Reynolds Irrigation Dist. v. Sproat

214 P.2d 880, 70 Idaho 217, 1950 Ida. LEXIS 163
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1950
Docket7416
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 214 P.2d 880 (Reynolds Irrigation Dist. v. Sproat) 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
Reynolds Irrigation Dist. v. Sproat, 214 P.2d 880, 70 Idaho 217, 1950 Ida. LEXIS 163 (Idaho 1950).

Opinion

*219 TAYLOR, Justice.

Warm Springs Creek is a short stream tributary to Snake River in Canyon County. Its visible source is a spring known as Warm Springs located in the bottom of a draw approximately midway between the outlet into Snake River and a bluff at the upper end of the draw. The bluff follows generally the course of the river through the country separating the valley floor from a higher mesa or plateau. Prior to the application of water in the irrigation of land on the mesa, the springs had a natural flow of forty to fifty miners’ inches. Beginning about 1915, or earlier, water was brought from the Boise River, in a foreign watershed, by the United States Bureau of Reclamation and applied to the irrigation of land in what is now the Boise-Kuna Irrigation District, lying on the plateau above the Warm Springs Creek watershed. Some of this water, by seepage and percolation, appeared in Warm Springs and surrounding area, increasing the flow of the springs to as much as 1300 inches in recent years. This seepage rose to the surface in the draw above the springs and formed a small pond. About 1916 or 1917 defendants began diverting water from the immediate area where it thus collected and applied it to the irrigation of land then occupied by them. The seepage increased in subsequent years to the extent that lands in the area above and to the east of the springs became water-logged. These lands being within the Boise-Kuna Irrigation District, the United States Reclamation Service, at the request of the district, and acting as its agent, in 1926 began the construction of a drainage system consisting (at present) of a trench with six terminal branches. On four of these terminal branches wells were dug to facilitate the escape of the underground water into the drainage trenches. These laterals and wells are located in the area above and east of the warm springs and the waters collected therein are conducted to the southwest, bypassing the springs, and emptied into Warm Springs Creek below the springs. One of the lateral branches of this drainage system, known as the Simpson Drain, extends through the area from which defendants had been diverting water and across their diversion ditch. This construction de *220 stroyed a part of defendants’ ditch and lowered the water level, making it necessary that defendants’ ditch be lowered, extended and connected with the drain in order to continue their diversion. Thereafter the defendants diverted their water directly from the Simpson branch of the drain.

In 1934 the plaintiff district was organized and began diverting water at the springs for the irrigation of the district lands. In that same year a decree was entered in the district court, in Bachman et al. v. Reynolds Irrigation District et al., 56 Idaho 507, 55 P.2d 1314, adjudicating the rights and priorities of the water 'claimants in Warm Springs Creek. The defendants were not parties to that suit and their rights were not affected thereby. Reynolds Irrigation District v. Sproat, 65 Idaho 617, 151 P.2d 773.

The well, on the Simpson branch of the drain, known as the Simpson Well, was put down in 1941 and discharges approximately 125 inches of water into the Simpson Drain above defendants’ point of diversion. This increased the flow in the drain and defendants, claiming the right to divert all of the water in the drain at their point of diversion, have diverted the increased flow. The plaintiff district commenced this action (apparently sometime in 1941) and in its complaint alleges its right as established by the decree of 1934 in the amount of eight cubic feet per second with priority of April 1, 1934, and a second right claimed by it under a license issued by the Commissioner of Reclamation for 23.56 cubic feet per second with priority of March 8, 1929; that it has since continuously applied these waters, when available, to the irrigation of the lands, within the district; that the water collected in the drainage system is tributary to and a part of the source of supply of warm springs creek and, as such, was decreed by the court in the adjudication of 1934; that defendants claim an interest in and to the water so decreed to the plaintiff and appropriated by plaintiff under the water license; and that the defendants, have diverted water from the drain, the right to the use of which is vested in the plaintiff; that defendants’ claim is unlawful and without right and that the defendants have no interest, right or title in the water thus diverted by them.

The defendants deny the plaintiff’s allegations of ownership and deny that the water claimed by them is or ever has been naturally tributary to Warm Springs Creek. They allege their appropriation commenced in the year 1916 and that they have since continuously diverted and appropriated the water and applied it to a beneficial use in the irrigation of their land and also allege adverse use thereof for more than thirty years (the answer having been filed April 11, 1947).

The trial court found for the defendants and plaintiff has appealed.

The court found that the seepage water in question was originally diverted from *221 the Boise River by the Bureau of Reclamation and belonged to the primary appropriator; that there is no proof that in the absence of the drainage ditches the water would or would not appear in Warm Springs Creek; that defendants’ diversion from the drain ditch in nowise affects the supply of water in Warm Springs Creek available for diversion at plaintiff’s point of diversion; “that at the time of the construction of said government drain ditches, the officials of the United States Reclamation service granted to defendants, for a valuable consideration, the right to divert and use for the irrigation of their lands the waters developed and flowing in said drain ditch at defendants’ said point of diversion; that beginning about the year 1926, defendants have continuously during each irrigation season diverted from said drain ditch and applied to beneficial use in the irrigation of their said lands all the water flowing in said drain ditch at said points, that is, varying amounts of water up to but not exceeding a maximum amount of 300 miners’ inches (6 cubic feet per second) ; and have irrigated thereby about 100 acres of their said land; * * * that for more than 20 years last past defendants have openly, notoriously and under claim of right adverse to plaintiff and to any one else whomsoever, diverted and beneficially used in the irrigation of their said land, which is arid land, the quantites of water aforesaid, and plaintiff at all times has had full knowledge of defendants’ said adverse claim to and use of said water.”

Appellant’s first assignment charges error in the admission of testimony offered by defendants to prove an oral agreement entered into by the defendant Hugh Sproat with certain employees of the Reclamation Service, by the terms of which Sproat claims to have given to the Boise-Kuna Irrigation District a right of way through land then owned or controlled by him in return for the right to divert water from the drain. The particular objection urged is that the proof offered was hearsay, that is, a conversation between Sproat and two employees of the service who appeared upon the property with a dragline for the purpose of digging the drain.

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Bluebook (online)
214 P.2d 880, 70 Idaho 217, 1950 Ida. LEXIS 163, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reynolds-irrigation-dist-v-sproat-idaho-1950.