Tolman v. Casey

13 P. 669, 15 Or. 83, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 53
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 18, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 13 P. 669 (Tolman v. Casey) 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
Tolman v. Casey, 13 P. 669, 15 Or. 83, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 53 (Or. 1887).

Opinion

StrahaN, J.

The object of this suit is to enjoin the defendants from stopping, diverting, or interrupting the flow of the waters of Neil Creek, in Jackson County, Oregon, into a certain ditch owned by tbe plaintiffs. The court found in favor of the plaintiffs as against the defendant Henry Casey, and dismissed [84]*84the complaint as to all of the other defendants. From this decree Casey appealed, and the plaintiffs appealed from so much of the decree as dismissed their complaint against the other defendants. These appeals bring the whole case into the court for examination.

The plaintiffs allege, among other things, that in the year 1852, they and their grantors dug and constructed a ditch from what was then known as Bear Creek, now sometimes called Neil Creek, in said county, commencing at a point on said creek on or near the land now occupied by the defendant Casey, but then on government land, and from thence running in a northwesterly direction to and across the aforesaid described lands of the plaintiffs, and thereby appropriated a portion of the water of said creek. That ever since the year 1852 said ditch has been maintained continuously by plaintiffs or their grantors to conduct the water of said creek to the said lands of the plaintiffs, and the water so conducted has been, each and every year since said last-mentioned date, used by them for irrigating said lands and for watering stock, and for other domestic purposes, and that the plaintiffs are now the owners of said ditch. That from and since the year 1867 up to the decision hereinafter mentioned, plaintiffs and their grantors have appropriated and diverted the waters of said creek by means of said ditch, for the uses and purposes hereinbefore specified, as follows: From January 1st to August 15th, one hundred and sixty inches; from August 15th to September 20th, one hundred inches; and from September 20th to January 1st, sixty inches, by and under the natural flow thereof, running through a box or flume placed on a grade of three fourths of an inch to the rod. That from and after the fifteenth day of May, 1885, plaintiffs have limited the diversion and use of said water to one hundred and twenty inches, as provided by decree of this court in the two cases of Neil v. Tolman. That on or about the fifteenth day of June, 1885, the defendant Henry Casey wrongfully and maliciously, and with the intention of depriving plaintiffs of the beneficial use of said ditch, and of the water which was wont to flow therein from the natural and ordinary channel of said creek, obstructed the general flow [85]*85of the water in the channel of said creek at a point above and about twenty rods south of the head of plaintiffs’ ditch, by constructing and placing a dam across said channel, whereby all of the water of said creek was diverted from its general flow to the head of said ditch, and whereby the plaintiffs ever since have bken wholly deprived of the beneficial use of said ditch so owned by them as aforesaid, and the water of said creek so appropriated by these plaintiffs as aforesaid has wholly ceased to flow therein. The complaint then charges the other defendants with aiding and abetting and conspiring and confederating with the said Casey in the commission of'said wrong. That the purpose and object of said defendants’ confederation and conspiracy is to obtain, for their own use and enjoyment, all of the water of said creek, and deprive the plaintiffs of the use and enjoyment of the same, or any part thereof. The defendants Casey aud William Taylor each filed separate answers; the defendant William Kin-caid and eleven other defendants joined in their answers. Casey’s answer denies the allegations of the complaint, except that it admits a prescriptive right in the plaintiffs to divert sixty inches of water and no more. The answer then claims that he is and has been for fifteen years the owner of an irrigating ditch taken out of the natural channel of Neil Creek at a point about twenty rods south from the head of the plaintiffs’ ditch, and leading the water upon defendant’s lands for irrigation and other domestic purposes, and thát he has been diverting and using a portion of the'water'of said creek through said ditch ever since he dug it, in about 1870. That from the year 1867 to 1880 plaintiffs diverted sixty inches of water on a grade of three fourths of an inch to the rod from the channel of Neil Creek, at a point a few rods below H. W. Dyer’s house, and about twenty rods below the head of this defendant’s ditch aforesaid, and conducted said water thence west of north into and across an old channel, and into what is now called the plaintiffs’ ditch, and through said ditch to the farms of the plaintiffs; that about the year 1880, plaintiffs ceased to divert water from the natural channel at said point into their ditch, and commenced to take the water out of the ditch of this defendant aforesaid, and to conduct said water [86]*86from defendant’s ditcb along an old channel or depression to and into the head of plaintiffs’ said ditch; that the plaintiffs took the water out of this defendant’s ditch in 1880, without his consent, and has ever since continued to do so wrongfully and against the wish of this defendant; and that since said date, said plaintiffs have diverted more water than they did at any time prior thereto, and that for the past three years, they have and do now divert into their said ditch and carry away from said creek nearly all the water thereof during the irrigating season, to wit, more than one hundred and sixty inches, on a grade of three fourths of an inch to the rod. That about the fifteenth day of June, 1885, this defendant turned that portion of the water which he did not need for his own use out of'his said ditch into the natural channel of Neil Creek, and j>ermitted it to flow down the natural channel in its customary way without obstruction, as it was his right and duty to do. That said act of turning the water out of this defendant’s ditch into the natural channel as aforesaid is the same that is complained of in plaintiffs’ complaint.

William Taylor’s answer, among other things, sets up that he is and has been for more than twenty years a riparian owner, residing about one mile below the head of plaintiffs’ ditch on said creek, and has, during every year, used the waters of said creek for domestic purposes, and for watering his stock and irrigating the crops on said land. This answer also admits that plaintiffs have a prescriptive right to sixty inches of water, to be diverted through their ditch, and alleges that they have diverted more than that amount.

Proper replies were filed to these answers. The answers of the other defendants consisted entirely of denials.

The evidence was taken in writing upon an order of reference for that purpose, and accompanies the transcript. It is therefore necessary to detez’mine the rights of those persons as they appear by the entire record. It will be most convenient to examine: (Í) The rights of plaintiffs to the water claimed by them, and their rights to the ditch as between themselves and Casey; (2) the rights of William Taylor as riparian owner; and (3) the liabil[87]*87ity of the other defendants under the facts disclosed by the evidence.

1. It stands admitted by the pleadings that the plaintiffs have acquired a prescriptive right as against all of the defendants, to divert and appropriate to their own use sixty inches of the water of Neil Creek. The appropriation was made in 1852 by the the plaintiffs, and those under whom they claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
13 P. 669, 15 Or. 83, 1887 Ore. LEXIS 53, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tolman-v-casey-or-1887.