Meriweather v. Peterson

48 P.2d 220, 183 Wash. 78, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 705
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 13, 1935
DocketNo. 25360. Department One.
StatusPublished

This text of 48 P.2d 220 (Meriweather v. Peterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meriweather v. Peterson, 48 P.2d 220, 183 Wash. 78, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 705 (Wash. 1935).

Opinion

Geraghty, J.

-Plaintiffs, being in possession of a five-acre tract of land, under contract of purchase, in *79 the east half of the northeast quarter of section 33, township 11, north range 11, W. W. M., brought this action to enjoin the defendants, owners of the northwest quarter of section 34, same township and range, adjoining on the east the legal subdivision in which plaintiffs’ tract is situate, from obstructing the flow of water from Cranberry lake, upon which plaintiffs’ land abuts, through a ditch on defendants’ land, running from the east line of section 33 to the east line of the northwest quarter of section 34, and thence through a ditch identified in the record as the Grile ditch to Willapa bay. Plaintiffs in their complaint also asserted a right to the maintenance of a ditch on the north line of defendants’ land, from Cranberry lake easterly the full length of the northwest quarter, with three laterals therefrom running south to the ditch first referred to. The plaintiffs also sued for damage to their land resulting from the stopping of the flow of water through the south ditch by the defendants.

The case was tried to the court without a jury, and a decree entered awarding plaintiffs nominal damages in the sum of one dollar and giving them the right to clean and maintain the south ditch under conditions specified in the decree. As to the north ditch and the laterals running south, the court held against the claimed right of the plaintiffs, who have taken no appeal from that part of the decree. The defendants appeal from the decree in so far as it grants to plaintiffs any of the relief prayed for in their complaint.

Prior to 1883, Robert Chabot was the owner of the east half of the northeast quarter of section 33 and the northwest quarter of section 34, and had established bogs for the cultivation of cranberries on a portion of his land in the northwest quarter of section 34. The land here involved is situate on the peninsula, *80 about two miles in width at this point, lying between the Pacific ocean and Willapa bay in Pacific county. The district is low-lying and marshy, with small lakes dotting its surface. Cranberry lake lies partly in the east half of the northeast quarter of section 33 and extends northerly into other land not here involved.

Cranberry road runs easterly from the Pacific ocean to the Sandridge road, a north and south road, parallel with Willapa bay but some distance inland. Cranberry road is on appellants ’ land, near its south boundary, and is a public road in common use, although the right of way was never formally dedicated. The south end of Cranberry lake is about thirteen hundred feet north of Cranberry road. The intervening land is low and marshy.

For the purpose of cultivating his cranberry bogs, Chabot constructed a ditch on the north line of the northwest quarter of section 34 and also constructed three laterals running south from the north ditch to the south line of the quarter section. He built a head gate at the outlet to the ditch from Cranberry lake, in order to control the flow of water into the ditch. He also constructed head gates in the lateral ditches. The water thus controlled was used to flood the bogs when seasonal flooding became necessary.

To furnish an outlet from this system of ditches east to Willapa bay, Chabot acquired from one G-ile, who owned the land bordering on the bay, an easement for a ditch from the southeast corner of the northwest quarter to the bay. He constructed a ditch westerly near the south line of section 34, and on the north side of Cranberry road. The ditch was carried beyond the westerly lateral; how far does not definitely appear. For the purpose of controlling the water in Cranberry lake and maintaining it at a level that would enable him to obtain water for the north ditch when necessary *81 to flood Ms cranberry bogs, Cbabot constructed a dike at the south end of the lake.

In 1883, Chabot conveyed his land in sections 33 and 34 to the Pacific Cranberry Company. In 1904, the Pacific Cranberry Company conveyed all of the land to J. M. Arthur. In 1911, Arthur conveyed the northwest quarter of section 34 to the Pacific Cranberry Marsh. On January 5, 1917, Pacific Cranberry Marsh conveyed the northwest quarter to George H. Gould, and in 1926, through mesne conveyances, the appellants came into possession of it. On January 6, 1917, Arthur conveyed the land in section 33 to the Portland Trust Company, which company, in turn, conveyed to the Bi-State Investment Company in 1926. The Bi-State company thereafter made a plat subdividing its land into small numbered tracts, and the respondents acquired their interest through a written agreement with the Bi-State company in Januarv, 1932.

While Arthur conveyed the northeast quarter of section 34 to Pacific Cranberry Marsh in 1911, the cranberry bogs, developed originally by Chabot on the northwest quarter of section 34, remained in cultivation until 1917, and Arthur continued in control of its operations until that year. About 1919, the bogs were abandoned, and the ditches were permitted to fall into disrepair and become more or less filled with earth and debris. Since taMng possession of the northwest quarter in 1926, appellants have improved the land as a dairy farm with a home and other substantial improvements. It does not appear that any attempt was ever made to reclaim the land in that part of section 33 where respondents’ land lies, prior to its acquisition by the Bi-State company.

Respondents’ tract of land abuts on Cranberry lake and is under water when the lake is at its normal level. After coming into possession of the tract, they sought *82 to reclaim it as a cranberry bog by lowering the water in the lake. They cut the dike at the south end of the lake and dug a shallow ditch through to carry the water south to Cranberry road and east through what is called the Arthur ditch. This ditch had been dug by Arthur in 1914-1915.

Whether this ditch extended easterly to a connection with the Chabot ditch is one of the principal questions of fact in the case. Respondents contend that the two ditches connected and that there was a continuous flow eastward from section 33 through the Chabot ditch. The appellants contend that the short ditch dug by Arthur near the west line of appellants’ land was for some immediate drainage and not as a connection with the Chabot ditch, and that there was a stretch of two hundred eighty feet between the Arthur and Chabot ditches where no ditch was ever dug.

The court found that the north ditch and southerly laterals were not intended for draining Cranberry lake, but for flooding the bogs. It reached the conclusion that the south ditch had existed at one time, in some form, for the full length of the northeast quarter, for the purpose of draining the water from Cranberry lake, and that respondents had a right to clean it out and restore it to use for the purpose of lowering Cranberry lake and draining their land.

The court itself did not appear to be very certain of the physical conditions formerly existing, because, in commenting on the two-hundred-eighty-foot stretch, he said, in his memorandum opinion:

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Related

Berlin v. Robbins
38 P.2d 1047 (Washington Supreme Court, 1934)
Bailey v. Hennessey
191 P. 863 (Washington Supreme Court, 1920)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P.2d 220, 183 Wash. 78, 1935 Wash. LEXIS 705, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meriweather-v-peterson-wash-1935.