Washington v. Oregon

297 U.S. 517, 56 S. Ct. 540, 80 L. Ed. 837, 1936 U.S. LEXIS 536
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 2, 1936
Docket11, original
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 297 U.S. 517 (Washington v. Oregon) 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
Washington v. Oregon, 297 U.S. 517, 56 S. Ct. 540, 80 L. Ed. 837, 1936 U.S. LEXIS 536 (1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cardozo

delivered the opinion of the Court.

With leave of court (283 U. S. 801), the State of Washington filed ,a bill of complaint on July 22, 1931, in which it charged that the State of Oregon was wrongfully diverting the waters of the Walla Walla River to- the prejudice of inhabitants of Washington, and prayed an adjudication apportioning the interests of the two states in the river and in tributary streams and restraining any *519 use or diversion of the waters found to be unlawful. To this complaint Oregon filed an answer containing denials and defenses, to which Washington replied. On February 20, 1933, this court appointed a Special Master with authority to take evidence and with directions to make findings of fact and conclusions of law to be submitted to the court with. recommendations for a decree. 288 U. S. 592. The case is now here upon exceptions filed by Washington to the Master’s report, which finds the facts fully and advises the dismissal of the bill.

The Walla Walla River, a non-navigable stream, rises in the Blue Mountains of northeastern Oregon. For about four miles above the City of Milton it flows through a narrow canyon, the waters for that reach being inaccessible for purposes of irrigation. At Milton the river broadens out in a delta formation. . The first division in this formation is at Red Bridge, near the city, where the river breaks into two branches. One, the Tum-a-lum, as it is known in Oregon, or the main Walla Walla, as it is known in Washington, flows through cobble rocks over great depths of gravel till it reaches the McCoy Bridge. There, at the margin of an alluvial fan, springs rise from below the surface, and feed the flow anew. Thus reinforced, the stream moves northwesterly to the line between the two states, and again northwesterly for about thirty miles in Washington to its confluence with the Columbia River. A second branch of the river, starting at the Red Bridge, is known as the Little Walla Walla, which divides after a mile into the Crocket and the Ford. Prongs of the Crocket which contribute little, if ,any, water during the irrigation season, combine with another stream after crossing the state line, and discharge into the main river above the intake of the canal of the Gardena project. Another prong of the Crocket comes together with the Ford and joins.the main river in Washington below the intake of the canal. Still another tribu. *520 tary, known as the Mill Creek; rises in the Blue Mountains, and flows far to the east of the courses just described. After breaking up into other creeks (the Yellowhawk, the Garrison and others), it joins the main stream of the Walla Walla within the state of Washington. No claim is made by the complainant that the waters of Mill Creek have been illegally diverted. Indeed, the fact appears to be that the inhabitants of Washington use the waters of that creek to the exclusion of any use thereof by the inhabitants of Oregon. The claim of wrongdoing has its centre in the use of the waters of the Walla Walla arising above the Red Bridge.

The Walla Walla Basin has a semi-arid climate with warm dry summers and cold wet winters. The streams contributing to the river are supplied in the main from the snows of the Blue Mountains. Upon the coming of spring, these snows are melted, and the river at that season attains its highest -flow. Even then there are variations, not only from month to month, but from day to day. With the advance of summer, the flow diminishes greatly, particularly in the latter part of July and August. In such a climate agriculture cannot go on successfully without the aid of irrigation. A sporadic supply of water will not meet the farmer’s needs. “To be available in a practical sense the supply must be fairly continuous and dependable.” Wyoming v. Colorado, 259 U. S. 419, 471. A fair division of the water is thus vital to the prosperity of this agricultural community, and even to its life, for agricultural in the main it is. True, there are cities also within the limits of the. watershed, Walla Walla in Washington with a population of 15,976; Milton and Freewater in Oregon with a combined population of 2,3(18.. Even so', the welfare of the cities is •closely bound up with that of the area about them. _ Indeed, there has been a unity of growth in the devélopment of the whole community, a development quite inde *521 pendent of the dividing line between the states. As already pointed out, farmers in Washington have had the benefit of Mill Creek,"which takes its rise in Oregon.

Complainant and defendant have stipulated that ■ for the purposes of this case the individual rights of the respective land owners and water ownérs concerned in both states are governed by the doctrine of prior appropriation. Wyoming v. Colorado, supra. The Washington court made a decree in September,' 1928, adjudging the priorities of appropriators in Washington. The Oregon court made one in August, 1912, adjudging the priorities of appropriators in Oregon. Neither state was a party to the judicial proceedings in the other. The stream supply has been sufficient through the aid of the Mill Creek to satisfy rights with priorities up to 1891 under each of the decrees. What Washington complains of chiefly is the deficiency in the supply available .for the satisfaction of alleged priorities up to 1892. Particularly it complains of the deficiency of the supply for the Gardena Farms District. By the decree of September, 1928, the District was adjudged the holder of a water right with an 189.2 priority for the irrigation of 7,000 acres upon specified- conditions. This priority, though recognized in Washington, -is contested by Oregon. The project affected by that award was started in 1892; by the .Walla Walla Irrigation ¿Company. A canal to connect with the Walla Walla River was- to carry water for irrigation to a tract known, as the Gardena District, twelve miles or more away. Work on the canal was slow and intermittent, chiefly for lack of funds. About 1903 the engineers discovered'that the best land in, the District could not be irrigated at all unless the plans were greatly changed. ’ Thereupon a new system of construction was adopted following a different route. Not till 1904 or later was water in the canal applied beneficially to any acreage in Washington except in trifling quantities. Long *522 before that time, beginning in 1880 or earlier and continuously thereafter, irrigators in Oregon had been appropriating to themselves the waters of the river above the Red Bridge.

We turn at this point to a consideration of the acts of appropriation, their nature and effect, in an endeavor to ascertain whether they were legitimate or wrongful. Eor more than fifty years before the filing of this suit irrigators-in Oregon at seasons of shortage maintained crude or temporary dams across the Walla Walla River close to the Red Bridge. During the low water period the effect of the dam was to turn the waters of the river away from the channel of the Tum-a-lum into the channel of the Little Walla Walla, where they were used for agricultural, domestic and kindred purposes. A small quantity of water necessary to supply the right of the East Side Ditch has been permitted to go by the dam- without interfereñce.

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Bluebook (online)
297 U.S. 517, 56 S. Ct. 540, 80 L. Ed. 837, 1936 U.S. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-v-oregon-scotus-1936.