Natches & Cowyche Ditch Co. v. George Weikel

87 Wash. 224
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 13, 1915
DocketNo. 12569
StatusPublished

This text of 87 Wash. 224 (Natches & Cowyche Ditch Co. v. George Weikel) 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
Natches & Cowyche Ditch Co. v. George Weikel, 87 Wash. 224 (Wash. 1915).

Opinion

Mount, J.

This action was brought by the plaintiff against more than one hundred defendants and their wives to perpetually enjoin the defendants from allowing water used for irrigation to flow from their lands into Cowyche creek. The case was tried to the court without a jury, and at the conclusion of the evidence on behalf of the plaintiff, the court dismissed the action for the reason that the evidence, in his opinion, was not sufficient to show an injurious pollution of the water of Cowyche creek by the defendants, and for the further reason that the use of Cowyche creek for the drainage of waste waters from the lands of the defendants did not violate the rights of the plaintiff. The plaintiff has appealed from that judgment.

The principal facts as shown upon the trial may be briefly summarized as follows: The Natches river flows southeast in Yakima county. Cowyche creek is south of the river and flows in the same general direction, converging slightly toward the Natches river, and empties into that river in sec. 9, twp. 13 N., It. 18 E. W. M. In the year 1882, the plaintiff company built a canal for irrigation purposes from a point in section 9, southeastward about 7% miles to the city of North Yakima, in Yakima county. This canal was constructed across the bed of Cowyche creek a short distance above the mouth of that creek, the principal intake of the canal being from the Natches river at a point about one-half mile northwest of where the canal crosses Cowyche creek. The canal crosses the bed of Cowyche creek so that the bed of the creek forms the bed of the canal at the crossing. Below the point where the canal crosses this creek, the plaintiff company erected a dam to back up the waters of Cowyche creek so that the supply of water in the canal might be obtained both from Cowyche creek and from the Natches river.

[226]*226At the time this canal was constructed, Cowyche creek flowed an intermittent stream. In the spring months there was sufficient water in Cowyche creek to supply the canal, so that it was not necessary to take water from the Natches river; and from about the first to the middle of July, Cowyche creek became dry, and water was then taken from the Natches river. ■ The water carried in this canal was used principally for irrigation. It watered some 2,200 acres of land near the city of North Yakima, and a portion of the lots in that city. It was formerly used slightly for domestic purposes; but in later years has ceased to be used for domestic purposes, and is used now solely for irrigation.

The lands of the defendants lie south of the Natches river, and are high, rolling table lands. Cowyche creek flows through a canyon 100 to 150 feet deep in some places, with almost perpendicular walls of rock near its mouth. This creek is the natural drainage for a large scope of country. The defendants own the lands on both sides of Cowyche creek above the point where plaintiff’s canal crosses that creek.

In the year 1906, when the Tieton system for irrigating these lands was under consideration, the plaintiff renounced to the government the right to all the waters of the Natches river and Cowyche creek except 40 cubic feet per second of time for the months of May, June, July, and August, and for a smaller quantity during the months of September and October. In the year 1913, a branch of the Tieton system of irrigation was constructed upon the highlands down the divide between the Natches river and Cowyche creek. Another branch was constructed upon the highlands to the south of Cowyche creek. After the construction and the use of the Tie-ton system of irrigation upon these highlands, waste waters from irrigation find their way into Cowyche creek, which is the natural drainage of that country. In some places small streams of water sometimes run down to Cowyche creek. The result was that, during the year 1913, there was a continuous flow of water in Cowyche creek. This water was roily and [227]*227muddy. The sediment carried down Cowyche creek found its way into the plaintiff’s canal, and silt would settle in the canal and in the pipes used for irrigating town lots in the city of North Yakima, and obstructed the flow of the water in these pipes and in the canal.

The position of the appellant is that, having appropriated the waters in Cowyche creek and having used the bed of that creek where its canal crosses, for a period of thirty years, it is a prior appropriator, and is entitled to the natural flow of all the waters of Cowyche creek undiminished in quality, and that, because the waste waters from the defendants’ lands caused Cowyche creek to become muddy, and to deposit silt in the canal and pipes, the court should have restrained the defendants from permitting the flow of these waste waters into Cowyche creek, or required the defendants to pay the cost of building a siphon across Cowyche creek at the point where the canal crosses that creek.

The defendants, on the other hand, contend that Cowyche creek, being the natural drainage for the lands of the defendants, the defendants are entitled to the reasonable use of that creek to carry off the waste waters from their irrigated lands. The defendants contend further that the evidence fails to show that they have made an unreasonable use of Cowyche creek, and for this reason the judgment of the trial court should be affirmed.

A large number of authorities are cited by the appellant to sustain its contention to the effect that a prior appropriator of water in a stream is entitled not only to the quantity of water covered by its appropriation, but also to have the same continue to flow without being so polluted or diminished by the discharge of refuse or other matter therein as to render it unfit for use for the purposes of irrigation, and that it is entitled to an injunction restraining such pollution. We think there can be no doubt about the correctness of this rule where the water is actually polluted and rendered unfit for [228]*228the use to which it has been put. But we think the evidence in this case fails to show that the water in the creek is polluted so as to render it unfit for such use. The evidence discloses that, for many years, this water has been used only for irrigation. It is true there was some slight evidence to the effect that at one time the water from the creek was used in a few instances for domestic purposes. But we think the great weight of the evidence offered by the plaintiff is to the effect that such use had ceased long prior to the time when the defendants permitted waste waters to escape from their lands into the creek, and that the only use now made of the water is for irrigation. The evidence further conclusively shows that the only damage the waste waters from the defendants’ lands do to the plaintiff’s irrigation system is that silt settles in the canal, and in some cases has clogged pipes where the water has been used for irrigation. But there is no evidence in the record that the water has been rendered unfit for irrigation.

In the case of Atchison v. Peterson, 20 Wall. 507, the supreme court of the United States said:
“What diminution of quantity, or deterioration in quality, will constitute an invasion of the rights of the first appropriator will depend upon the special circumstances of each case, considered with reference to the uses to which the water is applied. A slight deterioration in quality might render the water .unfit for drink or domestic purposes, whilst it would not sensibly impair its value for mining or irrigation.

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Bluebook (online)
87 Wash. 224, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/natches-cowyche-ditch-co-v-george-weikel-wash-1915.