Independent Irr. Co., Ltd. v. Baldwin

252 P. 489, 43 Idaho 371, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 45
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 252 P. 489 (Independent Irr. Co., Ltd. v. Baldwin) 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
Independent Irr. Co., Ltd. v. Baldwin, 252 P. 489, 43 Idaho 371, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 45 (Idaho 1926).

Opinions

*374 BUDGE, J.

Appellants, Independent Irrigation Company and its stockholders, brought this action against respondents, as watermaster of district No. 36 and commissioner of reclamation, respectively, for the purpose of enjoining the latter, their successors, agents, etc., from preventing the diversion by appellants of certain waters flowing in a natural channel known as Scott Slough, in Jefferson county, and to obtain a decree declaring appellants to be the owners of such waters.

The complaint alleges that appellants appropriated, and have continuously diverted and put to a beneficial use since a date prior to June, 1884, the supply of water rising in Scott Slough from natural springs, and that their claim of exclusive ownership in and to said water has been open and notorious and without opposition or adverse claim on the part of anyone, but that the watermaster of district No. 36 has informed appellants that he will and is threatening to shut off said water supply, with the explanation that appellants have no right to the use of the water. Such threatened interference on the part of the watermaster, appellants aver, is without right, either in law or in equity and for no valid reason whatever, and that to be deprived *375 of the use of said water would cause them irreparable damage and injury. Upon a showing made under the complaint a temporary injunction was issued enjoining respondents from interfering with or in anywise preventing the use of said water by appellants.

A formal written appearance in the action was filed on behalf of respondents by the attorney general, and the Snake Eiver Yalley Irrigation District, Idaho Irrigation District, New Sweden Irrigation Dietrict and North Side Canal Company, Ltd., obtained leave to and filed answers in intervention.

The substance of the defense interposed by intervenors was that Scott Slough is a tributary of Snake River and that the waters of the slough comprise a portion of the natural flow of Snake River; that by a decree dated December 6,1910, in an action wherein appellant company was a party, it was decreed the right to the use of 1,700 inches of the waters of Snake River and had relied upon this adjudicated right until after a sale of the same in 1920; and that the decreed right of 1,700 inches is the only water to which appellants are entitled, and that they ought to be barred and estopped from setting up any claim, right, title or interest in and to the use of the waters of Snake River different from the decreed right.

At the time the cause came on for trial appellants moved the court to strike the answers in intervention and to call a jury, both of which motions were denied. Thereupon the court proceeded to hear the cause upon the issues framed by the complaint and answers in intervention. Oral and documentary evidence was introduced by appellants, and at the conclusion of their ease the court granted motions of the intervenors for a nonsuit and to dissolve the injunction theretofore issued. The appeal is from the judgment and order dismissing the action and dissolving the injunction.

Appellants assign as error the action of the trial court in denying their motion to strike the answers in intervention; in granting intervenors’ motions for a nonsuit and to dissolve the injunction; also in overruling appellants’ *376 request for a jury; and in the rejection of certain evidence. We will dispose of the assignments in the order stated.

It appears that the intervenors have decreed rights to the waters of Snake River and are interested in having the flow of that stream maintained, so as to enable them to divert as nearly as possible the amounts of their respective rights, and they were therefore entitled to present their claims as intervenors in this action. (C. S., see. 6655; People v. Green, 1 Ida. 235; Pittock v. Buck, 15 Ida. 47, 96 Pac. 212.)

The rule is well established in this jurisdiction that on a motion for nonsuit, defendant, for the purpose of the motion, is deemed to have admitted all the facts of which there is any evidence and all the facts which the evidence tends to prove and every inference of fact that can be legitimately drawn therefrom, and that on such motion the evidence must be interpreted most strongly against the defendant. (Culver v. Kehl, 21 Ida. 595, 123 Pac. 301.)

From the evidence introduced on the part of appellants it appears that in 1884 appellant company and its stockholders constructed a tight dam across Scott Slough and claimed, diverted and applied to a beneficial use the waters rising and flowing therein, and since said date have continuously and without interference so used and applied said waters, except in the year 1922 when one John Empey, watermaster, undertook to regulate the flow through appellants’ headgate, and again- in 1923 when respondent Baldwin, watermaster, threatened to interfere with appellants’ headgate, resulting in the filing of the present action and the issuance of the injunction herein. It was therefore established by the evidence that for approximately forty years appellants diverted and applied to a beneficial use the waters rising in Scott Slough, without any interference or adverse claim whatever.

The evidence further shows that from the date of the construction of the dam by appellants Scott Slough ceased to be a tributary of Snake River. There is also evidence in the *377 record to the effect that when the so-called Snake River water suit was tried, the waters in Scott Slough were not considered to be a part of the river, were not involved in the suit and were not decreed as a part of the waters of Snake River, but the waters of the slough remained an independent water supply owned and applied to a beneficial use by appellant company and its stockholders; that the 1,700 inches of water decreed to appellant company in the Snake River water suit were diverted by it from the river into the works of the Long Island Canal Company and thence conducted down to and into Scott Slough and diverted from the slough into appellant company’s diversion works and from there applied to a beneficial use upon the lands of its stockholders, along with the waters rising in the slough; that at the time of the entry of the decree in the Snake River water suit, in order to have a sufficient amount of water with which to irrigate properly the lands belonging to the stockholders of appellant company it was necessary to use the 1,700-inch decreed right together with the spring or seepage water in the slough, if profitable crops were to be produced on the land.

While the evidence is not as clear and conclusive as might be desired, there was sufficient evidence introduced by appellants to have warranted the court in denying the motion for nonsuit. In other words, appellant made out a prima facie case, and the granting of the motion for non-suit was error.

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Bluebook (online)
252 P. 489, 43 Idaho 371, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/independent-irr-co-ltd-v-baldwin-idaho-1926.