Rutherford v. Lucerne Canal & Power Co.

75 P. 445, 12 Wyo. 299, 1904 Wyo. LEXIS 4
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 75 P. 445 (Rutherford v. Lucerne Canal & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rutherford v. Lucerne Canal & Power Co., 75 P. 445, 12 Wyo. 299, 1904 Wyo. LEXIS 4 (Wyo. 1904).

Opinion

CorN, Chief Justice.

For the sake of convenience, the plaintiffs in error are spoken of as the plaintiffs and the defendant in error, The Lucerne Canal and Power Company, as the defendant, the action having been dismissed as to the other defendant. The controversy is concerning a right of way over a strip of ground now occupied by the Lucerne Canal of the defendant and through which defendant is conveying water from the North Platte River to irrigate certain of its lands.

The prayer of the plaintiffs’ petition is that the defendant be restrained from flowing or using any water from the North Platte River in, or by means of, its said Lucerne Canal and from keeping possession of, or claiming any title or right of way to, any portion of the Burbank ditch (the name by which plaintiffs’ ditch is known), or its right of way, at any and all places, or points, of conflict between it and the said Lucerne Canal; and to compel the defendant to yield up the control and possession of the said Burbank ditch and the said right of way to the plaintiffs at any and all such conflicting points and places.

The District Court denied the relief sought, dismissed the action and decreed that the plaintiffs and defendant each pay their own costs. Both the plaintiffs and defendant except to the decision of the court, the latter upon the ground that the court erred in refusing to give judgment in its favor for costs.

Prior to 1889 one Henry Burbank partially constructed what he recorded as the Platte Bluffs ditch upon a line substantially identical with the course now pursued by the ditch of plaintiffs. In 1889 Burbank left the country, the ditch being incomplete and water never having been turned into any part of it. Being indebted to George A. Draper, then a merchant in Cheyenne, he turned over to Draper his property and interests in that section, and Draper claims [308]*308that such transfer included the ditch, water right, etc., and he testifies that, to the best of his recollection, he received some instrument in the nature of a bill of sale from Burbank evidencing the transfer to him of the property, including the ditch and water right. But the instrument was not in evidence, no effort was made to prove its contents, the plaintiffs do not attempt to trace their title to Burbank and the Platte Bluffs ditch is conceded to have been abandoned and is treated by all the parties to this action as an abandoned ditch.

On November 6th, 1891, Draper filed, in the office of the State Engineer, an application to appropriate water from the North Platte River, through a ditch called the “Burbank’' ditch, the course of the proposed ditch as described in the application, though being in the same locality and having the same general direction, not being substantially or approximately upon the same line as the old Platte Bluffs ditch of Burbank. Indeed, John Hunton, the surveyor who ran the line, and who drew the application for Draper, testifies that it did not cover, and was not intended to cover, the line of the latter, and that it did not approach very near to it, except at the point of controversy between plaintiffs and defendant, where it was some thirty to forty feet from it horizontally and about thirteen feet vertically above it. But there was subsequently filed in the Engineer’s office a plat which it is claimed located it along the line of the Platte Bluffs ditch. Who filed this plat, or when it was filed, does not clearly appear from the evidence. But from the mem-oranda in the Engineer’s office it seems to have been filed in pursuance of the Draper application and, in view of the file marks upon it in connection with what was shown to be the practice of the office in such matters, it was perhaps fair to infer that it was filed not longer, or not much longer, than six months from, the time of the filing of the Draper application on November 6th, 1891. And the court below, in its written findings, found that it was filed on or about May 6th, 1892, as part of the Draper application of Novem[309]*309ber 6th, 1891, and that it covered in part, and was intended to cover in part, the line of the Platte Bluffs ditch; but the court did not find what part it covered or was intended to cover. The law as it stood at the time of the transaction did not require a plat to be filed with the application, but permitted it to be filed within six months afterwards.

Subsequent to the filing of this application, Draper sold to Alexander Rutherford all his title and interest in this so-called Burbank ditch, Rutherford and members of his family, the plaintiffs in this action, having in the meantime acquired possession of certain lands along its course by entry made under the homestead and desert land ° laws of the United States. And the plaintiffs base their rights in this action on this purchase from Draper. Rutherford claims, and so testifies, that he bought from Draper on November 8th, 1891. But all the evidence tending to show that he made the purchase prior to February 17th, 1893, is of very doubtful character and much of .it is open to very grave suspicion. In support of his statement, he introduced in evidence his check to Draper for seventy-five dollars, which he stated was the first payment on the purchase price of three hundred and twenty-five dollars. This check was dated November 8th, 1891, and he also introduced in evidence a receipt of the same date purporting to be signed by Draper and reciting the receipt of that amount “in part payment for the Burbank ditch.” The exhibits themselves, instead of a copy or transcript, under our practice, are before us in this court, and it requires only a slight examination of this check to show conclusively that it was dated November 5th, the five having been carefully converted into an eight; and the stamp of the bank shows that it was paid on November 5th. There was evidence tending to show that the signature to the receipt was not Draper’s at all, though Draper himself thought it was. Rutherford testified in detail as to the giving of the check and receipt; that it was at the desk at the back, part of Draper’s store, who was then in the hardware business in Cheyenne; that the store was open [310]*310for business and others going in and out, and that he was about the streets on that day, and that the banks and other business houses in town seemed to be open for business. And yet the evidence showed that the 8th of November was Sunday, upon which day banks, stores and other like business places were notoriously and invariably kept closed.

The manufacturing of evidence in support of a claim does not necessarily prove the claim to be fraudulent. But November 5th, the day the check was given, was the day before Draper made his application and before he had any ownership or interest in any ditch named the Burbank. There is no 'intimation anywhere in the evidence that the application was made as a result of or with a view to or in connection with the sale to Rutherford. But Rutherford testifies that before he paid the money to Draper they went together and examined the records in the office of the State Engineer, and he found that Draper had some claim and right to the ditch. As Draper’s application was not filed until November 6th, it must be inferred that such examination was after that time.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 P. 445, 12 Wyo. 299, 1904 Wyo. LEXIS 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rutherford-v-lucerne-canal-power-co-wyo-1904.