Keyser v. Morehead

130 P. 992, 23 Idaho 501, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 80
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 4, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 130 P. 992 (Keyser v. Morehead) 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
Keyser v. Morehead, 130 P. 992, 23 Idaho 501, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 80 (Idaho 1913).

Opinion

STEWART, J.

— This action was brought by the appellant against the defendants for the purpose of establishing his right and interest in a certain pipe-line to the extent of twenty miner’s inches, upon plaintiff’s paying into court his proportional share of the expense of purchasing and laying said pipe-line. The defendants by their answer put in issue the allegations of the complaint.

It appears from the record that the appellant and the respondents own lands in the same neighborhood, and that such parties have been taking water from what is known as the Lower Payette Ditch and its extensions, and that such water has been carried from the main ditch to the lands of the parties to this action through one lateral ditch; that the land over which this lateral passes is of such a character as has made it necessary to build a flume or pipe for a distance of about one thousand feet. When the lateral ditch was first constructed a flume was built across this portion of the line of the lateral, which was used by all the parties for the purpose of carrying water to their said lands from the main ditch, and it served such purpose up to and including the year 1910.

The lands of the parties to this action were below and beyond the flume, and below the point where the pipe-line delivered the water to the lateral below the depression, where the same water was delivered from the lateral into the pipeline. There is no dispute between the parties as to the respective rights of the different parties to convey water through the lateral from the main ditch to the lands each owned and described in the pleadings in this- case.

In the latter part of 1910 the flume, from long use, became unserviceable, and would not carry the water through it so as to supply the necessary water upon the lands of both plaintiff and the defendants, and the defendants proposed among themselves, and submitted such proposition to the plaintiff, [504]*504that the flume should be removed and that a pipe-line be constructed by all parties across the depression the full span of the old flume. The evidence is conflicting as to whether the plaintiff consented with the defendants and agreed to this arrangement. Nevertheless, the defendants determined in December, 1910, that the old flume over the depression was not sufficient to carry the water, and removed the old wooden flume and constructed the pipe-line across the depression. After the pipe-line was constructed and was finished, in May, 1911, and water was being carried through the same, the appellant requested the right to carry through the pipe the amount of water he had previously been using upon his land the same as it had been carried through the old flume, and upon such request he was permitted to carry the water through the pipe-line during the year 1911. Thereafter, in April, 1912, the appellant asked permission to purchase an interest in the pipe-line and this was refused. In this connection it is proper to observe that the company owning the lateral ditch, of which the flume was a part, was not the owner of the land occupied by the old flume, the land where the pipeline is laid, ,and has never acquired by conveyance a right of way therefor, but has used the flume over the depression for a number of years.

The lateral ditch above referred to and the flume were constructed by four different persons, Monteith, "Waite, Pence and Ehea, and these four persons furnished the money and material and secured the right of way for the lateral ditch and the construction of the flume where the pipe-line was afterward constructed, and the plaintiff and defendants are the successors in interest of the parties who built the lateral ditch; the lateral ditch was constructed for the purpose of taking water from the main ditch to water the lands owned by the parties who constructed the same, and the title to such lands and the lateral ditch passed from such persons to the plaintiff and the defendants.

We think it is also clear from the evidence, when considered all together, that the parties to this suit acquired the lateral ditch as co-owners and used the same as tenants in common, [505]*505and that each is entitled to the use of the same for the carriage of water to irrigate their respective lands. The pipeline constructed by the defendants was a necessary repair and improvement of the lateral ditch, and was used for the purpose above named. It was constructed to carry the water of the lateral ditch underground and poured it back into the lateral ditch at a point lower down and at a point where the flume delivered the water prior to the construction of the pipe. The pipe was laid along the right of way formerly occupied by the flume, and thus occupied the same right of way that was occupied by the flume, and by such construction the pipe-line became a part of the lateral ditch and was necessary for the operation of the same.

It also appears that if the plaintiff is not allowed to purchase an interest in such pipe-line, he will be compelled to build a separate pipe-line for his own use across the depression in order to carry water to his land, and that this will necessitate his purchasing or securing a right of way to do so, and that large and unnecessary expense will be imposed upon him.

It is shown that when the pipe-line was constructed it was upon the theory and for the purpose that the same was of sufficient capacity to carry water to supply the demands of the defendants and also the plaintiff in irrigating their lands.

The cause was tried to the. court and findings were made and judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants, and the judgment denied the plaintiff any right, title, claim or interest in the pipe-line or that he was entitled to purchase any interest therein, and that he was not entitled to an injunction.

The appellant presents two questions to this court: First, whether thére was an agreement in good faith between the plaintiff- and defendants for mutual co-operation in the construction of the pipe-line section connecting the two parts of the old lateral ditch, and whether it was carried out in good faith by the plaintiff or violated by the defendants; second, whether under all the facts of this case the appellant has the same interest in said pipe-line as he had in the flume, which [506]*506it replaced, prior to the construction of the_ pipe-line, upon his paying his proportionate share of the construction of said pipe-line.

In 38 Cyc., p. 53, paragraph E, the author summarizes the general rule as recognized by the authorities with reference to duty and right to repair property belonging to tenants in common, and it is said: “Tenants in common are not as such agents for each other, nor are they bound to protect each other’s interests and to prevent them from deteriorating in value; the duty to repair is equal; and where a eotenant improves the common property at his own expense, thereby putting it to its only beneficial use, he is not liable to his eotenants for trespass. If there be authority, by agreement or otherwise, to improve the property at the expense of the cotenants therein, then the cotenant so improving will be entitled to contribution from his cotenants if he act prudently and in good faith; and under such circumstances the cotenant so improving will not be held responsible to others for mere errors of judgment either as to the character of the improvement or the construction thereof.”

The same author, on p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
130 P. 992, 23 Idaho 501, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/keyser-v-morehead-idaho-1913.