In Re the Determination of the Rights Ex Rel. the Waters of Sinlahekin Creek

299 P. 649, 162 Wash. 635, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 699
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1931
DocketNo. 22831. Department One.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 299 P. 649 (In Re the Determination of the Rights Ex Rel. the Waters of Sinlahekin Creek) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re the Determination of the Rights Ex Rel. the Waters of Sinlahekin Creek, 299 P. 649, 162 Wash. 635, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 699 (Wash. 1931).

Opinions

Parker, J.

The claimants and appellants, Forde, Ellis, Conner, and Kinchelo, seek in this court reversal of a decree of the superior court for Okanogan county adjudicating their respective water rights in Sinlahe-kin creek, in that county. The decree was rendered in a proceeding prosecuted in that court by the state supervisor of hydraulics, as provided by our water code, Rem. Comp. Stat., §§ 7351 et seq., and adjudicated all of the numerous claims of water rights in Sinlahekin creek and its tributaries in that county. None of the other claimants has appealed from the decree.

Sinlahekin creek rises in the mountains in the northerly portion of Okanogan county, flows easterly through a narrow non-agricultural canyon or valley for a distance of some ten miles to a point near Blue lake, and thence northerly through the lands of appellants and other lands, in a valley of some agricultural possibilities, which is more or less settled, for a distance of some twelve miles into Palmer lake. Sinlahekin creek has no tributary of importance flowing into it above the lands of appellants, other than the short outlet of Blue lake, though it has one or two tributaries carrying considerable quantity of water flowing into it some distance below the lands of appellants.

*637 The trial court decreed, applicable to all riparian claimants, as follows:

“That the riparian lands formerly in Indian Allotments have failed in the successful use of water for irrigation, have not used the water within a reasonable time and will not within a reasonable time utilize the water of said stream for irrigation; that the claimants herein have generally elected to present their respective claims on the basis of rights by appropriation; that the evidence submitted by claimants who have not so elected is insufficient in every instance to establish rights by reason of riparian ownership;”

and, after classifying the lands of all of the claimants in classes 1 to 20, inclusive, and decreeing priority of rights accordingly, decreed generally as follows:

“That the duty of water fixed by the referee in his report herein, to-wit: One (1) second foot of water for each sixty (60) acres of land, be and the same hereby is fixed as the duty of water covering the rights to the water of Sinlahekin creek and its tributaries.”

The water was apportioned to the several land areas accordingly, subject to priorities according to the decreed classes. The controversy upon this appeal is between appellants on one side; and the reclamation district, claimant for non-riparian lands, and the Black Bear Ditch, claimant for non-riparian lands, on the other side; appellants claiming rights superior to those rights.

The Whitestone reclamation district is a duly organized irrigation district under the laws of this state. Its ultimate purpose has been and is to reclaim some 10,-000 acres of arid land lying over a low divide to the east of Sinlahekin valley, that is, lands not riparian to Sinlahekin creek, and, for that purpose, to divert the water from that creek, its tributaries and other sources. The reclamation district has already so reclaimed some 2,200 acres of arid lands so situated.

*638 In May, 1910, a predecessor in interest of the reclamation district made appropriation claim, by due notice and record thereof as provided by our statutes then in force, of 200 second feet of the water of Sinla-heldn creek, to be diverted therefrom at a point near Blue lake. Improvements looking to the diversion of the water at that point were promptly commenced and diligently carried to completion, consisting of the damming of the short outlet of Blue lake, which flowed into Sinlahekin creek, and diverting the water of the creek into the lake, making it a storage reservoir, and construction of a canal therefrom northerly for a distance of some ten miles along the higher ground of the eastern edge of the valley and over the low divide to the east, to the lands sought to be reclaimed.

The lands of the reclamation district were decreed to be in class 15, and it was accordingly awarded right in the waters of Sinlahekin creek to the extent of 200 cubic feet per second for 10,000 acres of land, qualified as follows:

“This right includes 32 cu. ft. per second for direct diversion for the Sinlahekin canal. The remainder, or 168 cu. ft. per second, is for filling the Blue lake reservoir to the extent of 7400 acre feet each year, and can be diverted between October 1st and April 15th the following year without respect to other rights, but from April 15th to October 1st of each year only the quantity over and above that required to fill the rights herein decreed from Sinlahekin creek may be diverted for storage.”

The land of appellant Forde lies along the creek below the Blue lake diversion point of the reclamation district. His land was granted by government patent as an Indian allotment in October, 1910, and thereafter acquired by him through mesne conveyances. The decree awards to Forde water for sixty acres of his land in class 15, and for one hundred and ten acres of his *639 land in class 20, each with a water right according to the general terms of the decree above noticed. Forde’s land has never been irrigated to the extent of more than twenty-five acres thereof; nor was any irrigation ever attempted thereon until long after the initiation of the appropriation right now held by the reclamation district.

The land of appellant Ellis lies along the creek below the Blue lake diversion point of the reclamation district. His land was granted by government patent as an Indian allotment in February, 1924, and thereafter acquired by him through mesne conveyances. The decree awards to Ellis water for one hundred and twenty-four acres of his land in class 20, with a water right according to the general terms of the decree above noticed. His land has never been irrigated to the extent of more than thirty acres thereof; nor was any irrigation ever attempted thereon until long after the initiation of the appropriation right now held by the reclamation district.

The land of appellant Conner lies along the creek below the Blue lake diversion point of the reclamation district. His land was granted by government patent as an Indian allotment in August, 1924, and thereafter acquired by him through mesne conveyances. The decree awards to Conner water for one hundred and ten acres of his land in class 20, with a water right according to the general terms of the decree above noticed. His land has never been irrigated to the extent of more than thirty-five acres thereof; nor was any irrigation ever attempted thereon until long after the initiation of the appropriation right now held by the reclamation district.

The land of appellant Hínchela lies along the creek below the Blue lake diversion point of the reclamation district. His land was granted by government patent *640 on a date that is not by this record made certain, bnt, manifestly, it was long after the initiation of the appropriation right now held by the reclamation district.

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299 P. 649, 162 Wash. 635, 1931 Wash. LEXIS 699, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-determination-of-the-rights-ex-rel-the-waters-of-sinlahekin-wash-1931.