United States v. Krall

174 U.S. 385, 19 S. Ct. 712, 43 L. Ed. 1017, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1500
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 15, 1899
Docket216
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 174 U.S. 385 (United States v. Krall) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Krall, 174 U.S. 385, 19 S. Ct. 712, 43 L. Ed. 1017, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1500 (1899).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

The United States alleged in its bill substantially as follows :

That in July, 1864, in Boise County, Territory of Idaho, (now Ada County, State of Idaho,) a tract of land was duly set aside as a military reservation for the establishment of a military post, and that the reservation was subsequently occupied as such post and so continued to be used by the Government of the United States, for the purpose in question, up to the time when the bill -was filed. It was alleged, moreover, that flowing across the reservation was a stream of water known as Cottonwood Creek, which was non-navigable, but which afforded “ an ample supply for the agricultural, domestic and practical purposes of the officers and troops of said military post, and no more, and that said stream of water, together with all the uses and privileges aforesaid, belong to and are the property of plaintiffs; and that from the time of the occupancy and location of said post, to wit, the month of July, a.d. 1864, the waters of said stream have been continually used and appropriated, and now are used and appropriated, for all *386 agricultural, domestic and practical purposes by plaintiff, through its said officers and troops.”

The bill then averred that at a point on said stream above the reservation the defendant, his agents and employés, are now, and have been since June, 1894, actually engaged in wrongfully and unlawfully diverting the waters of said Cottonwood Creek, and the whole thereof, from their natural course over and across the premises hereinbefore described. .And the said defendant, his agents and employes have, since said June, 1894, been aiid now are actually engaged in diverting and appropriating the waters of said stream, and the whole thereof, and preventing and obstructing the same from flowing in its natural channel across the said military reservation, and thereby rendering the said premises unfit for use and occupancy as a military post.”

Averring the illegality of defendant’s acts in diverting the water from the stream and that all the water flowing in its natural course was essential for the purpose of the reservation, the bill asserted the title of the United States to all the water in the stream, and prayed that the defendant be enjoined from appropriating any portion thereof for his use “ as aforesaid.” In his answer the defendant denied that the water drawn off by him deprived the reservation of water necessary for any of its purposes, and on the contrary charged that there was sufficient water in the stream to meet the demands not only of the water right, which he asserted was vested in him, but also to supply every demand for water, which the reservation might need. He alleged that pursuant to the laws of the Territory of Idaho, in 1877 he had located a perpetual water right for five hundred cubic inches of water, at a point on the stream above the place where it flowed through the reservation, and that this location of water right was sanctioned by the laws of the United States. It was besides averred that during the years 1894 and 1895 “ one Peter Sonna, and his associates, whose names are unknown to this defendant, without defendant’s consent, diverted a large amount of the waters of said stream from the head waters thereof, and above the point on said stream where plaintiff alleges this defendant has obstructed and diverted the *387 same, and led the same through pipes to a reservoir on said military post, and that said military post, the officers and troops thereon stationed, have used the waters so stored in part, and have permitted large quantities thereof to pass across said reservation and to be used by the said Peter Sonna for mechanical and other purposes.”

A stipulation was entered into between the parties containing an agreed statement of facts, which showed substantially this: That the reservation in question was established prior to the initiation by the defendant of his alleged water right; that “ in 1877 the defendant located for agricultural, irrigation and other and domestic and useful purposes, 500 inches of the waters flowing in Cottonwood Creek, and diverted them upon the lands adjacent and in the vicinity of the easterly and southeasterly side of the military reservation, and has continuously used, and is now using, such waters, or portions thereof, for agricultural and irrigating purposes ever since that time upon such lands. His lands consist of a homestead of 160 acres, a desert entry of 160 acres, and his wife’s desert of about 70 acres ; he has expended between $8000 and $10,000 in the construction of necessary ditches, flumes, reservoirs, laterals and other improvements necessary for the reclamation of such lands, which were all desert in character, and of a class known as ‘ arid lands,’ incapable of producing crops of fruit without the application of water. JBy means of the use of this water and the rights claimed under such location, he and his grantee have acquired title to said desert lands, and have been enabled to cultivate large annual crops of farm produce annually, and to propagate large orchards, which without the water they could not have done.”

The statement, moreover, indicated the mode in which the reservation drew its supply of water from the stream, some of it being taken above the point where the defendant’s water right was located, and contained the following :

“ On or about the year 1891 one Peter Sonna and his associates, without the consent of the defendant, went upon the head watérs of said ‘ Five-Mile Gulch,’ one of the main tributaries of Cottonwood Gulch, and at sundry points gathered and *388 appropriated the waters of large and flowing springs there situated, and which are supply springs of said ‘Five-Mile Gulch,’ and the stream there situated, and about four miles above the point of the defendant’s diversion, and conveyed the waters of said springs by means of pipes and mains, the flatter being commonly known as ‘ 2-inch pipe,’ down the mountains to the reservoir before mentioned as located above the officers’ quarters on the reservation. The reservoir has a capacity of about 570,000 gallons. The waters so gathered and conducted were and now are stored in said reservoir, and distributed thérefrom from time to time as hereafter shown. A portion of the waters from the springs, if not diverted, would eventually flow into Cottonwood Creek above defendant’s point of diversion.
“ The waters stored in the Sonna reservoir aforesaid are used for fire purposes only on the reservation, and are also conveyed through mains about three-quarters of a mile into Boise City, where they are used in the running of a passenger elevator in one of the largest office buildings of the city, for drinking and closet purposes therein, and for domestic [uses] in several city residences, and, in case of danger, for fire purposes, through hydrants located along the line of said main.”

The lower court concluded that as the stream was not navigable and was wholly on the public domain, the defendant had no right to appropriate any of the waters as against the United' States, and therefore enjoined the taking by him of any water, from the stream, above the reservation except to the extent that license to do so might be given by the com- ■ mandant oí the post.

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Bluebook (online)
174 U.S. 385, 19 S. Ct. 712, 43 L. Ed. 1017, 1899 U.S. LEXIS 1500, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-krall-scotus-1899.