Orr Ditch & Water Co. v. Justice Court of Reno Township

178 P.2d 558, 64 Nev. 138, 1947 Nev. LEXIS 46
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1947
Docket3474
StatusPublished
Cited by34 cases

This text of 178 P.2d 558 (Orr Ditch & Water Co. v. Justice Court of Reno Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orr Ditch & Water Co. v. Justice Court of Reno Township, 178 P.2d 558, 64 Nev. 138, 1947 Nev. LEXIS 46 (Neb. 1947).

Opinion

OPINION

By the Court,

Horsey, J.:

This proceeding is an application for prohibition to arrest certain proceedings pending in the justice court of Reno township, county of Washoe, State of Nevada, which were instituted under the provisions of an act passed in 1866, entitled “An Act to secure persons and animals from danger arising from mining and other excavations.” Statutes of Nevada 1866, pp. 59-61, N.C.L.1929, secs. 5630-5635.

Proceedings under said act were commenced in the respondent court by the filing of a notice (exhibit A attached to said application) by Harlan L. Heward, a *141 private citizen, in which a violation of the act was claimed in that a certain portion of the Orr ditch, situated in the city of Reno and described therein and alleged to be an excavation, is dangerous to persons and has been left and is being worked contrary to the provisions of said act. Specifically, it is contended by the said Harlan L. Heward that said portion of said ditch is an excavation within the meaning of said act, and that the same has not been fenced or otherwise safeguarded as required by the provisions of the act.

Upon the filing of the notice, the justice of the peace of said township made an order directing the service of notice upon the petitioner. A notice (exhibit C) was thereupon served upon the petitioner, who appeared and filed a demurrer in the respondent court. The demurrer was argued and overruled, whereupon petitioner applied to this court for an alternative writ of prohibition, and an order directed to respondents requiring them to show cause why the alternative writ should not be made permanent. Such alternative writ was issued by this court December 9,1946, and the respondents were commanded to desist and refrain from all further proceedings in said matter, and that they, and each of them, show cause before this court, on the 20th day of December 1946, why they should not be absolutely and permanently restrained from taking any further proceedings in said matter entitled “State of Nevada, Plaintiff, v. Orr Ditch and Water Company, a Corporation, Defendant,” case No. 4479 in the justice court of Reno township, county of Washoe, State of Nevada.

The hearing of arguments in said proceeding in this court was set for the 9th day of January 1947.

On the 31st day of December 1946 the defendants interposed a demurrer to the application of petitioner, alleging in substance that the said application does not state facts sufficient to entitle said applicaht to the relief prayed for in said application, nor to a peremptory writ of prohibition herein.

The hearing was had in this court under the said *142 show-cause order on said 9th day of January 1947. The demurrer to said application was argued by respective counsel on behalf of petitioner and respondents, and the matter was thereupon submitted to this court for decision upon said demurrer, and should same be overruled for decision as to whether the writ should be made permanent.

The petitioner contends that irrigation ditches are not within the meaning of the word “excavations,” as employed in said act; that such ditches are not within the terms of the act requiring that shafts, excavations, and holes be fenced, or otherwise safeguarded, and that respondents were without jurisdiction to proceed. The petitioner also contends that the act of 1866 is unconstitutional in several alleged particulars, and for that reason also the respondent court was without jurisdiction.

The respondents, on the other hand, contend that the term “excavations,” if broadly and properly construed, includes irrigation ditches, and that the act is constitutional.

We will at this point endeavor to determine, first, the meaning of the word “excavations,” as employed in said act of 1866. In what sense did the legislature use the word, and what meaning did the legislators intend it should have? Ditches are not mentioned in the act. If included, it must be by construing the word “excavation,” as used in the act, to include within its purview an irrigation ditch.

Webster’s Standard International Dictionary defines the word “excavation” as follows:

“1. Act or process of excavating.
“2. A cavity formed by cutting, digging or scooping.
“3. Engin. a An uncovered cutting in the earth, in distinction from a covered cutting or tunnel.”

The word “excavate” is, in said dictionary, defined as:

“1. To hollow out; to form a hole or cavity in; to make a hallow by cutting, scooping or digging; as, to excavate a hill or a tooth.
*143 “2. To form by hollowing; to shape, as a cavity, or anything that is hollow; as, to excavate a cellar or tunnel.”

In Funk and Wagnall’s New Standard Dictionary, the word “excavation” is defined as follows:

“1. The act or process of excavating, a making hollow or cleaning out by digging, scooping or cutting.
“2. A cavity or hollow formed by scooping, cutting or digging.
“Engin. An open earth-cutting, as distinguished from a tunnel.”

The word “excavate” in said dictionary is defined as follows:

“1. To make a hole or cavity in; hollow out; scoop, dig or cut a hollow in; as, to excavate an ancient mound; to excavate a tooth for filling.
“2. To form or make by hollowing, digging out or scooping, as to excavate a tunnel.
“3. To remove by digging or scooping out, or to uncover by this process; as, to excavate earth from a cellar; to excavate a statue from the ruins of a temple.”

As pointed out by Mr. Merrill, amicus curiae, in his reply brief, it would seem fair to say that there are two principal meanings applied to the word “excavation”:

1. A cavity or hole, as, to excavate a hill or a tooth.

2. An uncovered or open cutting* in the earth, as distinguished from a tunnel.

The latter definition is designated by both the above-mentioned dictionaries as the engineering definition, indicating that the former is the ordinary definition, or the one usually employed.

It is apparent, therefore, that there is a vast difference between the scope of the ordinary definition and the engineering or scientific definition. The former, if applied to the word “excavation” in said statute of 1866, would exclude irrigation ditches, as they are not a cavity or a hole, as to excavate a hill or a tooth.

Such a cavity or hole has an opening at the point of entrance, such as the portal of a tunnel or the collar of *144 a shaft or prospect hole. An irrigation ditch, in its natural state, is an uncovered or open cutting in the earth without a portal or collar, or other point of entrance, and comes clearly within the engineering or scientific definition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 P.2d 558, 64 Nev. 138, 1947 Nev. LEXIS 46, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orr-ditch-water-co-v-justice-court-of-reno-township-nev-1947.