Hall v. Taylor

67 P.2d 901, 57 Idaho 662, 1937 Ida. LEXIS 81
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1937
DocketNo. 6426.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 67 P.2d 901 (Hall v. Taylor) 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
Hall v. Taylor, 67 P.2d 901, 57 Idaho 662, 1937 Ida. LEXIS 81 (Idaho 1937).

Opinion

*665 AILSHIE, J.

This action was commenced by respondent to quiet his title to the waters of a small spring or seep situated on appellants’ land, and he alleged title to such waters by adverse possession and use. The court made findings and entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff (respondent here) and the defendants appealed.

The assignments of error involve the sufficiency of evidence to sustain the findings, and particularly to establish title to the waters of the spring in question, either by adverse possession or by diversion and appropriation. The essential part of the court’s decree reads as follows:

“It is now, therefore, hereby ordered, adjudged, and decreed that the plaintiff have judgment as prayed for in his complaint herein against the defendants, and each and all of them. That all adverse claims of the defendants, and each of them and all persons claiming or to claim said water right and right of way, or any part thereof, through, or under said defendants, or either of them, are hereby adjudged, and decreed to be invalid, and groundless and that the plaintiff be, and he. is hereby declared and adjudged to be the true and lawful owner of said water right, and right of way as described in the complaint and hereinafter described, and every part and parcel thereof, and that his title thereto is adjudged to be quieted against all claims, demands, or pretentions of the defendants, or either of them, who are hereby perpetually estopped from setting up any claims thereto or any part thereof, or interfering with in any way the right of the plaintiff to the use of said waters, and the right to enter into and upon the hereinafter described land to maintain the said dam and ditches. Said premises are bounded and described as follows, to wit: The right to the' use of said waters in the amount of twenty-five inches with a priority of 1914 of an unnamed spring and stream situated on lands *666 described as the Southeast quarter of the Northeast quarter (SE^NE^) of Section Thirty Three (33), Township Five (5) South, Range Eleven (11) East, the point of diversion being approximately 15 ft. north and 24 rods west of the southeast corner of said land, together with a right of way to enter said land, repair the ditches thereon, for the purpose of conveying the said water, maintaining a dam or dams sufficient to divert said waters onto the Northeast quarter of the Southeast quarter (NE^SE^A), and the Southeast quarter of the Southeast quarter (SE^4SE%), of Section Thirty Three (33), Township Five, (5) South, Range Eleven (11) East, B. M. Said dam and ditches to be maintained by the plaintiff in the same general situation they are now in.”

The findings of fact support the decree. Our consideration of the case is therefore reduced to the issue as to whether or not the evidence is sufficient to support the finding and decree based thereon, as above set out.

We have examined the record of the testimony very carefully, and, while it is very meager and indefinite in some respects, we are not prepared to say that it is not sufficient to support the finding that the plaintiff’s and his predecessor’s “use of said waters .... has been continuous, uninterrupted, adverse and notorious and uninterfered with during all the times since appropriation, to-wit, since the year 1914, and has continued to be so used to this date (date of trial) except during the months of April, May, June and a portion of July of the year 1935.....”

The evidence is sharply conflicting, that on behalf of plaintiff being of positive character and that on behalf of defendants, negative in character. In considering this evidence, the trial court had the advantage of a thorough inspection of the premises, which we do not have. We fail, however, to find any evidence to justify the court in decreeing to plaintiff a 25-inch flow of water from the spring in question. The evidence is vague and largely guesswork as to the volume of water which plaintiff and his predecessors had diverted from this spring or seep to the tract of land owned by plaintiff but, so far as we can discover from the record, it ranged from iy2 to 7 inches. The importance of the decree, definitely fixing the amount of water to be diverted, lies in *667 these circumstances: This spring or seep was originally developed about 1914 by the owners of these adjoininig forties, digging into the hill brakes, or what is called by one witness, a seepage strata, and developing a small flow of water.

It seems that the spring was first developed on the land now belonging to appellants (to which we will hereafter refer as the Crockett land, because it was originally located by Crockett) ; and immediately thereafter the owner of the adjoining forty (to which we will refer as the Hornbeck land, because originally owned by Hornbeck) dug a deeper hole or trench on his side of the division fence and drew the water off from the opposite side; and this was repeated back and forth a couple of times, with the result that the one who had the deeper ditch or hole obtained the water. Finally, some time between 1914 and 1916, the Crocketts quit making any effort to use the waters from this spring, except as seepage and percolating waters were accumulated in a pond they constructed below the spring. It also appears that the flow of seepage water increases with the amount of irrigation that takes place on the bench above, so that the seepage flow is not constant, dependent chiefly on the state and amount of irrigation on the bench above. However, the use thereof is valuable in proportion to the volume at any given time. It also appears that Crockett, appellants’ predecessor, in 1914 constructed a small reservoir or pond just below this spring for collecting waste and seepage water for the watering of livestock, and that such reservoir or pond has been maintained from time to time in some state of repair and service by the occupants of appellants’ tract of land. Under the evidence as it appears here, the respondent would not be entitled to an easement in this pond or reservoir. It is clear that he should not be allowed to pipe the water from appellants’ pond or reservoir constructed by the Crocketts back in 1914.

It is urged by appellants that the water claimed by respondent was merely seepage or percolating water that came to the surface on appellants’ land, near the division line between the two places, and did not flow off of the premises, nor did it form any watercourse and was, therefore, the private property of the owner of the land, under the rule announced by this court in King v. Chamberlin, 20 Ida. 504, 118 Pac. *668 1099, Public Utilities Com. v. Natatorium Co., 36 Ida. 287, 211 Pac. 533, and Washington County Irr. Dist. v. Talboy, 55 Ida. 382, 389, 43 Pac. (2d) 943. We think that contention may well be conceded.

It is next contended that a lawful location or appropriation of such waters could not originate in trespass. That proposition, too, may be conceded. (Sec. 41-101, I. C. A.; Marshall v. Niagara Springs Orchard Co., 22 Ida. 144, 125 Pac. 208; Bassett v. Swenson, 51 Ida. 256, 5 Pac.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
67 P.2d 901, 57 Idaho 662, 1937 Ida. LEXIS 81, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-taylor-idaho-1937.