Slayton v. Twohy Bros.

194 P. 682, 98 Or. 535, 1921 Ore. LEXIS 17
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 194 P. 682 (Slayton v. Twohy Bros.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Slayton v. Twohy Bros., 194 P. 682, 98 Or. 535, 1921 Ore. LEXIS 17 (Or. 1921).

Opinion

BEAN, J.

The complaint contains two causes of action. In the first cause of action the facts are in effect identical with those in the case of Marks v. Twohy Bros. Co., ante, p. 514 (194 Pac. 675), in which an opinion was rendered on this date, and also identical with those in the case of O’Neil v. Twohy Bros. Co., ante, p. 481 (190 Pac. 306), except as to the amount of damages claimed. The opinions in the two cases named govern the case at bar, as to the first cause of action. The judgment must therefore be reversed.

At the time of the argument of the five cases, which were mentioned in the opinion in Marks v. Twohy Bros. Co., it was urged by counsel for plaintiff that defendant was culpably negligent, and trespassed upon the rights of plaintiff by using water from the Table Land Ditch to carry on hydraulic work of washing earth and material into the dam being constructed across Ochoco Creek. Defendant asserts that any water so used was under the direction of the Ochoco Irrigation District, made through its superintendent of the work and under his direction and with the consent and acquiescence of the several plaintiffs. As we understand the plaintiff’s complaint and the record in the several eases, this was not a material item, nor taken into consideration by the jury in the trial of the cases.

The real complaint of plaintiffs seems to be that the company did not complete the irrigation system in time for irrigation during thé season of 1918. It is not claimed, as we understand, that the construction was not done within the time provided for in the [537]*537written contract between defendant and the district. It is claimed that there was a prior or contemporaneous oral agreement that a certain portion of the work should be done so that plaintiffs could pass the water for irrigation by April 1, 1918, a month earlier than the date originally fixed by the contract.

In order to show the theory upon which the cases were tried, we refer at length to the instructions given to the jury by the learned trial judge, to which there was no objection on the part of plaintiffs. We do this in order to make it clear that practically the whole of the causes of action pertaining to the Table Land Ditch depend upon the question of the right to the use of that ditch, which is discussed in the opinion in O’Neil v. Twohy. Bros. Co., and that in Marks v. Twohy Bros. Co. In the six cases which were tried together the trial court instructed the jury as to the issues of law in the case of Marks v. Twohy Bros. Co., and charged the jury that the instructions just given them in that case were all applicable to the case of Powell v. Twohy Bros. Co., post, p. 546 (194 Pac. 685), except as to the amount of damages claimed. The trial court then explained the issues, and instructed the jury in the case of Cram & Cram v. Twohy Bros. Co., which pertains to the CombsSlayton Ditch, charging inter alia:

“So that the plaintiffs who .have land under what is known as the Combs-Slayton Ditch can only recover if the work done by the defendant, Twohy Bros. Company, a corporation, was done in a careless and negligent manner, as alleged in the complaint, and not otherwise. That is, if you find from a preponderance of the evidence that when the dam across said Oehoco Creek was closed, there was a provision made for the taking- of water through said dam by means of a canal and the spilling of the same into Ochoco Creek below said dam, so the same might pass [538]*538down .said creek to the headgaté of said CombsSlayton ditch, you cannot find defendant liable in this action for any failure or shortage of water in said Combs-Slayton ditch, providing that the spillway was made and the water caused to gó through that spillway.”

The court also charged the jury that the instructions given in the Marks case were applicable to plaintiff’s first cause of action in Morgan v. Twohy Bros. Co., post, p. 547 (194 Pac. 686), that the instructions given in the Cram case were all applicable to plaintiff’s second cause of action in the Morgan v. Twohy Bros. Co., case; and that the same was true of the ease of Slayton v. Twohy Bros. Co.

As showing, among other things, that the cases were tried in regard to the Table Land Ditch as though they depended upon the right of plaintiffs to the use of that ditch, we quote from the charge of the court in the, Marks case as follows:

“It is essential to plaintiff ’s case that plaintiff show a right to the use of Table Land Ditch to carry water through to his lands. If plaintiff had no right to carry water through said Table Land Ditch, he cannot recover for any injury resulting from the destruction of said ditch.
“If you find from a preponderance of the evidence that plaintiff had an agreement with said district for water to be delivered from the reservoir created by the construction of said dam, such agreement would constitute an acquiescence and consent by plaintiff to the construction of said dam and impounding the waters of Ochoco Creek.”

Por a second cause of action plaintiff Slayton and plaintiff Morgan and plaintiff Lafollett allege, in effect, after adopting the formal paragraphs 1 to 4 of the first cause of action, that they are the [539]*539owners of certain lands, and vested water right appurtenant thereto in the waters of Ochoco Creek; that the dam across Ochoco Creek is at a point above the head of the Combs-Slayton Ditch where they divert water for use upon their lands. They then aver, much in the same form as in the first cause of action, that the defendant in the construction of the dam unnecessarily interfered with and interrupted the flow of water from Ochoco Creek to the lands of plaintiff during the months of March, April, May, and June, 1918; that they were thereby prevented from using such water through the Comhs-Slayton Ditch; that by completing the canal a sufficient distance below the dam for water to pass to the Combs-Slayton Ditch, or by providing other means for conveying such water to plaintiffs’ lands they could easily have permitted the water so to be diverted, which they unnecessarily failed to do or to provide other means for conveying such water, and willfully and purposely obstructed the flow of water to plaintiffs’ lands, and appropriated said water to defendaiit’s use and plaintiffs’ damage.

Issues were raised by the answer of defendant. Defendant avers, in substance, the organization and purpose of the district, and then as follows:

“Par. IV.
“During the years 1916 and 1917 said Ochoco Irrigation District for the purpose of erecting and maintaining a dam across the Ochoco Creek to impound all the waters thereof entered upon and appropriated lands on both sides of said creek at and adjoining the place where the dam referred to in the amended complaint is being constructed, and entered upon and appropriated all of the water and water rights in said Ochoco Creek, including any rights owned by plaintiff therein, and in the year 1917, after preparing plans therefor and submitting the same to the [540]*540State Engineer of Oregon and securing Ms approval thereof commenced the construction of a dam across said Oehoco Creek and continued the construction thereof, up to the present time, and is now .continuing such construction.”

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Related

Lafollett v. Twohy Bros.
194 P. 685 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1921)
Morgan v. Twohy Bros.
194 P. 686 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 P. 682, 98 Or. 535, 1921 Ore. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/slayton-v-twohy-bros-or-1921.