Staub v. Jensen

178 P.2d 931, 180 Or. 682, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 166
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1947
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 178 P.2d 931 (Staub v. Jensen) 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
Staub v. Jensen, 178 P.2d 931, 180 Or. 682, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 166 (Or. 1947).

Opinion

*683 HAY, J.

The plaintiff, Minnie Staub, brought suit to quiet title, as against rights claimed by defendants, to the use of the waters of Caris Creek, a tributary of Apple-, gate River, which is a tributary of Rogue River. The amended complaint alleges that, more than seventy years ago, predecessors in interest of the plaintiff, in the ownership of certain land riparian to Caris Creek, made an appropriation of the waters thereof by diversion to and upon such land and thereby irrigated a portion thereof, and that such waters were used by plaintiff’s said predecessors and by plaintiff continuously, during the dry season of every year, from the time of such original diversion until on or about June 27, 1945, at which latter time the defendant water master interferred. Use of such water by plaintiff and her predecessors is alleged, with all the appropriate adjectives, to have been adverse, under a claim of right, as against all the world in general and the defendants in particular.

Anticipating an affirmative defense of res judicata, the amended complaint alleges that, although she and her late husband, A. J. Staub, owned and resided upon the land involved herein at the time when the relative rights to the waters of said stream were adjudicated (Adjudication of Rogue River and its Tributaries. Circuit Court for Jackson County, Oregon. Pinal decree April 26, 1919), and had used the waters of such stream for irrigation of their land continuously from 1907 onward, no notice of such adjudication was given to or received by plaintiff or her husband. Mr. Staub died in November, 1938, and plaintiff alleges that, since his death, she has continued to reside upon said land and to use the waters of said stream beneficially and adversely as aforesaid.

*684 In said adjudication, there was awarded, as appurtenant to lands belonging to defendants and their predecessors and situate downstream from plaintiff’s land, certain rights to the use of the waters of Caris Creek for irrigation purposes. The defendants, by their answer, allege that the rights so awarded are prior in time and superior to any rights appurtenant to plaintiff’s land. They plead the adjudication decree above referred to, and allege that notice of the adjudication was duly and regularly given to the plaintiff and her predecessors; that plaintiff and her predecessors had full knowledge of the pendency of the adjudication proceedings and full and complete opportunity to appear and be heard therein, but that they failed, refused and neglected so to appear, and, by the decree, were forever estopped and precluded from maintaining or asserting any right to the use of said waters.

The circuit court, after a hearing, made findings of fact and conclusions of law in favor of plaintiff, and entered a decree quieting her title “to use all of the waters of Caris Creek during the dry seasons of the year, and particularly during June, July, August and September, and prior to the rains in any season” for domestic purposes and for irrigation of not in excess of 13.9 acres of land, as against the claims of the defendants. From this decree, the defendants have appealed.

Plaintiff has resided upon her Caris Creek land since about 1907, when she married her late husband. Prior to their marriage, Mr. Staub had lived on the land, having deraigned title thereto, by mesne conveyances, from the original homesteader. The land evidently' had been irrigated prior to Mr. Staub’s *685 ownership, but there was no proof of the date of original appropriation. Mrs. Staub, however, testified that, to her own knowledge, water had been used on the place for irrigation purposes continuously ever since the year 1907. Mr. and Mrs. Staub increased somewhat the area of irrigated land, but the date and extent of such increase were not shown. There was evidence that, in 1922, Mr. Staub claimed to be irrigating approximately twelve acres. The stream is small, and its summer flow, from about the middle of June onward in every year, is inadequate even for the purposes of plaintiff’s small appropriation. Under those circumstances, plaintiff and her predecessors have diverted and used for irrigation and domestic purposes the entire flow of the stream. Their ditches were “never closed”.

Mrs. Staub’s land is situated upon the upper reaches of Caris Creek. Measurements made by the water master on July 16, 1945, showed that the total discharge of the stream at the head of Mrs. Staub’s main ditch was 0.10 cubic feet per second, which was sufficient for the irrigation of only about eight acres of land. At the same time there was a discharge of 0.05 cubic feet per second at the point where the stream leaves Mrs. Staub’s premises and enters those of one of the defendants. Mrs. Staub irrigates about two acres of garden, a small orchard, and a few acres of alfalfa, besides using water for domestic purposes.

The defendants sought to prove that, prior to 1943, the only use that Mrs. Staub made of the waters of the stream was through “a little ditch running to the house”, and that, in 1943. she newly seeded some ten or twelve acres of land to alfalfa, the irrigation of which depleted the water to a point where the rights *686 of the defendants were seriously interfered with. There was evidence, however, that from 1924 on, year after year, the defendants and their predecessors had complained to the water master that Mrs. Staub and her husband were diverting from the stream water to which such complainants claimed prior rights. The evidence, in our opinion, was sufficient, and indeed ample, to support the trial judge’s findings.

In November, 1908, the Oregon Conservation Commission, comprised of a number of prominent engineers, lawyers and publicists, in a report to the governor of the state, recommended that legislation should be adopted giving the state complete control over all diversions of water from streams, providing adequate procedure for the determination of the relative rights to the use of the waters of every stream' system, and requiring the recordation of all existing water rights and of new rights as initiated. In the following year, evidently in response to the commission’s recommendations, the legislature passed an act “providing a system for the regulation, control, distribution, use, and right to the use of water, and for the determination of existing rights thereto within the State of Oregon, * * (General Laws of Oregon, 1909, chapter 216; section 116-402, et seq., O. C. L. A.) By this act, the state definitely abandoned the old method of appropriation of water by mere diversion and application to beneficial use, and adopted in lieu thereof a system of filing all applications to appropriate water with the state engineer, who, upon approval thereof, issues formal permits to the applicants. Construction of diversion works and application of the water to the approved beneficial use follow, and, in due course, after proof of completion of the project, certificates of water right are issued to the *687 applicants. This is the only method whereby, since the 1909 act became effective, water rights may be acquired in Oregon.

In Tudor v. Jaca, 178 Or. 126, 164 P. (2d) 680, 690, this court said:

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Bluebook (online)
178 P.2d 931, 180 Or. 682, 1947 Ore. LEXIS 166, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/staub-v-jensen-or-1947.