Tudor v. Jaca

165 P.2d 770, 164 P.2d 680, 178 Or. 126, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 211
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 165 P.2d 770 (Tudor v. Jaca) 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
Tudor v. Jaca, 165 P.2d 770, 164 P.2d 680, 178 Or. 126, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 211 (Or. 1946).

Opinions

*133 HAY, J.

This is a suit to quiet title in plaintiff to the use of waters of Crooked Creek, a tributary of the Owyhee River. It was commenced in 1938. Issue was joined upon the complaint and upon counterclaims by the defendants under which affirmative relief was sought. A hearing was held before the late Judge Robert M. Duncan, wherein voluminous testimony was taken and numerous documentary exhibits were received. Shortly thereafter, Judge Duncan died without having rendered a decision, and by agreement of the parties the case was submitted, upon the record and evidence, to Judge R. J. Green, who in due course entered a decree determining the rights of the parties. The plaintiff has appealed to this court from the whole of such decree.

The principal defendant, Juan Jaca, died pendente lite, and the administrator of his estate was substituted in his stead. The Jaca lands were thereafter acquired by S. E. Henderson, and, subsequent to the hearing but before the case was decided, he was joined as a defendant. Although there are other respondents, we shall, in the interests of clarity, refer to Mr. Henderson as “the respondent”.

Crooked Creek flows from a large spring which rises upon appellant’s land and runs in a general northeasterly direction. It is augmented by some small springs which also rise on appellant’s land. Leaving that land, it traverses a tract called the Loveland field, formerly owned by one Anderson Loveland and now owned by respondent. Thereafter, it proceeds through a canyon for upward of a mile, and enters respondent’s main ranch property.

The relative rights to the use of the waters of this stream were involved in early litigation between pred *134 eeessors in interest of the respective parties hereto Seaweard v. Duncan, 47 Or. 640, 84 P. 1043; Seaweard v. Pacific Livestock Co., 49 Or. 157, 88 P. 963. The last-mentioned case was instituted by two of respondent’s predecessors in title, J. H. Seaweard and Anderson Loveland, against appellant’s predecessor, Pacific Livestock Company, to enjoin the latter from raising the waters of the large spring by means of a dam or dike, for the purpose of diverting them into a high-line ditch which the Company was then constructing, and applying them to the irrigation of land not theretofore irrigated. The decree gave the Company a prior right to the use of 100 inches of water, miner’s measurement, under six-inch pressure, for irrigation purposes, as appurtenant to the Ey2 E% and SW!4 NE14, section 22, and the Sy2 and the SE14 section 14, T. 33 S., E. 39 E., W.M., with a date of relative priority as of 1885. The other parties to the suit were determined to have secondary rights as follows: Seaweard, 120 miner’s inches for the irrigation of the SE14 NE14, N% SE14, SW14 SE14, section 4, T. 33 S., E. 40 E.; Loveland, 150 miner’s inches for the irrigation of the NW14 of section 20, and all of section 17, T. 33 S., E. 40 E.; defendant Pearl Duncan, 80 miner’s inches for the irrigation of the NE^4 and SW14 NE14, section 4, T. 33 S., E. 40 E., W.M.

In 1919, an adjudication of the relative rights to the use of the waters of the Owyhee Eiver and its tributaries, under the water code of 1909 (section 116-801, et seq., O. C. L. A.) was initiated, and in that proceeding claims were filed by Pacific Livestock Company, predecessor in interest of appellant, and by James P. Anderson, a predecessor in interest of respondent. Anderson contested the claim of Pacific *135 Livestock Company, and the contest was settled by written stipulation of the parties. The stipulation reads, in part, as follows:

“Whereas the relative rights of these parties and their predecessors in interest have been, to a large extent, determined by the Supreme Court of the State of Oregon in that certain case entitled J. H. Seaweard, et al., against the Pacific Livestock Company, reported in 49 Oregon Reports, at page 157, and the case of Seaweard against Duncan, reported in 47 Oregon Reports, at page 640, and in which first mentioned case the Court made a final Decree awarding to the Pacific Livestock Company the right to the use of 100 miner’s inches of water, measured under a six-inch pressure, to be taken from said Crooked Creek, said right to be prior in time to the other users mentioned in said Decree, and the Court made a Decree in awarding to J. H. Seaweard 120 inches, to Anderson Love-land 150 inches, and to P. O. Duncan, 80 inches, and
“Whereas, the said James P. Anderson has succeeded to the rights of the said Seaweard, Loveland and Duncan, and is now the owner of the lands and water rights of said parties, and these parties are now willing that such Decree should control the amount of water awarded to each of the parties herein:
“NOW, THEREFORE, it is agreed that the State Engineer’s office, in its Findings and Decree to be made and entered in this matter, should find that the Pacific Livestock Company shall have a prior right to the use of the water of Crooked Creek to the extent of 100 miner’s inches, measured under a six inch pressure, to be used as it sees fit on the lands of said company in the Southwest Quarter and the Southeast Quarter of Section 14, and its lands in the Northeast quarter of Section 22, Township 33, S. R. 39 E. W.M., and that the said James P. Anderson shall be entitled to the use of *136 350 miner’s inches of water, measured under a six inch pressure, for the irrigation of his lands in sections 20, 17, and 4 in Township 33, South, Range 40 E.W.M.”

The State Engineer, in his findings of fact and order of determination, embodied the foregoing stipulation, with the following proviso added:

“In the administration of the water rights allowed herein to the parties to this contest, and their successors in interest, the water master shall distribute the water as between said parties in accordance with the terms of said stipulation and the decree mentioned therein, in so far as practicable; provided, that the quantity of water used by said parties shall be governed by Paragraph 24 hereof; and provided further, that as against other water users the rights of said parties shall be governed by their dates of priority as set forth in the tabulation hereinafter contained.”

Paragraph 24, above referred to, fixed the duty of water and the irrigation season as running from April first to October fifteenth. We quote:

“The amount of water diverted from main Owyhee River for irrigation purposes shall not exceed one acre foot per acre during any calendar month prior to June 1st, and three-fourths acre foot per acre during any calendar month after June 1st, of each year; and the total quantity diverted during the irrigation season from April 1st to October 15th, shall not exceed three acre feet per acre.

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Tudor v. Jaca
165 P.2d 770 (Oregon Supreme Court, 1946)

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Bluebook (online)
165 P.2d 770, 164 P.2d 680, 178 Or. 126, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 211, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tudor-v-jaca-or-1946.