Miller v. Douglas

60 P. 722, 7 Ariz. 41, 1900 Ariz. LEXIS 53
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 28, 1900
DocketCivil No. 716
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 60 P. 722 (Miller v. Douglas) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Miller v. Douglas, 60 P. 722, 7 Ariz. 41, 1900 Ariz. LEXIS 53 (Ark. 1900).

Opinion

STREET, C. J.

The appellee, Charles L. Douglas, brought an action in the district court of Cochise County against the appellant, W. C. Miller, and his wife, Jennie Miller, to recover damages for the loss of crops in the year 1897, and to obtain an injunction restraining defendants from interfering with a certain ditch through which plaintiff was diverting water -to irrigate his lands. The case was tried to the court without a jury. Upon the hearing of the cause the defendant Jennie Miller was dismissed from the complaint, and judgment was entered by the court against the defendant William C. Miller for the sum of $6,212.50 damages and costs of suit; whereupon the defendant filed his motion for a new trial, which was overruled, and defendant appealed to this court.

Plaintiff’s complaint was filed on January 12, 1898, and alleged that ever since 1883 he and his predecessors in interest had been cultivating and farming one hundred and sixty acres of land in the Barbacomari Valley; that the same could only be cultivated by irrigation, and that by means of a dam in the Barbacomari Creek he conducted the water of said creek through a canal onto his land; that in December, 1896, the defendant, Miller, built a dam in the Barbacomari Creek, above plaintiff’s ditch, and built a ditch across plaintiff’s ditch, thereby filling it up, and depriving plaintiff of water during the year 1897, by reason whereof plaintiff lost his crops growing on said land for that year. The allegations were fully denied, and upon the trial the court made full •findings of fact covering all the allegations in the complaint, as well as the result of the evidence upon many contested facts. Barbacomari Creek, during most of the year, and especially in the dry seasons, furnishes but a small amount of water at the place where plaintiff diverts water for his canal. During the flood seasons the banks of the creek are often rent and torn with the torrents. Plaintiff’s land lies but a short distance below the old point of diversion, and had been in cultivation by himself and others for a great many years. It was cultivated formerly by a man by the name of Harris^ [43]*43from whom Douglas purchased it. Harris made the first appropriation of water for the land, and sold his interest in the water appropriation and diversion and his interest in the canal to the plaintiff, Douglas, at a period so early that there can be no question, under the evidence in the record, about plaintiff’s appropriation being prior to any appropriation of the waters of Barbacomari Creek made by the defendant, Miller, or any of his predecessors. The defendant, Miller, is the owner of the Brookline ranch, which was fenced and used for the purposes of pasture, principally, if not altogether, by his predecessor in interest, ~W. C. Land, since about the year 1883 or 1884. At the time the Brookline pasture was fenced by defendant’s predecessor, Harris was already diverting water from the Barbacomari Creek. The Brookline pasture-field, as fenced by W. C. Land, lay on both sides of the Barbacomari Creek down to the point where Harris had made his diversion of the water. There is some conflict in the evidence as to whether the point of diversion was inside of the Brookline pasture-field or outside. Land says it was on the outside, just where his fence crossed the creek. At that place there was a natural pool, which had been formed in the creek-bed by reason of the roots of willow trees growing there in a clump and cluster. Plaintiff’s ditch was so constructed that he made of the pool a sort of reservoir, so that, when irrigating his lands, he could get a stronger irrigating head than could be obtained by the steady flow of the water in the creek. In 1890 the floods of the rainy season changed the channel of Barbacomari Creek, leaving the pool and the point of diversion one thousand feet or more, away from the new channel of the creek. Plaintiff then went up through the pasture-fields of the Brookline ranch, owned by W. C. Land, to about the place where the new channel connected itself with the old channel, and there built a dam in Barbacomari Creek, and constructed a canal from that point down through the Brookline pasture-field to plaintiff’s ditch at the old point of diversion at the pool, and there joined the new canal on to the old, and by that means again diverted water from the Barbacomari Creek. The waters of the creek never regained the old channel between these two points, but have since continueql to flow through the new channel around through a different portion of the Brookline pasture-field, [44]*44and away from plaintiff’s land. The defendant, Miller, came into possession of the Brookline pasture-field in 1896, and soon after coming into possession made a diversion of the waters of the Barbacomari Creek above the new dam of the plaintiff, as located in 1890, and constructed a canal for himself, ran it through the Brookline pasture-field across plaintiff’s ditch, and filled up plaintiff’s ditch, and thereby prevented plaintiff from using his canal, or obtaining water from the Barbacomari Creek. Plaintiff’s dam at the new point of diversion was a temporary structure,—a brush and rock dam,—and suffered destruction every year from the floods to the extent 'that its reconstruction was every year necessary. The government title to the Brookline pasture-field at the time of the acts complained of had not been obtained by the defendant, Miller. It was still government land, and Miller’s rights to it were such rights as come from inclosure and possession. The two questions to which, the attention of the court is directed, are: First, the extent to which the plaintiff committed trespass in going through the Brookline pasture-field, and constructing his canal, and building his dam on Barbacomari Creek within the pasture-field; and second, the question of damages under the pleadings and the evidence.

The position is assumed by the defendant that plaintiff had no right to go through the Brookline pasture-field; that every time he went into the field to reconstruct the dam he was a trespasser; and that, being a trespasser, the defendant could fill up plaintiff’s ditch without being subjected to damages. It is conceded by the defendant that an appropriator of water can change his point of diversion, but it is denied that he can enter the inclosure of another for that purpose; and some argument has been made before the court and on brief as to what extent one may go -upon the inclosure of another, while the same is public land, to make such new diversion. There is some conflict in the evidence as to whether the Brook-line ranch from the time that W. C. Land inclosed it had been in the actual, or even the legal, occupation of any one during all the years up to the time defendant went into possession of it. Land claims that he was all the time in possession, and using it, until he sold it to Miller. If so, he and his successor are estopped by acquiescence. It is certain, under [45]*45the evidence, that Douglas built the canal through the. Brook-line ranch in 1890, and ever afterwards, up until he was disturbed, in December, 1896, maintained the canal and maintained the dam in the Brookline ranch. If Land was in possession of it, he had allowed all time to go by in which either he or his successor to him could complain. If he were not in possession, and the ranch was of the nature of unoccupied public land at the time Miller came into possession, it is clear that Miller would have to take it subject to the conditions in which he found it.

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Bluebook (online)
60 P. 722, 7 Ariz. 41, 1900 Ariz. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-douglas-ariz-1900.