Pleasant View Irrigation Co. v. Milton-Freewater & Hudson Bay Irrigation Co.

16 P.2d 939, 141 Or. 492
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 16 P.2d 939 (Pleasant View Irrigation Co. v. Milton-Freewater & Hudson Bay Irrigation 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
Pleasant View Irrigation Co. v. Milton-Freewater & Hudson Bay Irrigation Co., 16 P.2d 939, 141 Or. 492 (Or. 1932).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

Proceedings to adjudicate the water rights on the Walla Walla river and its tribu[494]*494taries were begun by the State Engineer of Oregon, in the year 1927. All parties interested filed their claims. When the statements of the different claimants • were opened for inspection, it was. found that there was a conflict between the daim filed by the Milton-Freewater and Hudson Bay Irrigation Company and that of the Pleasant View Irrigation- Company. Thereupon the Pleasant View Irrigation Company instituted a contest against the claim of the Milton-Freewater and Hudson Bay Irrigation Company, as to priority and length of irrigation service each year.

On December 24,1930, the State Engineer filed his findings and order of determination awarding the Milton-Freewater and Hudson Bay Irrigation Company the use of the waters of the stream from October 15th to May 15th of each year, as follows:

“3000 miners’ inches or 75 cubic second feet of water per second which appears to be its capacity of its main canal under date of priority of Feb. 16, 1903, measured at the intake from the Tumalum or the Little Walla Walla Biver for the irrigation of 2673.76 acres of land * *

The State Engineer awarded appellant a priority of 1912.

Appellant duly filed exceptions to a portion of the State Engineer’s findings and order of determination and excepted to that part of said order awarding appellant a priority of 1912. It claimed a priority of 1903. It also claimed a priority right over the MiltonFreewater and Hudson Bay. Irrigation Company to all the flow of the Little Walla Walla and Tumalum rivers, between March 15th and October 15th of each year, less than 4,000 miners4 inches under- six-inch pressure, not adjudicated to other appropriators other [495]*495than the Milton-Freewater and Hudson Bay Irrigation Company. It also asserted certain rights to the use of a portion of the waters allotted to the MiltonFreewater and Hudson Bay Irrigation Company by reason of adverse possession or adverse user under a claim of right from the year 1913.

The respondent suggested a modification of the State Engineer’s findings and order of determination to contain the following:

“Said water may be used, however, at all seasons of the year when there is sufficient water available to the company, in the Little Walla Walla River, the Tumalum River or from any other source and which legally may be diverted therefrom by the company.”

The circuit court overruled the exception of appellant and in effect upheld the State Engineer’s findings and order of determination and adopted the modification suggested by respondent. Pleasant View Irrigation Company appeals.

The Milton-Freewater and Hudson Bay Irrigation Company, respondent, is a private corporation organized for profit. It owns no land. It is engaged in the business of supplying water for general rental for irrigation and other purposes to such of the general public as own irrigable lands that may be served by its ditch. It has constructed a canal system consisting of about 40 miles of open ditch and about 8,500 feet of pipe line. Its system supplies sufficient water to irrigate and reclaim about 3,000 acres of land. It appears that it made its appropriation of water in the year 1903, when it began supplying water to its customers ; that among the lands to which it supplied water at that time was a large number of the tracts that are now being supplied by the Pleasant View Irrigation [496]*496Company. The respondent was accustomed to supply to the various users served by its ditches under individual annual rental contracts, which were renewed each year. It also sold to some of its customers permanent water rights. Some of the water users became dissatisfied with this service and about the year 1912 organized the Pleasant View Irrigation Company, a mutual company, and built canals paralleling the respondent’s ditch, and began to use water therefrom. It applied to the State Engineer for a permit to appropriate 50 cubic feet of water per second, for the irrigation of the lands served by its ditch, from the Tumalum and Walla Walla rivers. The State Engineer thereupon, under said application, granted permits for the appropriation of 9.51 cubic feet of water per second. Under these permits, it operated until the present adjudication.

Water was first applied to the lands, now under the Pleasant View Irrigation Company’s ditch, from respondent’s ditch under individual annual rental contracts between the year 1903 and year 1912, and for that reason the owners of these lands are claiming an appropriation by relation with a priority of the date of 1903, the year the respondent made its appropriation.

“The use of the waters of the lakes and the running streams of the State of Oregon, for general rental, sale or distribution, for purposes of irrigation, and supplying water for household and domestic consumption, and watering livestock upon dry lands of the state, is a public use, and the right to collect rates or compensation for such use, of said water is a franchise. A use shall be deemed general within the purview of this act when the water appropriated shall be supplied to all persons whose lands lie adjacent to or within [497]*497reach of the line of the ditch or canal or flume in which said water is conveyed, without discrimination other than priority of contract, upon payment of charges therefor as long as there may be water to supply; * * Oregon Code 1930, § 47-1001.

When a public corporation complies with all of the provisions of this statute, it, and not the owner of the land supplied, acquires the right to the use of the water: Nevada Ditch Co. v. Bennett, 30 Or. 60 (45 P. 472, 60 Am. St. Rep. 777); In re Waters of Hood River, 114 Or. 112 (227 P. 1065); In re Waters of Umatilla River, 88 Or. 376 (168 P. 922, 172 P. 97); 1 Wiel on Waters in Western States (3d Ed.) 431; 3 Kinney on Irrigation and Water Rights (2d Ed.) § 1477.

“The water right is appurtenant to, but not inseparable from the land”: In re Waters of Deschutes River, 134 Or. 623 at 657 (286 P. 563, 294 P. 1049), and authorities cited therein. While the users of water from respondent’s ditch, by annual rental contracts, continued such use, the water was appurtenant to their land, but when they withdrew their lands from such use they segregated the appurtenance so far as the water appropriated by respondent was concerned. Appellant misconceives the purport of the following language in Eldridge v. Mill Ditch Co., 90 Or. 590 (177 P. 939):

“It seems to be pretty well settled * * * even in cases of public service corporations organized for profit and selling water to the general public, that the water and ditch rights really belong to the individual appropriator and is appurtenant to the lands upon which the same is used, and that the corporation transmitting the same- is in the nature of a holding company or agent for the true owners.”

[498]*498In the instant case, the respondent and not the rental irrigator was the appropriator. The water rights and ditch rights belong to the individual ‘ ‘ appropriator” and not to the individual “irrigator.” The paragraph above quoted from Eldridge v. Mill Ditch Co. must be read with its immediately succeeding paragraph, of which the syllabus is as follows:

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16 P.2d 939, 141 Or. 492, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pleasant-view-irrigation-co-v-milton-freewater-hudson-bay-irrigation-or-1932.