McCann v. Wallace

117 F. 936, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5153
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon
DecidedSeptember 12, 1902
DocketNo. 2,672
StatusPublished

This text of 117 F. 936 (McCann v. Wallace) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
McCann v. Wallace, 117 F. 936, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5153 (circtdor 1902).

Opinion

BELLINGER, District Judge.

This is a suit to restrain the defendant, in the operation of a placer mine, from damaging plaintiff Dy flowing water over his land and depositing mining débris or [937]*937slickens thereon. Since the commencement of the suit the mine complained of has been sold to the Althouse Mining Company, and the company is in fact the real party in interest.

The water used in the operation of the mine in question is taken from Althouse creek by means of a tunnel through a divide that separates the waters of that creek from Democrat creek. The amount of water so taken is some 2,000 inches, miners’ measurement. Below the mine defendant has built a slum dam 216 feet long. This dam is built by driving piling, six feet apart, and planking the same on the inside with 2-inch plank, 12 feet long, put down close. The piles are from 10 to 12 inches in diameter and 20 feet long. They are driven in the ground so that they protrude above it 10 feet. The water flowing over this dam spreads over a flat thickly covered with willows to a width of some 300 or 400 feet for a distance of from 800 to 1,000 feet, where it is taken up by Democrat creek or gulch, a part of it by means of an intersecting ditch. The point where this overflow reaches Democrat creek is about half a mile above plaintiff’s land. This creek, or gulch, runs on a line, straight or nearly so, through plaintiff’s land for a distance of about a mile. This ditch is artificially made, and is higher than some of the adjacent land. It has a fall of some 14 or 16 feet in going through the land in question. One of plaintiff’s witnesses, testifying from actual measurement, gives the width of Democrat gulch through plaintiff’s premises at from 10 to 11^2 feet, and the depth at from 3 to 5 feet. It is intersected by Mulvaney’s gulch a little below the center of plaintiff’s tract. This gulch is used mainly as an irrigating ditch. In high water it carries as much or more water than Democrat creek. Defendant’s mine was first operated by water from Althouse three years ago. Prior to that time for many years mining operations had been carried on on a small scale above plaintiff’s farm, and the débris carried into Democrat gulch. Probably the extent of such mining altogether was about equal to that done by the defendant in the three years that the mine complained of has been in operation.

Plaintiff’s land consists of 425 acres, of which he owned 320 acres at the commencement of this suit. Something over 200 acres is what would be called level land, over half of which has been cleared. The remainder is brush land, that has once been cleared, but has grown up again with brush. Of the land in cultivation, 50 acres are devoted to raising timothy hay, 15 to alfalfa, 4 to natural grass, and from 15 to 25 to wheat, oats, barley, and potatoes. This land lies on either side of’ Democrat gulch. Plaintiff testifies that it is pretty good land, and that he paid $3,500 for it 11 years ago. There is testimony tending to prove that its present value is about $10,000.

The complaint is that mining débris is carried in the water from defendant’s mine, and is filling up the channel of Democrat gulch so that it is being carried over the sides of such channel and deposited on plaintiff’s land, and that the water flowing from the mine into Democrat gulch' is more than the channel can carry, and as a result it spreads out over plaintiff’s meadow and other land, rendering them boggy and unproductive and impossible of cultivation. Plaintiff testifies that when the creek is full of water it overflows his [938]*938land on the north side out from the creek for a distance of four, or five hundred yards, covering 25 acres of meadow; that on the other side the overflow will extend about 300 yards; that when the mine tunnel is run full of water his land subirrigates, and is so wet that he cannot plow it, and sour grass comes up on the meadow where the water stands; that the mine is usually operated from about the middle of November to the 1st of May; that the deposit on the land is sand and slickens; that since the mine has been operated this deposit has accumulated to an average depth of from 1 to 8 inches, and that the land so affected comprises 8 or xo acres. On cross-examination, in answer to the question, “You say 25 acres are covered with slickens?” the plaintiff answered, “Yes.” In fact he had not so stated. What he had stated was that on one side of the ditch 25 acres had been flooded with water. Further on in his cross-examination he testified that about 5acres are covered from 8 to 15 inches deep, and that the rest of the 25 acres have “little rises in spots.” He further testified on his cross-examination as follows: “How much of that (the meadow) is covered with them (slickens) ? A. Nearly all covered where the water went through. Q. Covered with slickens? A. Six, eight, or ten acres.” The witness explains that this refers to the timothy meadow. He testifies that there are four'acres of natural grass land affected, and something “over an acre on the other side,”—a total of from 10 to 15 acres; that he cleared the brush out of the channel of Democrat creek and repaired the banks; that since the operation of the mine the banks of the channel have been flooded off and the levee built by him washed out, and the work of keeping the channel in repair increased to the amount of $40 or $50 a year; that it is not possible to control the flow of water through this channel when the mine is being operated; that the débris fills up the channel,- and when this is cleared out it will fill up again in two days.

Patton, a brother-in-law of plaintiff, and Maurer, a neighbor, testify that between 15 and 25 acres of plaintiff’s land have been affected by débris. Croxton, another witness for plaintiff, places the amount of land affected at 10 or 15 acres. Carson testifies that between 30 and 40 acres are affected, and that the débris will eventually destroy the land entirely. This witness produced samples of the slickens taken from plaintiff’s land. He has débris litigation himself, and came from Grant’s Pass, some 35 or 40 miles distant, where he resides, for the purpose of examining plaintiff.’s land so as to testify as a witness. Dovelace testifies that there was quite a territory of it, land flowed over, with débris.' Morey, a witness for plaintiff, testifies that “there have been several acres of McCann’s land” covered more or less with fine gravel and sediment. George, another witness’ for plaintiff, testifies that the value of plaintiff’s land is from $8,000 to $10,000, and that the continued operation of the mine is liable to do the land great damage. One of defendant’s witnesses, J. F. Holland, testifies that he examined plaintiff’s land; that he saw a little sediment or sand, not enough to amount to anything; saw some slickens; but that the operation of the mine will be some damage to plaintiff’s land. On the other hand, 12 witnesses, farmers, miners and others, [939]*939without interest in the controversy, testify in effect that there are no slickens or other débris upon plaintiff’s land in quantities to injure or affect it. Thirteen other witnesses, who are, with two exceptions (one that of a small stockholder and the other that of Mr. Rourke, who owns a mine on Althouse), miners in the company’s employment, testify to the same thing. There is also testimony to the effect that neither the ground worked by defendant, nor that of the Rourke mine on Althouse, from which stream the water used in defendant’s mine is taken, contains slickens, or the clay from which they are produced, in any considerable quantity.

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Bluebook (online)
117 F. 936, 1902 U.S. App. LEXIS 5153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccann-v-wallace-circtdor-1902.