho 583, 1927 Ida. LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glavin-v-salmon-river-canal-co-ltd-idaho-1927.