Re Determination of Water Rights on Grande Ronde River

232 P. 626, 113 Or. 211, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 194
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 28, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 232 P. 626 (Re Determination of Water Rights on Grande Ronde River) 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
Re Determination of Water Rights on Grande Ronde River, 232 P. 626, 113 Or. 211, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 194 (Or. 1924).

Opinion

BURNETT, J.

In this case there are two appeals. The first one to be considered is that of JVL F. Dean, J. F. Dean, J. B. Love and J. L. Caviness. It involves the use of the waters of "Warm Creek which is a tributary of Catherine Creek, which in turn empties in the Grande Ronde River at a point below all the other irrigation schemes involved in this adjudication. Practically the sole question involved is whether or not the court erred in adding to Finding 18 of the State Water Board these words:

“Provided that the owners of the Conklin Estate lands shall have the first right to the use of the waters from the springs rising on said Conklin Estate lands, to the extent that same are beneficially used.”

This depends upon the priority of appropriation of water and its devotion to a useful purpose, and is purely a question of fact. It would encumber the judicial reports of the state without corresponding benefit to .cull out from nearly 1,700 pages of testimony and set down here what was said by the various witnesses on the subject. Hence we give only our conclusion. The lands were settled approximately at the same time in the early sixties of the last century, and the settlers began to use water for irrigation soon afterwards. As to locations and the like, the testimony in many respects is obscure and valueless in that some of the witnesses, who-evidently, had a map before them, would point to it and say, for illustration, that “the dam was.located about here and the ditch ran in this direction” without marking the map *213 in connection with their statements. Such testimony is wholly unintelligible to a mere reader of the record and no information can be derived from it. Suffice it to say for this appeal, therefore, that so far as we can discern from the record, the weight of the testimony is in favor of the correctness of the Circuit Court’s decision and it is therefore affirmed without costs or disbursements in favor of either party in this court.

The other appeal is that of E. E. Grout as successor in interest of Dexter Eaton and the heirs and successors in interest of George Gekeler, deceased. In the findings of the Water Board these parties were granted the use of a certain quantity of water out of the Grande Ronde River through the ditch of the Irrigation Canal Company with a date of priority of 1869. The Pioneer Flouring Mill Company, as the successor in interest of the Island City Mercantile and Milling Company objected to the matter of priority, claiming that it should not be earlier than 1883. The Milling Company relies upon a decree rendered in a suit between its predecessor as plaintiff and George Gekeler and the Irrigation Canal Company as defendants, wherein it is decreed in substance that Gekeler, the individual, has no right or interest in the waters of Grande Ronde River; that the Island City Mercantile and Milling Company was entitled to a flow of 1,500 inches of water out of the Grande Ronde River from September 1st of each year until July 1st of the following year and from July 1st to September 1st in the same year, 100 inches of water, and that the Irrigation Canal Company should have the remainder of the water. The Circuit Court so construed this decree as to establish the priority in favor of the Gekelers and Grout and the Irrigation Company as of the ' year 1883, *214 that being the date of incorporation of the Irrigation Canal Company. The respondents point to the stipulation between Gekeler and the Milling Company upon which that decree was based wherein it was agreed between the company and George Gekeler that the latter “has and claims to have no right or interest in or to the waters of the Grande Ronde River.”

The respondents say that this concludes Gekeler and his heirs who are parties to this proceeding and his successors, and that all the right they have is that derived from their connection as stockholders in the Irrigation Canal Company which confessedly had no existence prior to 1883.

In our judgment this conception is erroneous. It is abundantly established by the testimony that at least as early as 1869 the predecessors in interest of the present appellants, Grout, and the heirs of George Gekeler appropriated water from the Grande Ronde River and applied it to the irrigation of the lands here involved. There were other appropriators using water from the same river and for the purpose of the better and more efficient enjoyment of their appropriations they formed a company to maintain the ditch and deliver to them the water of their several appropriations. Whether that company was regularly incorporated or not does not fully appear from the record, but at the very least, it was an instrumentality whereby the appropriators used and enjoyed their appropriations. This scheme continued in operation until 1883, when the present defendant, the Irrigation Canal Company, was incorporated and the work was carried forward under its management.

*215 We note two things about the decree in the case of the Island City Mercantile and Milling Company against the Irrigation Canal Company and George Gekeler. One is that nothing is stated therein about who has the priority in point of time and the other is the feature common to all decrees, codified in Section 756, Or. L., thus:

“The effect of a judgment, decree, or final order in an action, suit or proceeding before a court or judge thereof of this state or of the United States, having jurisdiction to pronounce the same, is as follows:

“1. In case of a judgment, decree, or order against a specific thing, or in respect to the probate of a will or the administration of ths estate of a deceased person, or in respect to the personal, political, or legal condition or relation of a particular person, the judgment, decree, or order is conclusive upon the title to the thing, the will or administration, or the condition or relation of the person;

“2. In other cases, the judgment, decree, or order is, in respect to the matter directly determined, conclusive between the parties and their representatives and successors in interest by title subsequent to the commencement of the action, suit, or proceeding, litigating for the same thing, under the same title, and in the same capacity.”

So far as priorities are concerned it would have been perfectly competent for Gekeler to surrender his priority to the Milling Company in consideration of his being released from damages for his invasion of the company’s rights. Whatever the effect of that decree may have been between Gekeler and the company, it certainly has no effect as against or in favor of those who were not parties to it. Of course, it would bind the present Gekelers as to the Milling Company, for they are ‘successors in interest of a *216 party to that decree, but it would not bind them respecting strangers to that litigation.

It is true that in the stipulation -between Gekeler and the Milling Company he stated as part of the agreement that he had no claim in the waters of Grande Ronde River. Aside from the effect of the decree, limited as it is to the immediate parties to it, the language of that stipulation may be considered as an admission against Gekeler’s interest affecting his heirs and other successors in interest, but it is not conclusive.

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Related

In Re Rights to Use of Waters of Silvies River
237 P. 322 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1924)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 P. 626, 113 Or. 211, 1925 Ore. LEXIS 194, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/re-determination-of-water-rights-on-grande-ronde-river-or-1924.