Verheyen v. Dewey

146 P. 1116, 27 Idaho 1, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 17
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 13, 1915
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 146 P. 1116 (Verheyen v. Dewey) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Verheyen v. Dewey, 146 P. 1116, 27 Idaho 1, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 17 (Idaho 1915).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, C. J.

— This action was brought to recover damages resulting from an alleged trespass on real and personal property by flooding and seepage from the canal system of the defendant, the Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District.

This is a companion case to Doran v. Dewey et al., post, p. 25, 146 Pac. 1124, which was orally argued by respective counsel with the case at bar. These two cases involve practically the same questions of law and fact, although the [5]*5alleged -damages occurred to different tracts of land and different personal property.

The respondent in this case alleged, among other things, in his amended complaint, that he was the owner of twenty-one acres of land situated on Mason creek flat, about two miles northeast of the city of Nampa, and that he had this tract in a good state of cultivation and had growing thereon about 900 apple trees, 300 peach trees, 50 cherry trees, 200 grape vines, berry bushes and shrubbery, all of which, as well as certain personal property, was destroyed by reason of the flooding of said land and seepage from the Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District system, and that the whole loss sustained aggregated $38,815.40; and prayed for damages for that sum.

A demurrer to said amended complaint was overruled and the defendants answered. The case was thereafter tried to a jury and a verdict was returned in favor of the plaintiff in the sum of $8,315.40, and judgment was entered for that amount. A motion for a new trial was interposed and denied, and this appeal is from that order and from the judgment, as well as from an order of the court taxing costs.

Eight errors are assigned, which go to the action of the court in overruling the appellant’s demurrer to the amended complaint and defendants’ motion to strike from the amended complaint certain portions thereof; the overruling of defendants’ motion to tax costs; the giving and refusing to give certain instructions; the denying of defendants’ motion to strike out certain parts of the testimony, and the denying of the motion of defendant .Dewey for a nonsuit.

The following facts are disclosed by the record:

The land of the plaintiff is situated in the midst of what is known as Mason creek flat, about two miles nearly north of the town of Nampa. The valley slopes from the south to the north at from ten to fifteen feet to the mile. The Mason creek valley is only about one-third of a mile from Indian creek, at a point near Lake Ethel. The Mason creek basin [6]*6receives the surface drainage from several thousand acres of land. Said creek rises some ten or fifteen miles southeast of the land of plaintiff and runs in a northwesterly direction to Boise river, and is the natural drainage channel for said basin. The land of the plaintiff is located- in the Pioneer Irrigation District and is irrigated from the Phyllis canal, which passes easterly and southeasterly of plaintiff’s land -at a distance of about a mile. The Nampa & Meridian irrigation District adjoins or is near the Pioneer Irrigation District on the south. Its canal system consists of the main Ridenbaugh canal, which crosses Mason creek basin about five miles southeast from plaintiff’s land, together with the high-line canal crossing the same basin still higher up. Nest above this is what is known as the New York canal, or the canal of the United States Reclamation Service. The reservoir known as Lake Ethel is an -artificial lake made by means of a dam in Mason creek about one and a half miles above plaintiff’s land. The channel of Mason creek is through Lake Ethel, which covers about twenty-three acres of land and holds water to the average depth of about four feet and when full holds about 112 acre-feet of water. Plaintiff’s land is situated in the level basin or channel of said creek, which channel terminates about three-fourths of a mile above plaintiff’s land, and the channel -again begins at about a mile below plaintiff’s land. Thus for about a mile and three-quarters there is no natural channel across said basin, and the water coming to the upper end of said basin or flat must either seep or percolate into the soil, or, if it comes in large quantities, overflow the basin -and spread out over the-entire Mason creek flat and flow on down the valley to the point where the channel begins again.

Much of the land in this vicinity has been irrigated for some fifteen or twenty years from the said Phyllis canal, while lands farther up Mason creek valley have been irrigated for fifteen years or more from the Ridenbaugh canal, while thousands of acres of new land, naturally draining into Mason creek or valley, have been placed under cultivation [7]*7during the four or five years preceding the trial of this action, by water from said New York canal.

The topography of the locality of said Mason creek valley or basin was shown by several maps introduced in evidence, and by oral testimony on the trial. Said basin or valley is subject to natural floods from rain and snow in the winter, and in the summer a large amount of waste water runs off from and percolates the irrigated land situated in said basin.

As above stated, the maximum capacity of Lake Ethel reservoir is 112 acre-feet of water, and the water from that reservoir is not used for irrigation purposes. If the entire contents of said Lake Ethel were spread out over the surface of Mason creek flat, it would cover it to about a depth of two and a half inches, which is a less amount of water than is ordinarily used by the average Idaho farmer on his land at a single irrigation.

The original complaint in this action was substantially a copy of the complaint in the case of Doran v. Dewey et al., but the amended complaint alleges the turning out of water into Mason creek directly from the canal of the defendant corporation, as well as from said Lake Ethel. The answer of the defendants denied turning out water into Mason creek, either from the canal system or from Lake Ethel, except on January 13, 1912, and denied that any injuries resulted on that occasion. Paragraphs 3 and é of defendants’ answer set forth in detail their contention in this case, and it is there averred that the land of plaintiff, together with the improvements constituting realty, such as orchard trees, shrubbery, etc., is being gradually destroyed by the underground seepage waters unavoidably resulting from the lawful use of water for irrigation in said Mason creek basin, and that in any event defendants could only be held liable for the part of such injury resulting from an unlawful flooding by the defendants wholly independent of the common injury resulting from seepage from other sources, which, it is contended, plaintiff must prove by competent evidence; that if defendants or any land owner or canal owner in Mason creek basin unlawfully turns out water so as to injure the land of plain[8]*8tiff, the law affords plaintiff a sure remedy by injunction, and that the only practical remedy for injury from underground seepage waters resulting from the lawful use of water for irrigation is by drainage.

The amended complaint charges a trespass by the defendants from February, 1910, to November, 1912. The evidence shows two surface floodings of the land in Mason ereek fiat in the month of February, 1910, one in the month of October, 1911, and one about January 13, 1912. It is not contended that from February, 1910, to November, 1912, there were any surface floodings except those above mentioned. An injunction was asked and on that question the trial court made the following findings:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
146 P. 1116, 27 Idaho 1, 1915 Ida. LEXIS 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/verheyen-v-dewey-idaho-1915.