Reno v. Richards

178 P. 81, 32 Idaho 1, 1918 Ida. LEXIS 5
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 26, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 178 P. 81 (Reno v. Richards) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reno v. Richards, 178 P. 81, 32 Idaho 1, 1918 Ida. LEXIS 5 (Idaho 1918).

Opinion

RICE, J.

This action was brought to obtain an adjudication of the rights to the use of the waters of Birch Creek. Birch Creek is a stream which has its source in Lemhi county, near the southern boundary thereof, in what is known as Birch Creek Springs. It flows in a southeasterly direction for a distance of about thirty miles, its waters gradually sinking into the ground along the lower part of its eonrse until they are all absorbed at a point commonly known as Birch Creek Sink, and they do not appear again at any known place.

There were forty-four parties plaintiffs and defendants named in the suit. There was a prior adjudication of the rights to the use of the waters of this stream in the year 1894. That decree was confirmed by the lower court in this suit: The cause was tried by the court, findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and judgment entered conforming thereto.

Two appeals from the judgment are before this court for consideration. The appellants claim error was committed in [5]*5certain findings and conclusions of the court, and portions of the judgment based thereon.

Appellants Frank G. Worthing and Jessie Worthing, defendants and cross-complainants in the court below, specify as error the finding of the court that on July 29, 1907, appellants went upon Pass Creek, a tributary of Birch Creek, and by means of cleaning out the channel thereof, and performing other work thereon, caused a substantial but indefinite increase in the flow of the waters of said Pass Creek, for the reason that the evidence shows a considerable and definite increase in the flow of - the waters of said stream, amounting to at least two second-feet, was caused by the labors of these appellants. It is contended that the court should have found definitely the amount of the increased flow caused by them, and awarded to them a right to the use of such increase superior to that of all other claimants from the stream.

These appellants claim under a permit issued by the state engineer on July 29, 1907, and submitted in evidence a license issued by the state engineer granting them the right to the use of 2.03 second-feet of the waters of Birch Creek, with date of priority July 29, 1907, the date of the original permit. The lands of appellants are situated on Birch Creek above the point where the waters of Pass Creek flow into Birch Creek, and they claim a right to take out of Birch. Creek the amount of water which they have caused to flow therein below the point where they diverted the water. It is not shown that there were any rights intervening between their poiht of diversion from Birch Creek and the point where they caused the waters of Pass Creek to empty into Birch Creek. In the absence of detriment to other users of water from Birch Creek, there is no doubt of their right to make a diversion from Birch Creek, at their point of diversion, of the amount of water which they caused to flow therein for the use of other appropriators farther down the stream.

It was shown that Pass Creek has its source in a number of springs, and after flowing a distance of about sis miles [6]*6through a canyon, continues a distance of about three and one-half miles through a comparatively level country to a point where it empties into Birch Creek; that the soil through which it flows is very porous; that many obstructions were in the stream, and that there was a large percentage of loss by seepage and evaporation in its natural channel. These appellants claim that by removing obstructions from the channel, such as brush and fallen logs, and excavating channels through sand-bars and other obstructions, for a distance of some miles through the canyon, and by taking out a ditch of sufficient capacity to carry all the waters of the creek the remaining distance of three or four miles, they have considerably augmented the flow of the stream. They cite many authorities in support of their claim that they are entitled to the use of the waters which they have thus conserved. (See Wiel on Water Rights, secs. 38a and 61; Ironstone Ditch Co. v. Ashenfelter, 57 Colo. 31, 140 Pac. 177; Beaverhead etc. Co. v. Dillon etc. Co., 34 Mont. 135, 85 Pac. 880; Churchill v. Rose, 136 Cal. 576, 69 Pac. 416; Fuller et al. v. Sharp et al., 33 Utah, 431, 94 Pac. 813; Pomona L. & W. Co. v. San Antonio Water Co., 152 Cal. 618, 93 Pac. 881; Wiggins v. Muscupiabe L. & W. Co., 113 Cal. 182, 54 Am. St. 337, 45 Pac. 160, 32 L. R. A. 667; Roberts v. Crafts, 141 Cal. 20, 74 Pac. 281; Miller v. Wheeler, 54 Wash. 429, 23 L. R. A., N. S., 1065, 103 Pac. 641.)

We do not know of any statute, or any policy of our laws, to prevent the application of the rule announced by the above-cited authorities. The court having found that these appellants effected a substantial increase in the flow of Pass Creek, it should have determined as definitely as possible the amount of such increase and awarded the same to the use of appellants. (Pomona L. & W. C. v. San Antonio Water Co., supra; Butte Canal etc. Co. v. Vaughn, 11 Cal. 143, 70 Am. Dec. 769, Miller v. Wheeler, supra.)

These appellants also specify as error the action of the court in awarding to the Wood Live Stock Company the right to the use of 1.4 second-feet of the waters of Pass [7]*7Creek, with date of priority June 1, 1900;.also the action of the court in awarding to Edward Kaufman the right to the use of 1.2 second-feet of the waters of Pass Creek, with date of priority May 1, 1907.

It appears from the testimony that in "1901, Kaufman took out a small ditch heading in Pass Creek immediately above his land, with a carrying capacity of about 25 inches of water. The court decreed to Kaufman the right to the’use of 25 inches, or .5 seconcl-feet, with date of priority May 1, 1901, and to this award no objection is made. After using this ditch one or two years, Kaufman obtained water through another ditch known as the “Bucklin Ditch,” which afterward became the property of the Wood Dive Stock Company. It appears that thereafter the land of the Wood Dive Stock Company and that of Kaufman were irrigated from the same ditch. It also appears that they used the water flowing in this ditch alternately by a system of rotation. The evidence is not definite as to the amount of water diverted through this ditch, the estimates varying from one to 1.4 second-feet. By the decree the court evidently awarded each of these claimants at least the full amount of the continuous flow of the water diverted by the so called Bucklin Ditch. This was error. The amount of water allotted to both claimants should not have exceeded the continuous flow of the water diverted by the Bucklin Ditch and applied to a beneficial use.

Moreover, a careful consideration of the evidence introduced in favor of the claim of Kaufman shows that it is insufficient to justify an award for any water over and above the 25 inches decreed to him, with date of priority May 1, 1901. He does not show that he applied any of it to a beneficial use. The full extent of his testimony is that he used it on his desert claim. The court was not informed as to what was the nature of the use made of it. In his cross-complaint he alleges that he conducted the water to his land for the reclamation and cultivation thereof, but his testimony does not show that he used it either in the reclamation or cultivation of his land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 P. 81, 32 Idaho 1, 1918 Ida. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reno-v-richards-idaho-1918.