Jeffery v. Ouldhouse

80 P.2d 685, 59 Idaho 50, 1938 Ida. LEXIS 37
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 3, 1938
DocketNo. 6487.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 80 P.2d 685 (Jeffery v. Ouldhouse) 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
Jeffery v. Ouldhouse, 80 P.2d 685, 59 Idaho 50, 1938 Ida. LEXIS 37 (Idaho 1938).

Opinion

*52 AILSHIE, J.

This is an appeal by Clauson P. Ouldhouse and A1 Richens from a decree adjudicating the rights and priorities of the respective parties to water appropriations from what is known as Spring Lake'in Jefferson county. Respondents, Jeffery and Gerrard, deraigned their title from Thomas A. Wagoner who was the original locator of the water right from which respondents obtain their water supply. It was contended by appellants in the lower court and is urged here, that respondents were estopped to urge their claim in this action, by reason of a judgment entered in the United States District Court for the District of Idaho in 1930, in the case of Ernest Sauve v. W. H. Abbott et al. Appellants contend, and correctly so, that Jeffery and Gerrard, having deraigned their title from Wagoner, are in privity of title with him; and that if he was bound by the decree in the Sauve-Abbott case, respondents were equally bound *53 by it. (Schuler v. Ford, 10 Ida. 739, 80 Pac. 219, 109 Am. St. 233, 3 Ann. Cas. 336; Smith v. Kessler, 22 Ida. 589, 593, 127 Pac. 172; Carver v. Ketchum, 53 Ida. 595, 599, 26 Pac. (2d) 139.)

Wagoner was made a defendant in the United States District Court for the District of Idaho in the case of Sauve v. Abbott et al., and he answered in that case with certain admissions and denials, then filed a cross-complaint, setting up his ownership in the land here involved and also alleging that on the 11th of July, 1914, he made application to the commissioner of reclamation of the state of Idaho for authority to appropriate and divert “from what is known as Mud Lake, 5.32 second feet of the waters of said Lake,” for irrigation and domestic purposes. That the application was approved, permit issued dating from July 11, 1914; and that thereafter and on about the second of January, 1923, the commissioner issued a license and certificate of water right to Wagoner for “the use of 5.32 cubic feet per second of the waters of Mud Lake”; and then prayed for a decree establishing his right to the quantity of water covered by his permit, with a priority dating from July 11, 1914. It appears that thereafter, and during the pendency of that case, upon motion of counsel for plaintiff, the action was dismissed as to Wagoner. Although the findings and decree of the United States District Court are not before us in full, there was introduced a certified copy of a portion of the decree which reads as follows :

“That this action be, and is dismissed as against Thomas Waggoner. That the waters used by Thomas Waggoner are not tributary to, nor a part of Mud Lake. ’ ’

The certificate of the United States District Court clerk certifies the foregoing “to be a full, true and correct copy of a portion of the decree filed and entered in the above entitled case in my office on the 1st day of November, 1930, pertaining to Thomas Waggoner.”

While this entry and recital in the decree only specifies the action against Wagoner as being dismissed, it seems probable, or is at least presumable, that it was intended to cover not only the plaintiff’s action against Wagoner but *54 also A¥agoner’s cross-complaint; and so far as the record discloses, it appears that all the parties to the federal court action treated the dismissal of A¥agoner, as a defendant, as also a dismissal of his cross-complaint as well; and no further proceedings appear to have been taken on his cross-complaint. It is true that dismissal of a plaintiff’s cause of action does not carry with it a dismissal of an action based on a cross-complaint. (Brown v. T. B. Reed & Co., 31 Ida. 529, 174 Pac. 136; Savage v. Stokes, 54 Ida. 109, 28 Pac. (2d) 900.) On the other hand, as to whether, after the dismissal by plaintiffs of their cause of action against one of the defendants, such defendant may abandon his cause of cross-complaint, without further action or proceeding, we express no opinion; but it seems clear that he might voluntarily dismiss such cross-complaint, at any time before any pleading filed by his adversary praying affirmative relief. (Sec. 7-705, I. C. A.; Molen v. Denning & Clark L. Co., 56 Ida. 57, 50 Pac. (2d) 9.)

The fact that the decree adjudges or recites (according to the construction that may be given it), “that the waters used by A¥aggoner are not tributary to, nor a part of Mud Lake,” makes it clear that, as the matter then stood, the A¥agoner appropriation or water right was thought to have its source from some other body of water or stream separate from and independent of Mud Lake. A¥ith this evident understanding of the facts and the law, it was concluded in the Sauve-Abbott case, that A¥agoner’s claim or water appropriation from some other source should not be considered and litigated in a suit involving the waters of Mud Lake.

Confusion has arisen out of the fact that the litigation here involves waters of ‘ ‘ Spring Lake ’ ’; and the litigation in the Sauve-Abbott case concerned the waters of “Mud Lake,” and A¥agoner’s appropriation and water permit was from Mud Lake; while on the other hand, his successors in interest are here claiming their appropriations from Spring Lake. This confusion of names appears to be due to the fact that originally a series of adjacent or near-by lakes or ponds were all known and referred to as Mud Lake at the time settlers began to make water appropriations in that section of the country. Later on it was found that what is now *55 known as Spring Lake is somewhat higher in elevation than the lower lake, generally known as Mud Lake, and that the only connection between them was by overflow of the upper lake (Spring Lake) and possibly subterranean percolation. Wagoner explained this in his testimony as follows:

“In Nineteen fourteen I made a filing, filed my homestead, and made a filing in what is Mud Lake proper. At that time I never heard of Spring Lake; it was all considered Mud Lake; it was a long arm in a northwesterly direction from Mud Lake; and there is a body of water that we call the John Hansen and Charley Nordstrom pond, which is just a depression in the country, and there is what is called the Jefferson Reservoir, but wasn’t at that time. Another depression, sort of a lake, on farther, was what they later termed Spring Lake. I didn’t know at the time I filed, I didn’t know there was such a thing as Spring Lake. In Nineteen sixteen we found that the water in Spring Lake was higher than it was in Jefferson and John Hansen Lake, as it subbed on down to Mud Lake; and in order to get the higher water we changed our point of diversion from a point on Mud Lake proper to what we thought was a point on Mud Lake farther north; and it was later, in Nineteen fifteen, was the first time I ever heard the term ‘Spring Lake’.”

In the light of this state of the record and these facts, it would be a violation of established rules, as to the scope and binding force of judicial decrees, to hold that Wagoner and his grantees are bound by a water decree establishing rights and priorities to a water supply in a case from which he was dismissed and excluded and his rights were not thought to be in litigation. The facts of this case do not bring it within the rule of

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 685, 59 Idaho 50, 1938 Ida. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jeffery-v-ouldhouse-idaho-1938.