Meng v. Coffee

60 L.R.A. 910, 93 N.W. 713, 67 Neb. 500, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 430
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1903
DocketNo. 9,837
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 60 L.R.A. 910 (Meng v. Coffee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meng v. Coffee, 60 L.R.A. 910, 93 N.W. 713, 67 Neb. 500, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 430 (Neb. 1903).

Opinion

Pound, C.

This suit was brought in 1893 to enjoin the defendants, upper riparian owners upon Hat creek and its several tributaries, from diverting the waters of said streams for irrigation purposes to such extent as to deprive the plaintiff, a lower owner, of the use of the stream. Upon trial a decision was announced orally adverse to the plaintiff. On appeal to this court, it appeared that no final decree had been entered in accordance with such announcement, and the appeal failed. . Thereafter a decree dismissing the cause and following the findings originally announced was duly entered, from which the present appeal is prosecuted. The defendants justify their diversions of the waters of said streams upon these grounds: (1) Prior appropriation; (2) that irrigation of meadow land to produce forage for their stock is a “domestic” use of the water, for Avhich, if necessary, they may consume the whole; (3) that they have a right to divert the water, as against the plaintiff, by reason of section 2339, Bevised Statutes of the United States; (4) that the character of the soil in the region in question and the nature of the beds of the streams are such that the waters diverted would be lost by evaporation and absorption in any event before reaching the plaintiff; and (5) that they have acquired rights to divert the water by prescription. The alleged appropriations were long prior to any legislation authorizing the same, and no questions under the present irrigation laws are before us in this case.

The first two positions are clearly untenable if this court is to adhere to its repeated pronouncements that the rules of the common law as to the rights and duties of riparian owners are in force in this state. Clark v. Cambridge & Arapahoe Irrigation & Improvement Co., 45 Nebr., 798; Gill v. Lydick, 40 Nebr., 508; Eidemiller Ice Co. v. Guthrie, 42 Nebr., 238, 28 L. R. A., 581; Slattery v. Harley, 58 Nebr., 575; Crawford Co. v. Hathaway, 60 Nebr., 754, 61 Nebr., 31. But in view of the general mis[503]*503conception of the scope and purpose of those rules and their effect upon irrigation, and the earnest and able arguments which have been presented in the endeavor to bring the court to a contrary conclusion, it has seemed proper to treat the question as res integra, and for that purpose the arguments in the several other cases now pending which involve the soundness of the prior decisions referred to have been considered in connection with those in the case at bar.

A great deal of what has been urged upon us as demon-stra! ing the inapplicability of the rules of the common laAV upon this head to conditions in Nebraska proceeds upon an erroneous impression of the nature and- purpose of such rules. Thus, in a brief in which the subject is most elaborately and exhaustively discussed, counsel say: “No riparian proprietor in Nebraska today is entitled to the full flow of the stream through his premises just for the pleasure it may give him to see the stream Ailing' its banks. * * * The use of the water belongs to the people.’’ And throughout that brief, and in all the arguments we have examined, it is assumed that at common law taking of water from a stream is an injury to the riparian proprietor, and that the latter may insist that no water whatever shall go out. The common law does’ not hold to so unreasonable a rule. On the contrary, it considers running water pulMci juris, and while it will not permit any one man to monopolize all the water of a running stream when there are. other riparian owners who need and may use it also, neither does it grant to any riparian owner an absolute right to insist that every drop of the water flow past his land exactly as it would in 9/ state of nature. “No one,” said Nelson, J., in Howard v. Ingersoll, 13 How. [U. S.], 380, 426, 14 L. Ed., 189, “can set up a claim to an exclusive right to the flow of all the water in its natural state; and that what he may not wish to use himself shall flow on till lost in the ocean. Streams of water are intended for the use and comfort of man; and it would be unreasonable, and contrary to the uni[504]*504’versal sense of mankind, to debar a riparian proprietor from tlie application of the water to domestic, agricultural, and manufacturing purposes, provided the use works no substantial injury to others.” In Embrey v. Owen,

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

Related

Koch v. Aupperle
737 N.W.2d 869 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 2007)
Nebraska Game & Parks Commission v. 25 Corp.
463 N.W.2d 591 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1990)
In Re Application A-16642
463 N.W.2d 591 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1990)
Wasserburger v. Coffee
141 N.W.2d 738 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1966)
Metropolitan Utilities District v. Merritt Beach Co.
140 N.W.2d 626 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1966)
Scott v. Slaughter
373 S.W.2d 577 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1963)
Duval v. Thomas
107 So. 2d 148 (District Court of Appeal of Florida, 1958)
Harris v. Brooks
283 S.W.2d 129 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1955)
NEBRASKA v. WYOMING Et Al.
325 U.S. 589 (Supreme Court, 1945)
Nebraska v. Wyoming
325 U.S. 589 (Supreme Court, 1945)
Nichols v. Havlat
7 N.W.2d 84 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1942)
Drainage District No. 1 v. Suburban Irrigation District
298 N.W. 131 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1941)
State ex rel. Wright v. Barney
276 N.W. 676 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1937)
Osterman v. Central Nebraska Public Power & Irrigation District
268 N.W. 334 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1936)
Olson v. City of Wahoo
248 N.W. 304 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1933)
City of Fairbury v. Fairbury Mill & Elevator Co.
243 N.W. 774 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1932)
Sioux City Bridge Co. v. Miller
12 F.2d 41 (Eighth Circuit, 1926)
Re Determination of Water Rights of Hood River.
227 P. 1065 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1923)
Yearsley v. Gipple
175 N.W. 641 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1919)
Martin v. Burr
171 S.W. 1044 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1914)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
60 L.R.A. 910, 93 N.W. 713, 67 Neb. 500, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 430, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meng-v-coffee-neb-1903.