St. Martin v. Skamania Boom Co.

140 P. 355, 79 Wash. 393, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1193
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1914
DocketNo. 11407
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 140 P. 355 (St. Martin v. Skamania Boom Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
St. Martin v. Skamania Boom Co., 140 P. 355, 79 Wash. 393, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1193 (Wash. 1914).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

The plaintiffs, as owners and tenants in common of certain lands in Skamania county, brought this action to secure a permanent injunction restraining the defendant from interfering with the natural flow of the waters of Wind river across those lands. The plaintiffs claim title as the widow and heirs at law of the original homesteader, Isadore St. Martin, who died intestate in 1910. On the land in question, is a valuable mineral spring of hot water, which flows from the ground within a few feet of the edge of the waters of Wind river at its ordinary stage. This spring has an established reputation for its mineral properties, and is largely patronized as a health resort. The plaintiffs maintain a hotel and camping accommodations for their [395]*395patrons and, for a consideration, permit the use of- the waters of the spring. It requires the entire natural flow of the spring to accommodate the number of persons normally seeking its use in the dry summer season. For some unknown reason, the flow of the spring is so affected by the volume of water in the river that, when the flow of the river is- obstructed above the spring, in the dry summer season, the. spring furnishes only a small part of its normal supply, and is wholly insufficient to accommodate the plaintiff’s guests and patrons. It is in the summer time that the withholding of the waters of the river thus injuriously affects the spring. It is also claimed that the waters of the spring are hotter when flowing copiously than when the flow is scant, the evidence tending to show a temperature varying from 104 degrees, Fahrenheit, when the flow is slight, to 118 degrees when the flow is copious. The normal temperature of the water of Wind river is about 55 degrees.

The defendant corporation was organized in March, 1900, under the laws of the state, as a boom and driving company for the purpose of driving logs and timber products on Wind river. On March 30, 1900, it filed its plat in the office of the secretary of state, by which it sought to appropriate the waters of Wind river and its tributaries and the contiguous shores for its driving operations. Wind river is an unmeandered nonnavigable stream, rising in the Cascade mountains, and flowing into the Columbia river, much of its course being through a rocky canon or defile. It is necessary to impound its waters by means of a dam to produce artificial freshets, called “splashes,” to drive logs down the stream. In the summer and fall of 1901, the defendant erected a dam about twelve miles above the plaintiffs’ premises. The gates of this dam are about twenty-five feet high, and the pond formed covers forty or fifty acres. Three floods or splashes in close succession, covering in all three days, were produced late in November, 1901. At that time, other streams tributary to Wind river below this dam were [396]*396not dammed. The appellant has since dammed these tributaries. The evidence shows that the impounding for these first splashes did not noticeably affect the spring. No other splashes were produced until the spring and summer of 1902. In the winter time, it requires only about six hours to fill the dam. In the summer time, it requires several days to impound water sufficient to make a splash. Other evidence, so far as material, will be considered in the discussion of the case.

The action was commenced March 23, 1912. The cause was tried to the court without a jury. The court found the facts in favor of the plaintiffs, and, on appropriate conclusions of law, adjudged that the defendant be enjoined from operating its dam in such a way as to interfere with the plaintiff’s spring, or, as an alternative, erect and maintain, below the spring, a dam sufficient to maintain the water in the river at such stage as not to interfere with or diminish the flow of the spring during the operation of the impounding dam. The defendant appeals.

The appellant contends that the decree is contrary to the evidence in the following particulars: (1) that'the respondents failed to show any title; (2) that there was no evidence that the spring was materially affected by the impounding of the water of the river; (3) that the appellant established a prescriptive right to obstruct the flow of the river by showing an adverse enjoyment for over ten years.

I. The contention that the respondents failed to prove title is based upon the fact that there was no proof of a ceremonial marriage between Isadore St. Martin, the deceased homesteader, and the respondent Margaret St. Martin, the mother of the other respondents, of whom the deceased was the father. The following testimony of one of the respondents was admitted without objection:

“Q. Do you know how your father acquired this property? A. It was his homestead. Q. Were your father and mother living together then as husband and wife? A. Yes, [397]*397sir. Q. And always lived together from that time on as husband and wife? A. Yes, sir.”

It is argued that this was not the best evidence of the marriage, since Mrs. St. Martin was a witness and could have testified positively as to the marriage had there been one. The evidence given tended to prove the fact, and was not objected to as not the best evidence, or on any other ground. Had the appellant intended to rely upon this objection, it should have raised it at the time. The marriage was only a collateral issue. The evidence offered was sufficient to prove it, in the absence of such objection.

II. The claim that the respondents failed to show that the spring was materially affected by the impounding of the water of the river rests upon the assumption that, if the water of the river were so connected with the spring as to cause the spring to rise and fall with the river, the water in the spring would be cooler in periods of high water than in periods of low water. Practically all of the evidence on the subject was to the effect that the spring rises and falls with the rise and fall of the river, and that the water in the spring is hotter when the flow is greater than when the spring is low. It is argued that the latter statement is inherently unbelievable. This argument, however, proceeds upon an initial assumption that the access of the cold river water to the vein of the spring would, of necessity, cool the waters of the spring. An argument a priori such as this, to be of any value, must rest upon some admitted general principle or truth as a basis or cause. It is just here that the argument breaks down. To give it convincing force, it is necessary that we know and understand the operation of the hidden forces which control the flow of the water of the spring, and impart to it its temperature, but we neither know nor understand these forces in the present case. For example, it may be that the water in the spring flows more rapidly from the subterranean heating point when under the greater pressure supplied by the rise of the river, so that [398]*398it may not have the same time for cooling before reaching the surface as when this pressure is not applied. This is offered not as a theory, but as showing that the assumption that access to the vein of the spring by the water of the river would necessarily cool the water is only an assumption and not an established principle or truth, which would only give validity to appellant’s argument. Clearly, in such a case, all that the court can do is to take the evidence of the objective phenomena without speculation as to their causes: There being no evidence to the contrary, we must accept these things as facts.

III.

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Bluebook (online)
140 P. 355, 79 Wash. 393, 1914 Wash. LEXIS 1193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-martin-v-skamania-boom-co-wash-1914.