Vanderwork v. Hewes

110 P. 567, 15 N.M. 439
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 9, 1910
DocketNo. 1307
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 110 P. 567 (Vanderwork v. Hewes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Vanderwork v. Hewes, 110 P. 567, 15 N.M. 439 (N.M. 1910).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

McFIE, J.

The main question for our consideration, is, whether or not the water involved in this controversy is public water subject to distribution by the Territorial Engineer under Chapter 49, Laws of 1907. It is clear that the application of Vanderwork for the appropriation of the water was made under that law and the permission granted by the engineer for the use of the water upon the lands of Vanderwork, necessarily assumes that the water which rises upon Hewes’ land is subject to distribution under the provisions of the Act of 1907.

Section 12, Chapter 49, Laws of 1907, provides as follows:

“The Territorial Engineer shall have the supervision of the apportionment of the water in this Territory;, according to the licenses issued by him and his predecessors and the adjudications of the courts.”

1 This section, however, cannot be held to relate to waters held in private ownership or by prior appropriation, but must be held to relate to public and unappropriated waters within the Territory.

Section 1 of the Act of 1907, makes this clear, as it provides, that:

“All natural waters flowing in streams and water courses, whether such be perennial or torrential, within the limits of the Territory of New Mexico, belong to the public and are subject to appropriation for beneficial use.”

This section expressly limits the operation of the Act of 1907 to natural public waters within the Territory of New Mexico, with the further limitation, that it is water flowing in streams and water courses. This section, necessarily, indicates the character of the waters to which the engineer’s jurisdiction attaches for purposes of distribution as provided for in the act, with the single exception of the seepage water referred to in section 53, of that act.

The legislature, therefore, did not confer upon the Territorial Engineer jurisdiction for the distribution of all the waters within the Territory, but only over such public waters as are embraced in section 1, and the seepage waters referred to in section 53, subject to the conditions therein expressed.

The case at bar seems to furnish an excellent illustration of the correctness of the above construction.

In the first place it is admitted that the water involved in this case does not come from a stream or water course as defined in section 1, of the Act of 1907, but, on the contrary, its source is unknown. Such being the case, it is not contended by appellant that this water comes from either a stream or water course.

2 That it is seepage or percolating water, seems to be .accepted by all parties. In fact, appellant’s application for permit, states that it is seepage water and not tributary to any stream. Clearly, then, the Territorial Engineer had no authority to grant Vanderwork a pexmit to take this water under section 1, of the Act of 1907, but Ms authority to act must be found in section 53, if such authprity existed.

Section 53 is as follows:

“In the case of the seepage water from any constructed works the owner of such works shall have had the first right to the use thereof upon filing and application with the Territorial Engineer, as in the case of an original appropriation, but if such owner shall not hie said application within one year after the completion of such works, or the appearance upon the surface of such seepage water, any party desiring to use the same shall make an application to the Territorial Engineer, as in the case of unappropriated water, and such party shall pay to the owner of such works reasonable charge for the storage or carriage of such water in such works; Provided, That the appearance of such seepage water can be traced beyond a reasonable doubt to the storage or carriage of water in such works.”

3 Under the above section the only seepage water over which the engineer has power to grant permits for appropriation by applicants is seepage water from “constructed works.”

4 The term “constructed works” is used in many of the sections of the Act of 1907, and, as was held by the Board of Water Commissioners, in its opinion overruling the Territorial Engineer, refers to constructed reservoirs and ditches. There being no proof of any such constructed works, or proof that the seepage water came from such works, the engineer was without authority under that section to grant permits for its appropriation by the appellant; and this is true regardléss of whether the owner of the land upon which the water appeared, applied for its appropriation or not.

5 It is true, that one witness was of the opinion that the water came from a dynamited artesian well, three-fourths of a 'mile away. This, of course, was only a speculative opinion of the-witness. Even if true, it would be immaterial, as this well would not be constructed works, within the act.

6 These sections are the only sections in the Act of 1907 conferring authority upon the Territorial Engineer to grant permits or licenses for the appropriation of water, and as the waters, for the use of which the engineer granted the appellant a permit, were not of the character embraced in either section 1 or 53, but were seepage or percolating waters from an unknown source, the lower court, correctly held, that the Territorial Engineer had no jurisdiction over such waters and no power to grant appellant a permit to appropriate them.

Counsel for appellant further contend, that although appellant’s permit for the appropriation of the water on Hewes’ land may not be upheld, he has a superior right, by virtue of his attempted appropriation as against Dean, and even Hewes, the owner of the land upon which the water appears upon the surface, except as to so much as may be applied to a beneficial use by Hewes, upon his own land. Counsel, in his able brief, presents a line of authorities supporting the doctrine of “a reasonable use” rather than ownership of seepage or percolating waters .upon lands in private ownership, and in a proper ease, these cases would have great force, but in our opinion, the present ease does not come within the doctrine laid down in Katz v. Walkinshaw, 141 Cal. 116, a leading case upon this subject.

This case, and many others, involve the disposition of percolating water from large areas of land saturated with artesian water, and the same rules of law pertaining to surface and subterranean streams is held to be applicable to such water, notwithstanding such water is not in a channel with well defined bed and banks, the accepted definition of streams and water courses.

The case, at bar, is entirely different, in this, that a small quantity of water percolates to the surface and forms a small basin, wholly upon the lands of Hewes, and coming from a source unknown, so far as the record discloses.

While this water sometimes recedes to the point of disappearance and returns again to the surface, it spreads over a part of Hewes’ land at times and upon a portion of the lands of Dean, an adjoining owner.

7

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Bluebook (online)
110 P. 567, 15 N.M. 439, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/vanderwork-v-hewes-nm-1910.