Hayes v. Adams

218 P. 933, 109 Or. 51, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 86
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 9, 1923
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 218 P. 933 (Hayes v. Adams) 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
Hayes v. Adams, 218 P. 933, 109 Or. 51, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 86 (Or. 1923).

Opinion

McCOURT, J.

The plaintiffs commenced this suit to restrain and enjoin defendants from in any manner [52]*52interfering with, plaintiffs’ use of a certain spring, to which the defendants had theretofore granted plaintiffs the free and unrestricted use, and from in any manner interfering with, or diverting, the underground stream or streams of water which feed the spring in question. A trial resulted in a decree for plaintiffs, and defendants appeal.

On and prior to the tenth day of March 1914, the date of the deed hereinafter mentioned, defendants were the owners of Lots Fifteen and Sixteen in the platted tract known as Woodburn Fruit Farms, in Marion County, Oreg-on, and plaintiffs owned Lot Seventeen in the same subdivision. The lots mentioned each contained ten acres of unimproved stump land.

For the purpose of securing a suitable site upon which to build a dwelling-house, barn and other buildings, plaintiffs, about the last-mentioned date, entered into negotiations with defendants for the purchase of a three-acre tract in the southeast comer of Lot Sixteen and also the right to the use of - a spring which would furnish a supply of water to plaintiffs for household, domestic and other purposes upon said three-acre tract.

The spring, the right to use which plaintiffs sought to acquire, is located on said Lot Sixteen, near the center of the north and south line between Lots Fifteen and Sixteen, and about 160 feet north of the three-acre tract mentioned. The negotiations between plaintiffs and defendants culminated in a warranty deed, whereby defendants conveyed and granted to plaintiffs a three-acre tract, thirty rods long and sixteen rods wide, out of the southeast corner of Lot Sixteen, Woodburn Fruit Farms, “together with the [53]*53free and unrestricted use of a -certain -spring near the center of the west line of said Lot Sixteen (16).”

The spring in question is located near the mouth of a deep canyon or draw, which extends northerly from the spring to, and beyond, the north line of Lot Sixteen. At the time of the -conveyance by defendants to plaintiffs, no beneficial use had been made of the spring, or of any waters which found their way into the canyon above the spring. The bed of the canyon above the spring contains many wet, boggy places, and along its banks, rushes and other vegetation grow, indicating the presence and course of a small underground stream. The top soil in the bed of the canyon is loose, and water readily flows through the same. It is heavily mixed with twigs and vegetation, and varies in depth from one to four feet. This top soil rests upon a stratum of clay or bedrock which is impervious to water.

When plaintiffs acquired the right to use the spring,- the soil was wet and boggy for some distance in every direction from the place where the water flowed to the surface of the canyon and formed the spring. In the -summer and fall of 1914, plaintiffs removed the earth and slime that had accumulated about the spring, by excavating to the bedrock, and in the space so excavated, placed and installed a box or curbing about four feet square and four feet deep. The vein or stream of water which fed the spring then flowed into the box or curbing through an opening at the bottom thereof and spilled over the top on the opposite side.

A few days after plaintiffs had set the box or curbing, they discovered that for some reason the water flowing into the box was discolored and muddy. On investigation they discovered that defendants’ [54]*54hogs had been wallowing in a wet- place in the bottom of the canyon some distance above the spring, thereby intercepting and polluting the underground stream before it reached the spring. Plaintiffs then excavated a ditch from the spring up the canyon a distance of two hundred feet or more, following the course of the underground stream that supplied the spring, and laid therein a line of four-inch tile. In order to reach bedrock upon which the underground stream flowed, plaintiffs were required to excavate to a depth varying from sixteen inches to four feet. When plaintiffs had laid the line of tiling in the bed and course of the underground stream mentioned, they filled the ditch which they had excavated, and covered the tile laid therein, and left the bed of the canyon in such a condition that the surface waters flowing therein during the wet and rainy season tended to flow along the bank of the canyon farthest from the line of tiling.

Soon after plaintiffs commenced to excavate in the canyon for the purpose of laying the tiling, as aforesaid and when such excavation had proceeded but a short distance, the defendant Clarence A. Adams was present, and being advised of the intention and purpose of plaintiffs to lay a line of tiling along the underground stream which fed the spring to collect and carry the waters of the stream unpolluted and undefiled into the spring, the defendant Adams expressly authorized plaintiffs to lay the tiling as proposed by them, upon the single condition that plaintiffs should not leave an open ditch in which stock might be entrapped.

After the tiling was laid, as aforesaid, the water flowing into the curbing at the spring was clear, ex[55]*55cept when a large volume of surface waters flowed down the canyon during, or after, a heavy rain.

The installation of the curbing or box at the spring and the laying of the tile line above described, were necessary to enable plaintiffs to utilize the water of the spring and enjoy the rights granted them by their deed from defendants. Plaintiffs erected an onion-house upon the three-acre tract in 1914, at a cost of $300; during 1915 and 1916 they removed the stumps, and reduced the land to cultivation; in 1917 they erected a bam on the premises at a cost of $700 and a dwelling-house at a cost of $2,000. The dwelling-house was equipped with a system of water-pipes connecting with a sink, bathtub and other like fixtures for the use of running-water. Plaintiffs also installed a 300-gallon tank upon the top of the bam and an overflow tank, having a capacity of fifty gallons, at the side of the barn, and connected these tanks by piping with the water-pipes in the dwelling-house.

Plaintiffs at the same time installed an hydraulic ram in the canyon below the spring and about twenty feet therefrom, and connected the ram with the spring by a line of tiling and piping from the top of the curbing about the spring. Plaintiffs then ran a line of water-pipe, more than 300 feet in length, from the hydraulic ram to the tank at the top of the barn. The water flowing from the spring to the ram operated the same and raised water to the tank above mentioned, and furnished plaintiffs with an adequate supply of wholesome water for household and domestic use and also for watering stock.

The evidence, particularly that of the defendants, disclosed that only one-twelfth' of the water that flowed to plaintiffs’ hydraulic ram was raised or pumped by the operation of the ram into plaintiffs’ [56]*56storage tank and water system, and that the remaining eleven twelfths of the water which passed through the ram flowed on down the canyon.

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Bluebook (online)
218 P. 933, 109 Or. 51, 1923 Ore. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayes-v-adams-or-1923.