Phipps v. Rogue River Valley Canal Co.

156 P. 794, 80 Or. 175, 7 A.L.R. 741, 1916 Ore. LEXIS 39
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 156 P. 794 (Phipps v. Rogue River Valley Canal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Phipps v. Rogue River Valley Canal Co., 156 P. 794, 80 Or. 175, 7 A.L.R. 741, 1916 Ore. LEXIS 39 (Or. 1916).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Chief Justice Moore.

. The evidence shows that Bear Creek, a non-navigable stream from which the defendant’s proposed irrigating ditch is designed to divert water, flows northerly through Jackson County. This stream receives the sewage of Ashland, Talent, Phoenix and Medford, and the street litter and compost of the latter city also are discharged by storm sewers into the creek. The rains and melting snow on the mountains keep up quite a volume of water in Bear Creek until the warm weather dries up that stream in most places, leaving, however, pools of stagnant water and sand and gravel bars, which places, by reason of the heat, cause the sewage and foul matter cast into the stream to become very offensive. The water in the creek usually becomes low in June of each year, and continues in that condition until about September, when the drought is broken. The defendant owns a series of ditches, which take water from Fish Lake, Four Mile Lake, and the surplus from the north and south forks of Little Butte Creek and from Antelope Creek. From these streams a sufficient quantity of water [178]*178cannot ^always be obtained properly to irrigate about 70,000 acres of arable land which, lie under the ditches mentioned. In order to augment the supply the defendant secured from the state engineer permission to divert from Bear Creek the surplus water after the measure of lower prior appropriators on that stream had been satisfied. Thereupon a survey and plat were made of the proposed supplemental ditch; the point of diversion being located on Mrs. Phipps’ land and thence crossing northwesterly the premises of the other plaintiffs. As no agreement could be reached as to the compensation which should be paid for the easement demanded, actions at law to condemn the "right of way were instituted by the defendant. In order to prevent the maintenance of such actions at law, this suit in equity was instituted, terminating in a decree as hereinbefore stated.

1. It is contended by appellants’ counsel that to permit the filthy water from Bear Creek to flow in an open ditch across the plaintiff’s premises will at all times create such a stench as to render the atmosphere impure, producing sickness, and causing the contemplated diversion to become a nuisance, and, such being the case, an error was committed in dismissing the suit. Such anticipated consequences are denied by defendant’s counsel, who maintain that the intended diversion will be undertaken only when the water flowing in the creek is at a high stage, thereby carrying off through the ditch the sewage, which will be rendered innoxious by the then volume of the current; that the plaintiffs’ apprehension of injury is not sufficient to authorize equitable intervention, and, this being so, no error was committed as alleged. One of the cases relied upon by defendant’s counsel to support the legal principle last asserted is Esson v. Wattier, [179]*17925 Or. 10 (34 Pac. 756), where it was ruled' that in order to justify a court of equity in interfering by injunction to abáte a nuisance, the thing that unlawfully worketh hurt, inconvenience or damage must-be an actual existing offense, and not merely apprehended. In that case it was insisted that by erecting in a stream a dam the water thus to be impounded would become foul, stagnant and unhealthy, thereby impregnating the atmosphere with malaria, which noxious exhalation would render the plaintiff and his family liable to sickness. The dam so referred to had not been completed when that suit was commenced, and whether or not the consequences supposed would necessarily result was only problematical.

Where, however, it appears from the evidence that water confined by a dam has produced malaria causing illness, a court of equity will intervene to prevent a continuance of the injury: Richards v. Daugherty, 133 Ala. 569 (31 South. 934). In that case it was decided that where the erection of dams, which affect the natural flow of a running stream, results in injury to the health of persons living in the vicinity, such obstruction constitutes a nuisance and may be abated by a suit in equity by a person the health of whose family is injured thereby, without waiting the trial of the issue of nuisance vel non by an action at law. “It is difficult,” says a text-writer, “to define just what degree of injurious influence must be reached in order to warrant the court in determining what circumstances constitute a nuisance. A mere tending to injury is not sufficient; there must be something actually ' appreciable, which of itself arrests the attention, that rests not merely in theory, but strikes the common sense of the ordinary citizen. The determination, however, of the question rests in sound judgment and [180]*180depends upon common sense in each case. * * If property cannot be enjoyed unless the health is endangered thereby, a nuisance exists. It is not necessary, however, in order to constitute a nuisance, that the annoyance should be of such a character as to endanger the health of a person or persons, or of the neighborhood, the act need not be positively unhealthy. It is sufficient if it occasions that which is offensive to the senses, and that in any way renders the enjoyment of life and property uncomfortable, or that it prevents its enjoyment in as full and ample a manner as before, that it invades or violates a vested right and materially interferes with the ordinary comfort of human existence or renders one’s dwelling-house unfit for habitation; and if the enjoyment of life and property has been so rendered uncomfortable, it is not indispensable to sustain a right of action that one should, by the annoyance or alleged nuisance, have been driven from his dwelling or habitation. So even that which causes a well-founded, reasonable apprehension of damage may be a nuisance”: Joyce, Nuisance, §19. To the same effect see the first headnote to the case of Melker v. New York,, 190 N. Y. 481 (83 N. E. 565, 13 Ann. Cas. 544, 16 L. R. A. (N. S.) 621). A danger which is apparent and real, as distinguished from an imaginary fear of injury, from an alleged nuisance, may warrant equitable relief: Cheatham v. Shearon, 1 Swan (Tenn.), 213 (55 Am. Dec. 734).

2. An excerpt from the brief of plaintiffs ’ counsel is, in our opinion, fully justified, and reads:

“The testimony herein of four physicians is to the effect that the ditch, if constructed, will menace the health'of the plaintiffs and community, and fourteen other witnesses assert it will be a nuisance by reason of irreparable injury and damage to plaintiffs’ property.”

[181]*181The infliction of “irreparable injury,” such as a court of equity will enjoin, includes also that degree of wrongs of a repeated or continuing kind which produce hurt, inconvenience or damage that can be estimated only by conjecture, and • not by any accurate standard of measurement: 29 Cyc. 1224; Bernard v. Willamette Box & L. Co., 64 Or. 225 (129 Pac. 1039).

3. Most of plaintiffs’ witnesses, who on direct examination had testified as to the offensive odor emanating from the pools and bars to be found in Bear Creek in the dry season, admitted on cross-examination that when the water on that stream was high they had not perceived such stench.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 P. 794, 80 Or. 175, 7 A.L.R. 741, 1916 Ore. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/phipps-v-rogue-river-valley-canal-co-or-1916.