Sieber v. Frink

7 Colo. 148
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 15, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by78 cases

This text of 7 Colo. 148 (Sieber v. Frink) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sieber v. Frink, 7 Colo. 148 (Colo. 1883).

Opinion

Helm, J.

There was no error in allowing the answer to be filed. No default had been entered after the statutory period for answering expired, and it is doubtful if leave of court even was necessary, unless § 75 of the code may be construed as requiring such leave [§ 78, Code of 1883]; for it is said that the office of a default is “to [150]*150limit the time during which the defendant may file his answer,” and that “if plaintiff fail to take a default before trial it is a favor to the defendant.” Drake v. Davenick, 45 Cal. 463; Manville v. Parks, ante, p. 128.

Certainly when, as in this case, application is made, and leave granted, upon terms, by order of court, no default having been entered, there is no irregularity upon which we would reverse the judgment.

This is purely a chancery case; equitable questions only are presented and equitable relief alone demanded. The cause must be tried by the court unless both parties consent to a trial by jury; the court, of course, possessing the right to submit certain issues of fact, had they existed, to a jury or referee. § 14, p. 222, Sess. Laws 1879 [§ 154, Code of 1883].

The court in this action submitted no issue to the referee, and the referee assumed no judicial function; he determined no question and reported no finding; he only performed the ministerial duty of reducing the testimony to writing, and returning the same to the chancellor, who then heard the ai’guments of counsel and tried the case upon pleadings and the evidence so reported. We think that such cases may he tried upon proofs taken in this way, or upon oral testimony given in open court. We do not understand the chapter on references, or any other provision of the code, as operating to deprive the court, under the statute above cited, of the power, in cases like this, to direct upon its own motion the taking and reporting of evidence in the manner adopted herein; a power which was so fully conceded and so freely exercised before that instrument became a law. The case of Williams v. Benton, 24 Cal. 424, is not analogous; the reference there was to hear the evidence and decide the issue; the opinion considers the compulsory power of the court to authorize a finding and judgment by the referee. Besides, when that opinion was written, the California practice acts contained no such provision as [151]*151§ 14 above mentioned, a statute which had an. important bearing upon this and several other questions connected with the distinction between procedure at law and in equity.

Counsel for plaintiffs in error express a desire to have this court review the case upon its merits, and <c determine the rights .of the parties so that the proper decree may be made below.” And under the fourteenth and fifteenth assignments of eiror the argument and answer discusses but one proposition, viz.: the validity of a judgment entered in vacation. The question, therefore, which we shall consider under these assignments is whether a judgment regularly rendered by a court in the transaction of its judicial business may be entered of record in vacation.

In Stearns v. Aguirre, 7 Cal. 443, cited, the clerk attempted to enter a judgment in vacation, when it was neither rendered by a court, nor pronounced by law. Such a judgment is of course void; it is an attempt by a mere ministerial officer to perform judicial duties. The case is not in point upon the question above stated. The pronouncing of judgment is a judicial act; the entry of record thereof is a ministerial duty. The judgment is complete when properly declared, though the mechanical act of recording the same has not been performed. In jury trials our code directs the clerk to discharge this duty within a specified time after verdict, but if he fails or neglects to do so within the statutory period, the judgment itself, being pronounced on the verdict, is none the less valid, and may still be recorded; the code does not require the entry to be made in term time. And in no event does the provision limiting the time apply to trials by the court. The practice of entering judgments in vacation prevailed at common law. Freeman on Judgments (3d ed.), § 38 et seq. See, also, § 144 of our Code of Procedure.

The remaining assignments of error question the suffi[152]*152ciency of the evidence to support the decree. Upon the principles of law governing the rights of the parties, counsel for both sides are in perfect harmony, a circumstance which is especially gratifying, as the court has no fault to find with the legal doctrines thus agreed upon. The case was tried in the district court mainly upon proofs taken and reported by a master or referee; it is, therefore, our duty to “ sift and weigh all the evidence with a view to a just determination, uninfluenced by the proposition that the court below had superior facilities to judge of the credibility of witnesses.” Miller et al. v. Taylor et al. 6 Col. 45.

The record contains over seven hundred and fifty folios, of evidence, and we cannot analyze the same in this opinion; wo shall content ourselves with a statement of the material conclusions of fact to be drawn therefrom.

Plaintiffs aver priority of right to the water in controversy through what is known as the “Wilson & Brown ditch;” defendants base their claim thereto upon alleged appropriations thereof by means of the “ Old or Becker ” and the “ Edward P. Smith ditches.” A fourth, called the “'School Section ditch,”is described in the testimony, and will command our attention. The Wilson & Brown ditch was constructed for the purpose of irrigating two tracts of land owned by Wilson and Brown, respectively. Plaintiff Wheeler is the grantee of Wilson, and plaintiffs Sieber and Hudson hold title under a conveyance from Brown.

The priority of appropriation through the Becker ditch proper is practically conceded, though a suggestion of abandonment is made; it is probably the oldest connecting with Antelope creek. We do not understand that plaintiffs complain of this appropriation of water; their contention is that defendants cannot use this priority to sustain their right to water through the School Section ditch.

We think plaintiffs are right in this respect. The head [153]*153of the former is on Antelope creek; that of the latter is on Cottonwood, a tributary of Antelope; both being above the confluence of the two streams. The latter was constructed in 1875, yet water was' diverted from Antelope creek through the former as late as 1878; from the evidence and maps, we conclude that the former extends in a westerly, and the latter in a northerly, direction; they meet and unite, and the water from both may be used in irrigating the same tract of land. But there are two separate and distinct diversions and appropriations of water, dating at different periods, and the rights acquired attach upon the respective dates of appropriation.

There is some conflict of testimony as to the time of appropriation through the Wilson & Brown ditch; we are satisfied that the ditch was commenced as early as April or May, 1871, and that it was completed and water turned in by or before the 1st of August. The appropriation would, therefore, date from April or May of that year. We accept the rule adopted in California and Nevada in this connection.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Colo. 148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sieber-v-frink-colo-1883.