Hillman v. Hardwick

28 P. 438, 3 Idaho 255, 1891 Ida. LEXIS 44
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 24, 1891
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 28 P. 438 (Hillman v. Hardwick) 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
Hillman v. Hardwick, 28 P. 438, 3 Idaho 255, 1891 Ida. LEXIS 44 (Idaho 1891).

Opinion

HUSTON, J.

This is an appeal by the plaintiff from a judgment and decree of the district court for Bingham county, in an action by the plaintiff to establish his right to the waters of Gooseberry creek and its tributaries, and to restrain the defendants from interfering therewith. The case was heard upon pleadings and proofs before the court without a jury, and is brought here upon a statement of the case, containing all the evidence, the findings of the court and the decree and judgment. The plaintiff, and those under whom he claims, settled upon certain lands lying upon and along Gooseberry creek, in Bingham county, Idaho, in the years 1871, 1873, and 1873. These lands were at the time unsurveyed public lands of the /United States. Subsequently, after the lands were surveyed, said parties secured title to their various claims, plaintiff tak[257]*257ing one hundred and sixty acres under the pre-emption laws, and the other parties securing different amounts, under the preemption and homestead laws. The said parties at the time of settling upon their said lands made appropriations of all the waters of Gooseberry creek, for the purpose of irrigating the lands so settled upon by them, and title to which was afterward acquired as aforesaid. Gooseberry creek is a small stream flowing down from the mountains upon and through said lands. The fall of the stream is quite precipitous, until it reaches the lands of the plaintiff. The supply of water in the creek is derived from the melting snows of the mountains, and its quantity is consequently dependent upon the snowfall in the mountains. Ordinarily, in the spring of the year, and up to June, the flow of the waters in Gooseberry creek will reach from one hundred and twenty to one hundred and fifty inches. After June 1st the waters decrease quite rapidly, and the stream is usually nearly, if not entirely, dry by the 1st of September. In the years 1888 and 1889, by reason of the slight snowfall, the supply of water in Gooseberry creek was very limited. Under their appropriations, in 1872 and 1873, the plaintiff and his grantors had claimed, appropriated and used, for the purpose of irrigating their said lands, all the waters of said Gooseberry creek since the location of defendants. Occasionally, in the spring of the year, the supply of water in the creek would be in excess of the wants of plaintiff and his said grantors, in which event the defendants, or some of them, utilized such surplus waters upon their lands. Plaintiff and his grantors, in 1872 and 1873, for the purpose of so utilizing the waters of said Gooseberry creek in the irrigation of their said lands, constructed two ditches, one taking the water from the south side of said creek, and the other from the north side thereof: Said ditches were of a capacity more than sufficient to carry all of the waters of said creek, and were and have been continuously used by the plaintiff and his grantors for the purpose of irrigating their said lands. None of the defendants claim to have appropriated or claimed any of the water of Gooseberry creek prior to 1877, and from that year to 1885, at all of [258]*258which periods the plaintiff and his grantors were in the possession and occupancy of all the lands now claimed by plaintiff, and were using all the waters of said Gooseberry creek in-irrigating said lands, except in case of surplus, as before stated. The lands, both of plaintiff and defendants, are partly meadow and partly upland; but neither of whose lands, as is-conclusively shown by the evidence on the part of both plaintiff and defendants, will produce remunerative crops without irrigation, although at times the meadow lands, by reason of the nature of the soil, become quite wet from irrigation. The lands of the defendants are all located higher upon Gooseberry creek than the lands of the plaintiff. In the years 1888 and 1889, the defendants took so much of the waters of Gooseberry creek as to leave the plaintiff without sufficient water-for the proper irrigation and cultivation of his ■ said lands, whereby the plaintiff was greatly injured and damaged in the-failure of his crops for' want of proper irrigation. Hence plaintiff brings this suit, and prays that his right to the waters of' said Gooseberry creek and its tributaries, by reason of his prior appropriation, may be established, and that defendants may be restrained from interfering therewith.

Defendants allege location of lands by defendant Hardwick, of one hundred and sixty acres in 1877; defendant T. Croshaw, one hundred and sixty acres in 1887; by defendant B. Croshaw,. one hundred and sixty acres in Í882; and defendant Beck-stead, one hundred and sixty acres in 1877; defendant Cox, one hundred and sixty acres in 1878; defendant Denny, one hundred and sixty acres in 1880; and that said lands are-valueless for cultivation without artificial irrigation. That'all of said defendants, except defendants T. Croshaw and Beck-stead, claim to have appropriated one hundred and sixty inches each of the waters of Gooseberry creek, at the time of making their land locations- or settlements, to wit: Hardwick, one-hundred and sixty inches; Cox, one hundred and sixty inches;. Denny, one hundred and sixty inches; B. Croshaw, one hundred and sixty inches; and defendant T. Croshaw, one hundred and sixty inches from Chicken creek, a tributary of Gooseberry creek. The defendant Beckstead claims that the water-[259]*259used by him is derived from a source foreign to, and not tributary to, Gooseberry creek, and we think his contention in this regard is sustained by the evidence.

Thus it will be seen that, besides the location, or rather appropriation, by the plaintiff and his grantors, in 1871, 1872 and 1873, of all of the waters of said creek, there has since been appropriated by the defendants eight hundred inches of said water. The plaintiff alleges, and we think his allegation in this behalf is fully borne out by the evidence, that all the waters-of the creek are necessary for the irrigation of the lands owned by him, and susceptible of irrigation from the waters of said creek and its tributaries. The only witness who testifies to the amount of water ordinarily flowing in said Gooseberry creek is William H. Homer, who states that in the spring (the season when the water is presumed to be at its highest) of 1871 “there was about eighty or one hundred inches of water in Gooseberry creek. I think that would be a fair average of water in the creek for every year except the last two years” — that is, 1888 and 1889 — which years, the record shows, were exceptionally dry. -This evidence is not contradicted, disputed or sought to be impaired.

We then have this anomalous condition of affairs: A creek or stream flowing one hundred inches of water, with appropriations of-that water to the amount or extent of eight hundred inches, in addition to the prior appropriation by the plaintiff of all the waters of the creek and its tributaries. To the ordinary mind, this might, and perhaps does, present a somewhat difficult problem for judicial solution, unaided by the statutes; but the learned district judge found no difficulty whatever in reaching a conclusion as unique as it is unprecedented. We say unprecedented, because this question, under statutes identical with that of Idaho, has been decided so often in favor of the prior appropriator that it has been generally considered, both by professionals and profanes, as a settled question; as instance, the question had been decided up to 1889 twice by the supreme court of the Hnited States, seventeen times by the supreme court of California, five times by the: [?]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
28 P. 438, 3 Idaho 255, 1891 Ida. LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hillman-v-hardwick-idaho-1891.