State v. Small

90 P. 1110, 49 Or. 595, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 164
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1907
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 90 P. 1110 (State v. Small) 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
State v. Small, 90 P. 1110, 49 Or. 595, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 164 (Or. 1907).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Moore.

This is a special proceeding instituted in this court by the State of Oregon, upon the relation of F. M. Ghrisman and C. D. Porter, against George H. Small, to punish him for an alleged contempt. The facts are that Annie C. Hough, having commenced a suit in the circuit court for Lake County against S. A. D. Porter to enjoin him from interfering with the flow of water in the channel of Silver Creek to her premises, the relators herein and Small were made parties defendant by order of the court, and, issues having been joined, a trial was had, and it was decreed April 7, 1905, that the defendant herein made the prior appropriation of water from that stream and was entitled to use 650 inches thereof for the irrigation of 1,400 acres of land. The injunction prayed for was granted, and the rights of all the parties were determined. An appeal from that decree was perfected October 19, 1905, by the relators and others, who gave an undertaking therefor, in which it was stipulated that they would pay all damages, costs and disbursements that might be awarded against them on the appeal, and the transcript was thereafter filed in this court. It is stated in the initiatory affidavit of the relators that about May 16, 1906, and while there was sufficient water flowing in Silver Creek to furnish the appellants the quantity decreed to each, respectively, Small, in violation of a stay of proceedings in the suit mentioned, maliciously turned the water out of the channel of that stream and away from the relators, and his continuous diversion, in July and [597]*597xkugust of that year, of the quantity awarded him by the trial court, leaves practically no water in the creek for the relators, whereby they have suffered and will sustain irreparable injury by reason of his conduct. The defendant’s affidavit, which is in the nature of an answer to the charge made against him, states the source o'f his title to the use of the water and the extent thereof as decreed to him.

1. It is contended by the relators’ counsel that the statute of this state makes an undertaking on appeal, in suits of the kind specified, a supersedeas, in violation of which Small diverted more water from Silver Creek after the decree was rendered than he had theretofore taken from that stream, and, though the evidence is not direct and positive, it is convincing, and leaves no reasonable doubt of his guilt as charged; and, the appeal having transferred the cause, this court acquired jurisdiction thereof and possesses power to and should punish him for the constructive contempt. The statute permits a final decision of a circuit court to be reviewed by giving a notice of appeal and an undertaking therefor: B. & C. Comp. § 549. It is further enacted that the undertaking of the appellant shall be to the effect that he will pay all damages, costs and disbursements which may be awarded against him on the appeal, but that the proceedings shall not be stayed unless the undertaking also stipulates that the appellant will satisfy the judgment or decree appealed from, so far as it is affirmed in four particular 'instances (B. & C. Comp. § 550), referring to which, the statute contains the following provision:

“In cases not provided for in such subdivisions, when an appeal is perfected, with an undertaking for the appeal only, proceedings shall be stayed as if the further undertaking thereof had been given”: B. & C. Comp. § 551.

Subdivision 2 of Section 550 provides that an appeal from a judgment or a decree given for the recovery of land, or for the partition thereof, does not operate as a supersedeas, unless the undertaking stipulates that during the possession of the real property by the appellant he will not commit, or suffer to be committed, any waste thereon, and that if such judgment or de[598]*598cree, or any part thereof, be affirmed, he will pay the value of the use and occupation of such property, so far as affirmed, from the time of the appeal until the delivery of the possession thereof, not exceeding a sum specified, to be ascertained and fixed by the court or judge thereof.

2. Though the ownership of ditches by the relators, and the legal assertion by them of the right to have the water of Silver Creek flow in such trenches to their lands for the irrigation thereof, may constitute real property (Fudicker v. East Riverside Irrig. Dist. 109 Cal. 29: 41 Pac. 1024), we shall assume, without deciding, that the decree rendered in the case of Hough v. Porter was not a suit for the recovery of the possession of land or for the partition thereof, so that an undertaking only for appeal stayed the proceedings as if the further undertaking therefor had been given. In Dulin v. Pacific Wood & Coal Co. 98 Cal. 304, 306 (33 Pac. 123), Mr. Justice Harrison, in speaking of a supersedeas, says: “Originally it was a writ directed to an officer commanding him to desist from enforcing the execution of another writ, which he was about to execute, or which might come into his hands. In modern times the term is often used synonymously with a stay of proceedings, and is employed to designate the effect of an act or proceeding which of itself suspends the enforcement of a judgment.” In this state a writ of supersedeas is unknown, though a certificate of probable cause, issued by the trial judge, or by a justice of this court in a criminal action, is tantamount thereto, the effect of which is to suspend the enforcement of the judgment until it can be reviewed on appeal: B. & C. Comp. § 1475; State v. Armstrong, 45 Or. 25 (74 Pac. 1025). We shall consider as true that the giving of the undertaking on appeal in the case of Hough v. Porter, which provided only for the payment of damages, costs and disbursements, was equivalent to the granting of a writ of supersedeas by this court, a violation of which subjects the offender to punishment upon proceedings instituted in this tribunal (High, Injunctions, 4 ed., § 1431a.), on the theory that, though actions at law and suits in 'equity are tried in this state in the same court, the forums and procedure are essentially [599]*599distinct (Union Power Co. v. Lichty, 42 Or. 563: 71 Pac. 1044), and that an appeal from a decree brings np for review the entire suit, which is tried anew in the appellate court upon the transcript and the evidence accompanying it: B. & C. Comp. §§406, 555; Day v. Holland, 15 Or. 464 (15 Pac. 855).

3. Having disposed of those preliminary questions, we will consider the evidence in those proceedings, and in the suit of H ough v. Porter, as far as deemed applicable hereto'. It appears that Silver Creek flows northeasterly and empties into Pauline Marsh, in Lake County. This stream divides on the defendant’s premises, forming a delta. One fork, extending easterly, is known as the “Bunyard Branch,” and another, westerly, is called, the “Island Branch”; the latter emptying into the parent stream about a mile below the place of its departure. Bunyard Branch flows through the premises of the relator, Chrisman, who uses the water thereof for irrigation. Silver Creek and Bunyard Branch flow through lands of which the relator Porter has possession, and on which the waters of both streams are used for irrigation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
90 P. 1110, 49 Or. 595, 1907 Ore. LEXIS 164, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-small-or-1907.