Graham v. Leek

144 P.2d 475, 65 Idaho 279, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 71
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1943
DocketNo. 7113.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 144 P.2d 475 (Graham v. Leek) 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
Graham v. Leek, 144 P.2d 475, 65 Idaho 279, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 71 (Idaho 1943).

Opinion

*283 DUNLAP, J.

As appears from the pleadings, this suit involves a conflict between respondent and appellant over the right to the use of the public waters of Three Mile Creek in Camas County, Idaho, a tributary of Upper Malad River. This creek is also known as Four Mfle Creek. However, as appears by the evidence the waters actually involved in the conflict are from the flow of the East Fork or Branch of said Three Mile Creek.

The amount of the flow of the creek is not disclosed by the pleadings or the evidence, but it does appear it is what is known as a “flash” creek, with its run-off from the melting snows in the spring of the year; that the irrigation season is from two to four or five weeks in each year, and that after July 1st there is very little water, if any, for irrigation purposes.

In the first cause of his cross-complaint, appellant claims 3.2 cubic feet per second of time of the water from said Three Mile Creek for the irrigation of certain land owned by him containing 160 acres and referred to in the evidence as the Lenman Tract of land (also referred to as the Lemman and Lemnan Tract), with a priority of April 1, 1907, based upon a decree by the District Court of the Fourth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for the County of Lincoln, in the case of S. C. Frost, et al., plaintiffs, v. Alturas Water Company, et al., defendants, dated December 13, 1909. The adjudication by this decree, of water to the said Lenman Tract by said court is admitted by respondent. Appellant also claims that upon his application and on or about the 17th day of January, 1939, the Department of Reclamation of the State of Idaho by order of said date, duly transferred said water right so adjudicated by the Frost decree, to the said Lenman tract of 160 acres and to an additional 320 acres. The transfer of this water as pleaded is evidenced by defendant’s exhibit No. 2, being a certified copy of the State of Idaho Department of Reclamation *284 certificate of water right and which certificate was executed on the 4th day of February, 1939.

In the second cause of his cross-complaint, appellant claims a water right of 6.2 cubic feet per second of time of the water of Three Mile Creek, and Willow Creek, in said county, with a priority of May 17, 1907, for the irrigation of 320 acres of property in Camas County, Idaho, referred to in the proceedings as the Thorp tract, also as the Thorpe tract, and bases his claim to this water on water license No. 2759 issued by the State of Idaho to one Arthur C. Thorp, a former owner of the property, dated November 10, 1908, a certified copy of which was admitted into the evidence as defendant’s exhibit No. 1. The points of diversion of the water from these creeks are set Out in said exhibit, and appellant pleads that’ said points of diversion had been changed from the points designated in said license, and that at the time of said cross-complaint, one of said points of diversion for the said Thorp tract was on the East Branch of said Three Mile Creek and one point on the West Branch of said Three Mile Creek.

Appellant also claims that continuously during each irrigation season and from the time it became appurtenant to said respective tracts as stated by said cross-complaint, the water so claimed by him was diverted and used on said tracts of land for the irrigation thereof.

Appellant also alleges that respondent claims some right, title or interest in and to the water of Three Mile Creek (or Four Mile Creek) superior to his rights, and that respondent’s said claim is without right, and that appellant’s right to the use of said water is prior and paramount to the right or claim of respondent, and he asked judgment that he be declared to be the owner of the water so claimed by him and that his said right be declared prior and superior to any right of respondent to the use of said water, and that respondent be restrained and enjoined from obstructing or in anyway interfering with appellant’s right to the use of said water on his said land.

In the complaint, respondent asks for the determination of his right to the use as against the' ¿dverse claim of appellant of 160 inches of the public waters of Three Mile Creek, in said county, on land belonging to him consisting of 160 acres. He alleged he commenced to divert said water in the spring of 1910 and that he constructed a ditch for the purpose of diversion with a carrying capacity of 160 *285 inches, with a point of diversion in said Three Mile Creek and that by means of said ditch he has irrigated and reclaimed said land, and that since March of 1916 he has been in open, notorious and peaceable possession of said ditch and 160 inches of the water of said creek, and that he has used said water openly, notoriously and continuously for the irrigation of said land for more than five years next preceding the filing of the complaint (March 15, 1941). He alleged the adverse claim to the water by appellant, and asked the court to quiet his title to the use of said water as against the appellant.

The trial court decreed respondent to be the owner of and entitled to the use of 160 inches of the waters of the East Fork of Three Mile Creek, sometimes known as Four Mile Creek, diverted through a ditch and at a point designated in the decree; and that respondent’s use and right to the use of the waters aforesaid, and the ditch aforesaid, is prior and superior to any right of appellant to the use of the waters of said stream; appellant and his successors are by said decree specifically enjoined and restrained from, in any manner, interfering with the rights so decreed.

While it appears appellant’s claimed dates of priority as to the water for both the Lenman and Thorp tracts antedates respondent’s claimed date of priority, it was respondent’s theory (not pleaded) that appellant had abandoned the use of water evidenced by the decree and transfer, and he offered evidence to substantiate this theory.

On the question of the abandonment of this water, the trial court made several findings, to-wit:

In finding No. 8, to effect that by the terms of the Frost decree, one E. B. Lenmon who was then the owner of said Lenman tract, was decreed, the right to use 3.2 cubic feet per second of time of the water of said creek with a date of priority of April 1, 1907, and that notwithstanding the entry of said decree, no delivery of water thereunder was ever made by the watermaster acting under said decree, from the time of the entry of the decree up to and including the date of the filing of the complaint herein; that notwithstanding the entry of the decree, the said land from the organization of Camas County up to and including the date of the trial hereof, was assessed and taxed as dry land.

In finding No. 9, that from the time of the entry of said decree, until the year 1940, no attempt was ever made by appellant or his predecessors-in-interest, to use or attempt *286 to use any part of the water of said East Fork of Three Mile Creek on the Lenman land, with the exception of an attempt made to use said water on a tract of approximately ten acres thereof, and that at one time between 1926 and 1936 water was diverted for the irrigation of said small tract of land.

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Bluebook (online)
144 P.2d 475, 65 Idaho 279, 1943 Ida. LEXIS 71, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/graham-v-leek-idaho-1943.