In Re Waters of Rogue River

263 P. 882, 124 Or. 7, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 26
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1927
StatusPublished

This text of 263 P. 882 (In Re Waters of Rogue River) 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
In Re Waters of Rogue River, 263 P. 882, 124 Or. 7, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 26 (Or. 1927).

Opinion

BEAN, J.

This appeal involves the relative rights of the appellant and respondents to the use of the waters of Little Applegate River, a tributary of Rogue River.

It is stipulated by A. S. Kleinhammer and E. J. Cameron by their respective counsel that whatever modification shall be made upon this appeal as to the rights of said Kleinhammer that they shall be decreed in this court to be subject to the rights of said Cameron through her said Davidson Ditch, as the same *9 was decreed by this court about March 23, 1926, under the title of Cameron v. Buckley and the opinion reported in 117 Or. 477 (244 Pac. 662), and as decreed in the court below based upon the mandate in said cause. That any decree that shall be entered herein shall make the rights of appellant Kleinhammer subject to the rights of said E. J. Cameron as defined in said decree in Cameron v. Buckley, supra. This stipulation is approved and it is ordered as stipulated therein.

Claim of A. S. Kleinhammer.

Considering the claim of A. S. Kleinhammer, involving what is known as the Gin Lin Upper and Lower Phillip’s Ditches, taken out of the Little Apple-gate River, there was filed before the then board of control of the State of Oregon, water division No. 1, in the adjudication above mentioned, a statement and proof of claimant No. 932, for water from the Little Applegate River for irrigation and watering livestock, giving the date of the initiation of the water right by diversion and use as 1866 through a ditch known as the Gin Lin Ditch, formerly known as Duncan Ditch, for 88 acres of land.

A. S. Kleinhammer also filed statement and proof of claim No. 933, to the water from the same stream, stating the date of initiation to such water right and claiming a date of relative priority of 1854 through a ditch known as the Upper Phillip’s Ditch for the irrigation of 81 acres of land.

A. S. Kleinhammer also filed a statement and proof of claim No. 934 for water from the same stream for irrigation and livestock, giving the date of initiation of the water right and the completion of the ditch and claiming a date of relative priority of 1854 for 13 acres, all of said lands being hereinafter described.

*10 A. S. Kleinhammer also filed with his statement and proof of claim a copy of the decree of the Circuit Court of the State of Oregon for Jackson County, in the case of Andrew Cantrall and A. S. Kleinhammer, Plaintiff, v. The Sterling Min. Company, a Corporation, Defendant, dated January 29, 1910, relating to the water rights now claimed by A. S. Kleinhammer, which will be hereafter referred to. No contest as to the statements and proof of claim Nos. 933 and 934 of A. S. Kleinhammer was filed as to his right to a date of priority of 1854 to the use of the water from Little Applegate through the Upper Phillip’s Ditch and the Lower Phillip’s Ditch. There was a contest involving the water rights through the Grin Lin Ditch.

The state water board made the following award of water for the lands of A. S. Kleinhammer:

Date Amt. Cu. Ft.
Name and P. O. Address of Reí. per No. Name of of Appropriator. Priority. Second. Acres. Use. Ditch.
A. S. Kleinhammer 1866 2.49 99% Irrig. Gin Lin Buneom, Oregon domes- Upper and tic and Lower
(Proof 932, Vol. 13) 1898 0.55 22 stock Phillips

The Circuit Court, in its final decree upon a hearing of the findings of fact and order of determination of the state water board and the exceptions thereto, confirmed the findings of the water board as to the claim of A. S. Kleinhammer to the use of the water from Little Applegate River for his lands. The Circuit Court, based upon the decree in the case of Cantrall v. Sterling Min. Co., 61 Or. 516 (122 Pac. 42), found as follows:

“That as between A. S. Kleinhammer and the Sterling Min. Co., said A. S. Kleinhammer is entitled for irrigation purposes, to be diverted through said *11 Upper and Lower Phillips ditches, to the amount of 500 inches (or 12% second feet) of the waters of said Little Applegate Creek for one week at a time if they shall demand it, for five weeks between the first day of July and the first day of October of each year; and said Sterling Mining Company, or their successors in interest in the ownership of said Sterling ditch or water rights connected therewith, shall furnish to said A. S. Kleinhammer, or his successors in interest, on three days’ notice, for the irrigation of lands under and for use through said Phillips ditches, 500 miner’s inches of water (or 12% second feet) and shall allow said quantity to flow past the headgate or headgates of said company down the channel of said creek at any time as demanded during July, August, and September, of each year not exceeding one week at a time and not exceeding five weeks in all during those three months.”

From this decree A. S. Kleinhammer appealed, assigning error of the court in decreeing as recited above, and error of the court in not finding and decreeing that A. S. Kleinhammer was entitled to use water through the Upper Phillip’s Ditch and the Lower Phillip’s Ditch with a priority as of 1854, but subsequent to the right of E. J. Cameron through the Davidson Ditch and prior to the rights of the users of the Farmers’ Ditch of sufficient water for the irrigation of 81 acres, described in his proof of claim No. 933, and his 13 acres described in his proof of claim No. 934, and that such rights are prior to any of the rights of the respondents Maggie Buckley, ¥m. Cameron and the estate of John Devlin and Miles Cantrall.

But few witnesses could be obtained at the time of taking the testimony who were acquainted with premises involved when the earlier irrigation was had thereon.

*12 Theodore Cameron, a man about 83 years of age, was a witness. He had lived in the vicinity since 1854 and had known of the E. J. Cameron land since then. He testified to the effect that “Doc” Davidson, predecessor in interest in the E. J. Cameron land, made the first Donation Land Claim in the valley and built a ditch known as the Davidson Ditch, from the Little Applegate, and irrigated a garden of six or seven acres in 1854; that the Farmers’ Ditch was dug two or three years after the Davidson Ditch. After a time the heads of the Davidson and Farmers’ Ditch were “mined out” and the two ditches were reconstructed and combined. And afterward the E. J. Cameron lands were irrigated with water from the Farmers’ Ditch until the present time.

Mr. Theodore Cameron was a merchant and lived at Sterling for several years following 1854 and frequently passed up and down the river past the Samuel Phillips’ place at the junction of Sterling Creek and Little Applegate. Mr. Cameron was asked:

“Q. Was there any other land on Little Applegate in 1854 irrigated except that piece of ground? A. It is possible. Samuel Phillips lived right at the mouth of the Little Applegate (meaning Sterling Creek) there and he always raised a garden.

“Q. Samuel Phillips’ place belonged to Sterling Mining Company? A.

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Related

In Re Rights to Use of Waters of Silvies River
237 P. 322 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1924)
Simis v. McElroy
14 N.Y.S. 241 (New York Supreme Court, 1891)
Cantrall v. Sterling Mining Co.
122 P. 42 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1912)
Cameron v. Buckley
244 P. 662 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1926)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 P. 882, 124 Or. 7, 1928 Ore. LEXIS 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-waters-of-rogue-river-or-1927.