Scott v. Watkins

122 P.2d 220, 63 Idaho 506, 1942 Ida. LEXIS 47
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 4, 1942
DocketNo. 6915.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 122 P.2d 220 (Scott v. Watkins) 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
Scott v. Watkins, 122 P.2d 220, 63 Idaho 506, 1942 Ida. LEXIS 47 (Idaho 1942).

Opinion

*509 HOLDEN, J.

— Plaintiff and respondent is the owner of the SE14 of Section One, Township 5 North, Range 6 West, Boise Meridian, located in Canyon County, Idaho; and defendants and appellants are the owners of the NW}4 of that section and other lands adjoining and lying west and north of lands owned by respondent. Prior to respondent’s ownership of the said SE]4) that tract was owned by Walter Stutheit.

It appears a waterway, in the evidence frequently called both “Shuck Slough” and “Chuck Slough,” with its source in lands lying east and south of plaintiff’s lands, enters his lands on the south side, west of the center of the tract, east and west, and then runs northerly and northwesterly through its entire length, leaving it at a point just east of the northwest corner of respondent’s tract, being the center corner of the section, thence entering the SW]4 °f the NEIA of said Section One (owned by one Bill Bonner), thence running a very short distance north, thence crossing the east line of the SE]4 of the NW]4 of said section, thence running northwesterly and then northeasterly, emptying into the west side of the Boise River from the lands of appellants. In the spring of 1937 appellants began the construction of a *510 rock and earthen dam across this waterway, continuing the construction of the same in the spring of 1938. This dam was constructed across the waterway on the north and south center line of said Section One. The NW% of the SW% of Section One, owned by respondent, and the SE14 of the NWÍ4, owned by appellants, apparently “corner” near the south end of the dam. In the spring of 1937 while Stutheit still owned the SE1^ of said Section One (he conveyed it to respondent in September, 1937), one of the appellants, Roscoe Watkins, a son of appellant Joseph L. Watkins, had a conversation with Stutheit about the construction of the dam, following which appellants proceeded to construct the dam. In 1938 and again in 1939 some of the lands of respondent were flooded, allegedly damaging certain crops growing on approximately 14 acres of respondent’s lands. June 14, 1939, respondent Scott commenced this action against the Watkins’ to recover damages for the loss of the crops and for certain injunctive relief, to-wit, to enjoin defendants and appellants from maintaining the dam, and other relief. The cause was tried to the court sitting without a jury, following which findings of fact and conclusions of law were made and filed and judgment entered thereon for damages in the sum of $280.00. The court also ordered and directed that the dam be removed from across the channel of the stream, or, in lieu thereof, that a permanent opening or conduit be constructed under and through the dam of sufficient size to carry the waters of the stream. Thereafter the defendants moved for a new trial and same being denied prosecuted an appeal from the order denying a new trial as well as an appeal from the judgment awarding damages and granting the above mentioned relief.

The propositions upon which appellants appear to rely chiefly are:

First, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in that appellants insist “it is alleged in the complaint that defendants obstruct the flow of flood waters overflowing the banks of Boise river from flowing through an old abandoned *511 channel of the Boise river.” Here is what respondent alleges in his complaint:

“That there is a natural stream or waterway (unnamed so far as plaintiff is informed), which has its source in the lands lying a short distance east and south of plaintiff’s lands, and runs generally in a northwesterly direction. That said natural stream and waterway enters the plaintiff’s lands on the south side, west of the center of the tract east to west, and runs through the entire length of plaintiff’s said lands, leaving the same at a point a short distance south and east of the northwest corner of plaintiff’s lands, and enters the lands of the defendants, to wit: the northwest quarter of said “Section 1, and then continues to run in a northerly and westerly direction through the lands of the defendants and empties into the west side of the Boise River from the lands of said defendants. That said stream or waterway has a wide and sufficiently deep channel in its natural condition to carry off all of the water which runs in said stream from year to year, since said section of the country was first settled and cultivated,”

and

“That sometime in the late fall of 1937, and continuing in the spring of 1938 and again in 1939, the defendants have constructed a rock and earthe-ro dam across said stream or waterway, along the line between the plaintiff’s land and the defendants said lands, without an opening sufficient to permit the passage of the water flowing in said stream or waterway, and has dammed up the same and held said water above said dam in varying depths, but at some periods of the year from five to seven feet deep, flooding approximately ten acres of plaintiff’s lands, and backing up said stream, holding the water near the top of the banks of said waterway or stream to a point some four or five hundred feet south of the west line of plaintiff’s said land, and seeping and water-logging the lands of the plaintiff lying along the sides of said stream for quite a large distance on each side of said stream. Said water raised by said dam has also washed and eroded plaintiff’s lands.”

*512 It will be observed instead of alleging that appellants obstructed the flow of flood waters “flowing through an old abandoned channel of the Boise river,” respondent very expressly alleges that appellants constructed a rock and earthen dam across a certain stream or waterway, describing it, and by the construction of such dam obstructed the flow of water in that stream or waterway, not “in an old abandoned channel of the Boise river.” Moreover, we have very carefully examined the entire complaint without finding a single hint or reference to “an old abandoned channel of the Boise river.”

Secondly, that the evidence is insufficient to support the finding of the trial court that permission was given to construct the dam “on the condition that a box or opening should be placed under said dam at the bottom of said stream of sufficient size to carry the water of the said stream.”

Walter Stutheit testified:

Q. “Did you have a conversation with Mr. Watkins, or with persons — did you have a conversation with anybody with regard to a fill being put across this slough near the center of Section One?

A. “I did.

Q. “Who did you have a conversation with about that?

A. “Roseoe Watkins and Ewing Gardner.
Q. “Who is Roseoe Watkins?
A. “Joe Watkins’ son.

Q. “What was the conversation you had with these parties with regard to this fill ?

A. “Well, he asked me if I would object to putting a fill across there so they could irrigate that land on the north side there, and I told them, no, if they would put a box in there sufficient to carry the slough water.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 P.2d 220, 63 Idaho 506, 1942 Ida. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-watkins-idaho-1942.