Ketchikan Co. v. Citizens' Co.

2 Alaska 120
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedAugust 24, 1903
DocketNo. 233a
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2 Alaska 120 (Ketchikan Co. v. Citizens' Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ketchikan Co. v. Citizens' Co., 2 Alaska 120 (D. Alaska 1903).

Opinion

BROWN, District Judge.

Several questions arise on the face of the pleadings in this case, most all of which have been determined by abundant authority. It may be said, and it is probably true, that section 2339 of the Revised Statutes of the United States (1878), concerning the vested rights to the use of water for mining, right of way for canals, etc., passed July 26, 1866, has not been put in force and is not in force in Alaska. This is° not a part of the mining laws of the United States, but is an independent statute. Chapter 262, § 9, 14 Stat. 253 [U. S. Comp. St. 1901, p. 1437]. The terms of this statute are in part as follows:

“Whenever, by priority of possession, rights to the use of water Cor mining, agriculture, manufacturing, or other purposes have vested and accrued, and the same are recognized and acknowledged by the local customs, laws, and the decisions of the courts, the possessors and owners of such vested rights shall be maintained and protected in the same.”

Right of way for ditches and canals is also given by the same section.

This statute not being in force in Alaska, and no rights whatsoever given by the statute for the appropriation of water upon the public domain, the questions arise as to what, if any, right whatsoever a party may obtain by the appropriation and use of water for mechanical and other purposes.

By a provision of our Code enacted by the Congress of the United States, the common law, where not inapplicable and not inconsistent with the Constitution of the United States or with any law passed or to be passed by Congress, is adopted and declared to be the law within the district of Alaska. Section 367, p. 432, Carter’s Code. Possibly the rights in water, therefore, and the use of the same is restricted to what is [124]*124known in the common law as “riparian rights,” These depend upon the ownership of the land which is contiguous to and borders upon the water, and they do not attach to any lands, however near, which do not extend to the water. It is said “that the rights of a riparian propiietor, so far as they relate to any natural stream, exist jure naturae, because his land has by nature the advantage of being washed by the stream.” The right of the riparian proprietor is undoubtedly to have the flow of the stream across his premises in its natural state; the water being undiminished by being diverted for any purpose.

In this case it does not seem to be of very much importance what the theory of the law is as to the rights of parties to the use of the water, whether it be as a riparian owner or as an appropriator who has reduced the water to possession, and appropriated it to a useful and beneficial purpose, as long as the water should be returned to the bed of the stream in undiminished quantities before it should reach the lands of another riparian proprietor. Such proprietor would have no ground for complaint under such circumstances.

It is undisputed that the plaintiff company was the elder appropriator of the waters of the creek; that as such it has the undisputed right to all the water flowing in the creek at the time they made their appropriation, and to the amount that was originally claimed and applied to beneficial use. It would seem that the capacity of the plaintiff’s flume determines the amount of water necessary for its use, and this by actual measurement appears to be very much greater than the amount of water flowing in the creek at the time the measurement was made in the month of July last. That the plaintiff is entitled to this amount of water less such small quantity, if any, as had been appropriated by others prior to the time the appropriation was made by the plaintiffs, uninterfered with by any other person or persons or corporations, there can be no doubt. But, as before stated, if others should make appropriation of water [125]*125for mechanical uses at a point above them, and return the same to the creek above the intake of the plaintiff company, so that the same should have been undiminished in quantity by such use, such persons or company unquestionably may take such appropriation without injury to the party plaintiff, and unless the}7 are injured they cannot complain.

It is alleged on the part of the defendant that the defendant has a prior appropriation for a very considerable quantity of water, and illustrates their claim by showing the location of a small ram, which forces water from a point about where the plaintiff’s intake begins up the side hill a considerable distance to the residences of two families, and it is shown that the two families have made use of this water or some portion of it, forced up through a small pipe by the ram. They further claim that a six-inch pipe had been put into the stream from the bank at a point above the plaintiff’s intake;' that the six-inch pipe was shortly reduced to a two-inch, and the two-inch pipe run to the wharf. It appears that this pipe would be capable of running a very considerable amount of water to the wharf where the same ends. It must be understood, however, that merely taking the water from a stream is not an appropriation of the water. To make an appropriation one must not only take it from the stream, but must apply it to some beneficial use. To the extent of the use made there is an appropriation. Whatever rights the defendant has through these two pipes that he refers to are admittedly prior in point of time to the taking of water by the plaintiff company. It will be necessary, then, to inquire the extent of the appropriation made, or,, in other words, the extent to which the water taken has been applied to a beneficial use, unless the riparian rights of the-plaintiff prevent. As to the water propelled by the ram through the small pipe, two families have used it. Allow the-largest quantity (to wit, 100 gallons a day to each family) that could be reasonably used by them for domestic purposes, and [126]*126we have 200 gallons per day that is forced through the small pipe, constituting the actual use to which that water is applied, and therefore limits the • appropriation thereby to the amount necessarily and properly used.

Considering the other pipe, and what does the evidence show? That there were two points down in the town where there was a small hydrant from which people occasionally drew water for use. How much or to what extent this was used does not appear. It was shown that the 2-inch pipe under a 24-foot pressure would deliver into the tank that is situated on the wharf perhaps something like 12,000 gallons per 24 hours, but no evidence is furnished to show that the water in the tank was applied to any use whatever. It is sufficient to say, however, that the evidence shows that at the point of delivery from the pipe into the tank there is not the pressure described, and therefore the estimate made is practically valueless; but there is no offer to show what is done with the water, if anything, after it is put into the tank. The defendant alleges an appropriation of 1,000 gallons or more per day, but makes no proof of such appropriation, except to say that this amount passes through the pipe. The defendant alleges that the object and purpose of taking the water, other than such as may be used to run their electric plant, is to supply the citizens of the town of Ketchikan with water for domestic purposes and to provide water for fire protection. I think it appears from the testimony of Mr.

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3 Alaska 308 (D. Alaska, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
2 Alaska 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ketchikan-co-v-citizens-co-akd-1903.