State v. Hall

413 P.2d 685, 90 Idaho 478, 1966 Ida. LEXIS 317
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1966
Docket9450
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 413 P.2d 685 (State v. Hall) 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
State v. Hall, 413 P.2d 685, 90 Idaho 478, 1966 Ida. LEXIS 317 (Idaho 1966).

Opinion

*481 SMITH, Justice.

From a judgment of conviction in the Probate Court appellant appealed to the District Court where a trial de novo was had before a six-man jury. The instructions to the jury included the charging part of the complaint and the portion of I.C. § 18-4309 which reads:

“Every person who shall wilfully waste water for irrigation, or who shall wilfully open, close, change or disturb, or interfere with, any headgate or water box or valve measuring or regulating device, without authority, shall be guilty of a misdemeanor. * * * ”

On March 25, 1963, one Ray Blair filed a complaint in the Probate Court of Elmore County, charging that on March 22, 1963:

“Adin Hall [appellant] * * * did * * * wilfully, unlawfully intentionally prevent and interfere with the proper delivery of irrigation water to the property of the said Ray Blair and wilfully waste the same by interfering with and disturbing a certain water regulating device, to-wit: A spillway located on Little Canyon Creek in Elmore County, Idaho, * * * in violation of Section 18-4309, Idaho Code.”

The verdict which the jury returned reads:

“We, the jury in the above-entitled case, find the defendant guilty.”

The trial judge, in its judgment, rendered on the verdict, recited that the jury “rendered their verdict of guilty to the offense as charged in the complaint,” and thereupon entered judgment, in part reading:

“IT IS HEREBY ADJUDGED That the Defendant is guilty of the crime of interfering with a water regulating device, a misdemeanor, * * *

from which judgment appellant has perfected an appeal.

Before approaching the merits of the appeal, we shall clarify the allegations of the criminal complaint and “pinpoint” the issue. We deem this advisable inasmuch as appellant proceeds upon the theory that he was charged with and convicted of the offense of wasting irrigation water, whereas the trial court adjudged him guilty of interfering with a water-regulating device; and respondent devotes the major portion of its brief and argument in asserting the sufficiency of the evidence to support a charge, and the judgment, of interfering with a water-regulating device.

The purported charge contained in the complaint that appellant did wilfully and unlawfully “interfere with the proper delivery of irrigation water to the property of *482 the said Ray Blair * * * by interfering with and disturbing a certain water-regulation device, to-wit: a spillway * * *,” is an insufficient charge because of failure to allege the statutory requirement of I.C. § 18-4310, that appellant interfered with the proper delivery of the water “to the person or persons having a right thereto” (emphasis supplied). The charge of interfering with the proper delivery of water to the Blair property by interfering with a water-regulating device would not constitute a misdemeanor unless it be alleged, and proven, that Blair had a right to the water.

The charging part of the complaint, by reference to I.C. § 18-4309, is that appellant did wilfully waste irrigation water “by interfering with and disturbing a certain water-regulation device, to-wit: a spillway * * * Thus, appellant was charged with the misdemeanor of wasting irrigation water, and not with that of wilfully interfering with a water-regulating device. Appellant was not charged with the latterly mentioned offense; therefore, the judgment purportedly adjudging him guilty thereof, is a nullity.

In its brief, respondent states that appellant was charged under I.C. § 18-4309, and that such section of the statute sets out the two distinct misdemeanors, viz., first, the wilful wasting of water, and second, the wilful interference with a water-regulating device. Respondent’s statement, however, to the effect that the judgment shows appellant was convicted of the offense of wilful interference with a water-regulating device is incorrect; since, as hereinbefore pointed out, appellant could not have been adjudged guilty of the misdemeanor of wilfully interfering with a water-regulating device simply because he was not charged with that offense.

The only issue which merits consideration, as appellant correctly states, is whether the evidence is sufficient to show that appellant did “wilfully waste water for irrigation.” Appellant, by his assignments of error, asserts the insufficiency of the evidence to sustain a verdict that he is guilty of the commission of that offense. We shall review the evidence, inasmuch as it is not in conflict, bearing upon the issue. The evidence has to do with Little Canyon Creek in Elmore County.

The waters of Little Canyon Creek are used for irrigation. The principal area so irrigated lies northwesterly and westerly from Glenns Ferry, and consists of about a dozen ranches, the most northerly of which are the Parmley Ranch, and the Glenn Ranch formerly owned by appellant Hall. The Berry Ranch, also irrigated by the stream, is situate along the creek about eleven miles northerly from Glenns Ferry and about nine miles upstream from the head of the main farming area.

*483 The Herron Reservoir irrigates a ranch situated in the farming area northwesterly from Glenns Ferry. The point of diversion from Little Canyon Creek of waters stored in that reservoir is on the Berry Ranch; from the point of diversion the water is diverted southerly to the reservoir, the outlet of which runs to the Herron Ranch situated westerly from the Parmley Ranch, and in the main farming area.

Appellant owned the Glenn Ranch for about three years; he then sold it under a contract, dated March 12, 1963, to Samuel Blackwell. Because of the existent water situation on Little Canyon Creek, appellant assured Blackwell that he (appellant) would render assistance in obtaining the water to which the Glenn Ranch was entitled.

A decree referred to as the Corker decree, entered in 1898, adjudicated the rights to the use of the waters of Little Canyon Creek, with priorities extending back as far as 1871. The decree adjudicated the water rights for the ranches situated northwesterly and westerly of Glenns Ferry including the Parmley and Glenn ranches, the Berry Ranch and the storage rights in the Herron Reservoir, aggregating 811 miner’s inches in the flow of the stream, and 10,000 miner’s inches for storage in the reservoir.

The earliest adjudicated rights on Little Canyon Creek are for the Glenn and Parmley ranches. The adjudicated rights for the Glenn Ranch total 140 miner’s inches of the waters of the stream.

Ray Blair and Lee Trail, in the late 1950’s, under a permit issued by Idaho’s Department of Reclamation, obtained a storage right in Little Canyon Creek. Blair and Trail thereupon constructed, across the creek, a dam, herein called the Blair Dam, completed about the year 1960. The dam is about iy^ miles southerly from the Berry Ranch and some 7 to 8 miles northerly from the main farming area north and west of Glenns Ferry.

The dam is about 30 feet high and 16 to 18 feet wide at the top.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
413 P.2d 685, 90 Idaho 478, 1966 Ida. LEXIS 317, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-hall-idaho-1966.