Jones v. Warmsprings Irrigation District

91 P.2d 542, 162 Or. 186, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 86
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMay 2, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 91 P.2d 542 (Jones v. Warmsprings Irrigation District) 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
Jones v. Warmsprings Irrigation District, 91 P.2d 542, 162 Or. 186, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 86 (Or. 1939).

Opinion

BEAN, J.

This is a suit to prevent the defendant, Warmsprings Irrigation District, and Stanley Mallett, water master of Malheur county, Oregon, from depriving the plaintiffs of the full use of the water right decreed to them. The parties are appropriators of water from the Malheur river, a perennial stream, the south fork of which heads in Harney county, to the southeast of Crane, from whence it flows toward Riverside in Malheur county, where the middle fork joins. It then flows on to Juntura, in Malheur county, where the north fork joins, and thence on to the Snake river valley, where it empties into the Snake river near Ontario. The nature and topography of the river bed is such that from the point on said stream, where plaintiffs use water, to the headgates of the Nevada ditch on the river, is a distance of about 65 miles in a direct line. The flow of the water in the Malheur river is seasonal in character. While there is an abundant supply of water in the stream during the early part of the season, the flow rapidly diminishes during the early summer.

*190 The Warmsprings Irrigation District constructed a reservoir on the middle fork of the Malheur river, completing the same'in 1920 at a cost of approximately $1,550,000 by the sale of bonds. There are 1,989.5 acres of land within the district that enjoy a direct flow priority of 1881 through the Nevada ditch. All of the lands within the district, including those under the Nevada ditch which enjoy the earliest- streárii- flow priority of 1881, carry-a supplemental storage right. The lands in the district and in the vicinity thereof are semiarid and require irrigation in order to producé abundant crops. Plaintiffs’ lands, exclusive of-Bernice Platt as to whom the complaint was dismissed, have later priorities, from 1885 to 1905 inclusive, and are situated on the north fork of the Malheur river, outside of the irrigation district. Prom 1920 until' 1928 the water supply in the district, with the use of the reservoir, was very plentiful and the parties used the water very generously and extravagantly upon the lands with the result that 50 to 75 per cent of the lands in the district were waterlogged and unsatisfactory for cultivation.-

In April, 1926, the irrigation district entered into a contract with the United States government to sell one-half of its right to the reservoir and one-half of its right to the water therein to the government. The water right in the reservoir was sold to the government as surplus water.

The water that was used excessively on the lands of the district during this time did not seep back to the river in time to use it for irrigation that season, but seeped back very slowly for the most part late in the season, after the irrigation season had ended.

*191 In the contract between the irrigation district and the Bureau of Reclamation of the United States, it was arranged that the United States would construct drains from a large part of the land in the district to the river to reclaim the lands that had been waterlogged, thereby accelerating the return flow of seepage or waste water from the lands after the lands had been irrigated. The testimony in regard to this seepage is about as follows, Mr. Purvis, a witness for plaintiffs, testifying:

“Q. During those years prior to the construction of the drainage system, would any appreciable quantity of this water get back into the river during the irrigation season in which it was put on the land?

A. Very little of it returned to the river.

Q. That prevailed generally, did it, over all the lands from the head of the Nevada ditch up?

A. Quite generally.

# # # # #

A. In the upper part of the valley it didn’t get out during the winter time, the water didn’t get returned to the river scarcely at all.”

Jake Russell testified on the same subject as follows:

“ Q. Now, Mr. Russell, from your observation prior to the building of these drains, was there any appreciable quantity of this water which was placed upon the land in any irrigation season that seeped back into the river for use in the same season, or not?

A. Well, that is hard to determine, but it was very little if any, because the water seemed to stand there and recede very slowly, and be quite high yet at the beginning of the next season’s irrigation, in most cases.”

George McLaughlin testified as follows:

“Q. Before drainage, what would you say as to whether or not the water applied on the land in any *192 irrigation season came back into the river for nse during the same irrigation season?

A. I don’t think much of it would get back. ’ ’

Stanley Mallett testified:

“Q. What was the fact as to whether or not, prior to the construction of these drains you told us about, there was any appreciable seepage of that water off those lands' back into the river at any time during the irrigation season, while it could be employed for any purpose?

A. The seepage was very light during the irrigating season.

Q. Was there anything of any consequence that would augment the flow of the stream during the irrigation season prior to the construction of these drains ?

A. No.

Q. What can you say as to whether any of these waters developed as you have described, ever would have found their way into the river in any quantity available for irrigation ?

A. Very little found its way to the river until late in the season — that is, in the late fall and winter. There was some natural seepage during the season until probably the lowest level of the water table would be toward spring, when irrigation was commencing.

Q. As the water was poured on to the land in this irrigation process, it would be retained and held until late in the season?

A. Yes; it was that process that ruined the land, forced the alkali to the surface by the water that was held back in the subsoil.

Q. With that as the situation, did you, or did any of these directors o'f the district, or officers of the district, or people within the district, to your knowledge, ever treat those waters developed by the drains as any part of the normal flow of the stream?

*193 Q. And where would that water from waterlogged lands drain back into, naturally?

A. Where would it drain back in naturally? You mean before the drains were constructed?

Q. Yes.
A. Oh, through the winter season it is drained into the rivers, different points.”

The water rights of the Malheur river have been adjudicated and all the relative dates of priority of the different water users from the river have been established by decree entered in May, 1925.

The Warmsprings Irrigation District was organized in about the year 1916.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Department of Ecology v. United States Bureau of Reclamation
827 P.2d 275 (Washington Supreme Court, 1992)
Benz v. Water Resources Commission
764 P.2d 594 (Court of Appeals of Oregon, 1988)
Wood v. Woodcock
554 P.2d 151 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1976)
Cleaver v. Judd
393 P.2d 193 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1964)
Arbogast v. Pilot Rock Lumber Co.
336 P.2d 329 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1959)
Oliver v. Skinner and Lodge
226 P.2d 507 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1951)
Dry Gulch Ditch Co. v. Hutton
133 P.2d 601 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1943)
United States v. Warmsprings Irr. Dist.
38 F. Supp. 239 (D. Oregon, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
91 P.2d 542, 162 Or. 186, 1939 Ore. LEXIS 86, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-warmsprings-irrigation-district-or-1939.