Harrington v. Demaris

77 P. 603, 46 Or. 111, 1904 Ore. LEXIS 151
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 18, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 77 P. 603 (Harrington v. Demaris) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harrington v. Demaris, 77 P. 603, 46 Or. 111, 1904 Ore. LEXIS 151 (Or. 1904).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Moore

delivered the opinion.

An examination of the pleadings, the substance of which is hereinbefore set out, shows that the controversy involved in this suit relates to the use of water from a stream by riparian proprietors; and, though appropriations of water are mentioned in the complaint and answer, no priority of possession of public land is alleged by either party as a foundation for a vested and accrued right to the use of such water (Rev. Stat. IT. S. § 2339, H. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1437), nor is it averred by either party that, after the necessary demands of a prior appropriator had [115]*115been supplied, there remained a quantity which he appropriated: Simmons v. Winters, 21 Or. 35 (27 Pac. 7, 28 Am. St. Rep. 727); Carson v. Gentner, 33 Or. 512 (52 Pac. 506, 43 L. R. A. 130); Browning v. Lewis, 39 Or. 11 (64 Pac. 304); McCall v. Porter, 42 Or. 49 (70 Pac. 820, 71 Pac. 976).

1. It will be remembered that the complaint states that plaintiff and his grantor had used the water in question more than ten years adversely to the defendant, but, as his land is situated on the stream below that of the defendant, and the testimony fails to show any recognition by the latter of his alleged right, his use has not been adverse to the defendant: North Powder M. Co. v. Coughanor, 34 Or. 9 (54 Pac. 223); Bowman v. Bowman 35 Or. 279 (57 Pac. 546).

2. So, too, the answer alleges that the water issuing from the springs on Dorothy’s -land ivas used by defendant adversely to plaintiff more than ten years prior to bringing this suit. If the water from these springs was never tributary to the stream in question, defendant’s use thereof could not have been adverse to plaintiff, who, as a riparian proprietor, was never entitled thereto. The testimony shows that, though the volume of water flowing in the stream to plaintiff’s premises was annually diminishing, his use thereof was undisturbed until about 1898, and, if it be conceded that the water from the springs on Dorothy’s land originally formed a part of this stream, the defendant’s interference therewith, not having been sufficient to enable him to invoke the statute of limitations, his use of the water could not toll the plaintiff’s right thereto. This eliminates the question of adverse use by the respective parties, and confines the inquiry as follows: (1) What constitutes the waters of the stream flowing through the lands of the parties; (2) has the defendant, as a riparian proprietor, taken more than his share of the water of the stream; and, if so, (3) what damage has the plaintiff suffered in consequence thereof ?

3. Considering these questions in their order, the testimony shoivs that one R. M. Dorothy owns the east half of section 21 in township 5 north, of range 36 east of the Willamette Meridian, [116]*116the defendant the west half of that section, and the plaintiff, the southeast quarter and the east half of the northeast quarter of section SO in that township and range, except, however twenty-nine acres from the north end of the latter land, and also one acre therefrom on which a schoolhouse has been erected; that the Walla Walla River now flows westerly through the northern part of these sections near a bluff, but prior to 1870 it ran in an old channel about 200 yards south of its present bed; that a small stream, known as “Spring Branch,” is found on defendant’s land, and flows southwesterly to and through plaintiff’s premises, emptying into the river at a point below. This branch-was probably an older channel of the river, for, during freshets in the latter stream, before the channel was changed to its present bed, the water overflowed the banks on the south and passed down Spring Branch, and, to prevent the stream from permanently following such course, plaintiff’s grantor, George De Haven, and others, constructed a dam on the south bank of the river on the line of the overflow. About fifteen acres of Dorothy’s land was originally a swamp, in which brush and tules grew, and where the water during the entire year stood about three feet deep; but about 1884 he drained this marsh, and discovered that it was caused by three large springs therein. It is alleged in the complaint, and the court found, that the source of Spring Branch was the springs on Dorothy’s land, though defendant maintains that the fountain head of this stream is a spring on his premises, and that the water from the springs on Dorothy’s land never . reached Spring Branch in any channel, and, this being so, the court erred in making its finding to that effect, and in rendering the decree based thereon. Each party introduced in evidence a map on which is severally delineated the land owned by the plaintiff, by the defendant, and by Dorothy; but no survey of the stream, river, old channel, or dams ever having been made, the charts do not coincide in important particulars, and hence neither can be adopted as correct, except in so far as the representations thereon are corroborated. The plaintiff contends that the dam placed in the stream, constituting an obstruction to the flow of water from the springs on Dorothy’s land to his premises. [117]*117is built in the old channel. The defendant maintains, however, that the dam complained of is placed in Spring Branch, and permits as much water to flow to plaintiff’s land as passed an old dam' which was supplanted by the new structure, and that Spring Branch is separate from the .old channel. Whether or not Spring Branch is a part of the old channel of the Walla Walla Biver is of no consequence, but the identity of the dam that produced the injury of which plaintiff complains is important.

Considering whether the water from the swamp on Dorothy’s land ever found its way originally into Spring Branch, we think the preponderance of the testimony shows that it flowed westward therefrom on the surface into this stream, and also northward in the same manner into the old channel. When Dorothy drained this swamp, he dug a ditch therefrom northward, and conducted water into the old channel, and also made another ditch westward from the swamp to the boundary of his land, where defendant continued the conduit north, causing the water flowing therein to be discharged into the old channel. The marsh having been reclaimed, it was ascertained that the swamp was caused by three large springs, known as No. 1, which discharges its water westward, and Nos. 2 and 3, which emit their waters northward, and all now emptying into the old channel. This change in the flow .of water from spring No. 1 probably causing a scarcity, George De Haven, plaintiff’s grantor, Enoch Demaris, defendant’s father and predecessor in interest, and one Highby Harris, who then owned land through which Spring Branch flowed, 'about 1885, removed a part of the old dam, built on-the bank of the old channel to prevent an overflow, and let the water issuing' from these springs flow down such branch, in which, as we understand the testimony, the greater part thereof has continued to glide for more than fifteen years, until the summer of 1900, when the dam was replaced, and the water from the springs conducted in-the old channel to a dam built therein, where by means of a ditch it is diverted and used in irrigating crops and an orchard growing on defendant’s land.

[118]*118Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
77 P. 603, 46 Or. 111, 1904 Ore. LEXIS 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrington-v-demaris-or-1904.