Knox v. Kearney

142 P. 526, 37 Nev. 393
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1914
DocketNo. 2105
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 142 P. 526 (Knox v. Kearney) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Knox v. Kearney, 142 P. 526, 37 Nev. 393 (Neb. 1914).

Opinions

By the Court,

McCarran, J.:

This is an appeal from an order overruling demurrer to the plaintiff’s complaint and from the order refusing to set aside a temporary injunction. The injunction was granted ex parte under the verified complaint.

The complaint on which the inj unction was granted is some eight paragraphs in length.

The first paragraph alleges that W. M. Kearney is the duly qualified and acting state engineer of the State of Nevada, and that the defendant, L. Tanner, is acting as [395]*395water commissioner for the Muddy River water district.

Paragraph 2, in substance, alleges that the plaintiffs are the owners of certain parcels of land situated in the Muddy River Valley in Clark County, State of Nevada, describing said lands by subdivisions.

Paragraph 3 sets forth the necessity of water to cultivate said lands.

Section 4 is as follows: “That more than 200 acres of said land has been continuously, since the year 1890 by said plaintiffs, and their grantors, as aforesaid, irrigated and rendered of great value, by the use and appropriation of 300 miner’s inches of the water of the stream known as the Muddy River flowing in a southeasterly coursé through the Muddy Valley in its natural channel, and that 300 miner’s inches of the waters thereof is necessary for the use of the said plaintiffs, and the irrigation of their said lands, as aforesaid.”

Section 5 of the complaint is as follows: “That the grantors and predecessors of said plaintiffs, to wit, prior to the year 1890, constructed a dam and flume in, on and upon the Muddy River above the lands herein described with a water ditch of a capacity sufficient to carry 300 miner’s inches of water, connecting said dam with said described lands of plaintiffs with sufficient laterals to irrigate the same, and thereafter from year to year during the irrigating season the said plaintiffs and their grantors and predecessors in interest diverted from the said Muddy River by means of said dam and flume, through the said irrigating ditch, and appropriated to beneficial use, in the irrigation of the lands above described, 300 miner’s inches of water, which said amount of water is now and at all times heretofore has been, necessary in the irrigation of the crops of plaintiffs in, on and upon the lands above described, and that at the time of said appropriation no other person or persons had acquired any right to said 300 inches of water, and the said water was flowing in said Muddy River unappropriated and unused and was appropriated by the grantors of plaintiffs.”

[396]*396Section 6, in substance, alleges that the defendants without authority of law therefor and without right have from time to time entered upon the premises of plaintiffs and closed the headgate of their flume and ditch and prevented sufficient water, and at times any water, from flowing out of the Muddy River into the ditch, and that by reason thereof the crops of plaintiffs have suffered from want of water, and unless the defendants refrain from their acts in preventing the water so appropriated to flow in their ditch, their crops will die and the land become valueless.

Section 7 alleges, in substance, that the defendants without authority of law notified the plaintiffs in writing that within ten days from the 22d day of July, 1913, the defendants would close the ditch of the said plaintiffs and prevent plaintiffs from diverting or using any water from the Muddy River, so appropriated by plaintiffs, and would not permit plaintiffs to divert any water whatsoever from the Muddy River and, it is further alleged, that the defendants threatened and will, unless prevented by order of court, shut off and prevent plaintiffs from diverting the water from the said river, and that the same is of great and irreparable damage to plaintiffs, and further alleging that plaintiffs have no speedy and adequate or other remedy at law.

Section 8 sets forth the nature of the crop raised on said land.

Pursuant to this complaint the district court issued an injunction pendente lite. Defendants moved in the court below to dissolve the inj unction on the following grounds:

“(1) That the court has no jurisdiction of the subject of the action or of the person of the defendants or either of them; (2) that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action or to warrant the continuance of said injunction in force; (3) that the law does not justify the said injunction, or a continuance in force thereof.”

At the time of filing the motion to dissolve the injunction, defendants also demurred to the compláint.

[397]*397[1] It appears from the complaint that appellants are proceeded against in this action in their official capacity as state engineer and water commissioner of the Muddy River water district. It is contended, among other things, that the allegation “that appellants have, without authority of law therefor and without right, * * * closed the headgate of their ditch” is a mere conclusion of law, and not sufficient to warrant the issuance of an injunction. This, in our judgment, is untenable, inasmuch as the plaintiffs by section 4 set forth the appropriation of water prior to the passage of the first comprehensive water act enacted in this state. By the allegations of section 4 of the complaint the diversion and application to beneficial use is declared to have been consummated on or about the year 1890, and it is specifically alleged that at the time of said appropriation no other person or persons had acquired any right to the waters thus appropriated and in use. These specific allegations, constituting the fundamentals of vested rights, are sufficient in themselves, if supported by evidence and in the absence of a preponderance of proof to the contrary, to warrant the judgment of a court of competent jurisdiction in decreeing a vested right.

By sections 6 and 7 of the complaint the allegations of specific interference with a vested right are set forth.

It is not alleged in the complaint that any water district has been created by the state engineer under the act of 1913, or any other act; nor is it alleged that an adjudication of either the plaintiff’s water rights or of the relative rights on the Muddy River district has been established by the engineer. As to whether or not these allegations if affirmatively set up by way of answer would constitute a sufficient defense to defeat the contention of appellants is not before us at this time.

[2] For the purpose of considering points of law raised by a demurrer, facts pleaded in a complaint are considered as true. (Levy v. Ryland, 32 Nev. 463, 109 Pac. 905.)

[3] Courts, in considering demurrers, will not presume [398]*398beyond the declaration of the complaint in order to either sustain the complaint or hold the demurrer good. Therefore, it does not appear from the complaint in this case, which is all that is to be considered as to the sufficiency of the demurrer, that there are other water users in the Muddy River, or others who have the right to use all or any part of the 300 inches alleged to be appropriated.'

We are referred to the case of McLean v. Farmers’ High Line Canal Co., 44 Colo. 184, 98 Pac. 16, but in that case the plaintiffs alleged that they owned certain adjudicated

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
142 P. 526, 37 Nev. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/knox-v-kearney-nev-1914.