Wimer v. Simmons

39 P. 6, 27 Or. 1, 1895 Ore. LEXIS 16
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 11, 1895
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 39 P. 6 (Wimer v. Simmons) 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
Wimer v. Simmons, 39 P. 6, 27 Or. 1, 1895 Ore. LEXIS 16 (Or. 1895).

Opinion

Opinion by

Mr. Justice Wolverton.

The plaintiffs contend that they are entitled to the quantity of water that has been carried through their flume at the crossing of the east fork of the Illinois River during the period intervening from eighteen hundred and-seventy-seven to eighteen hundred and ninety-one. They base their claim of right upon the following propositions: (1) The owners of the defendants’ or Scotch Gulch ditch abandoned all that part of it below Scotch Gulch in eighteen hundred and seventy-seven; (2) the owners of said ditch abandoned all the water thereof that was turned or [6]*6allowed to flow back into said stream through Scotch Gulch in eighteen hundred and seventy-seven; and (8) plaintiffs have acquired a prior and perfect right to the waters of said stream as against defendants by adverse possession and use during the time intervening from eighteen hundred and seventy-seven to eighteen hundred and ninety-one.

1. It is the policy of the law that water of a stream shall be appropriated to the extent only that it is put to or designed for some useful or beneficial purpose. This is. the measure of the appropriation. The entire appropriation may not be utilized at once for the purposes designed. In such case a reasonable time is allowable within which to make the application to such purposes, and the surroundings and circumstances of each particular case are elements for consideration in determining what is a reasonable time within which to complete and fix the extent of the appropriation: Hindman v. Rizor, 21 Or. 112 (27 Pac. 13); Simmonds v. Winters, 21 Or. 35 (27 Pac. 7, 28 Am. St. Rep. 727); Low v. Rizor, 25 Or. 556 (37 Pac. 82); Cole v. Logan, 24 Or. 304 (33 Pac. 568); Sieber v. Frink, 7 Colo. 154 (2 Pac. 901).

2. A prior appropriator having the exclusive right to the use of part of or all the water of a stream may lose the same by abandonment. When abandoned, the water becomes pvblici juris, and subsequent appropriators are entitled to it according to their respective priorities. The abandonment may be express and immediate, as by the intentional act of the owner and possessor of the right, or it may be implied from his neglect, failure of application to the purpose designed within a reasonable time, nonuser, and the like: Kinney on Irrigation, § 253; Black’s Pomeroy on Water Rights, § 96.

3. The right of a prior appropriator may also be lost by the adverse possession of another. Nonuser by the [7]*7owner of tbe right, and adverse user of it by another, for a time equal to the period fixed as the limitation of actions for the recovery of real property, is necessary in this state to work a forfeiture through this method: Black’s Pomeroy on Water Rights, § 98; Dodge v. Marden, 7 Or. 458; Union Water Company v. Crary, 25 Cal. 508 (85 Am. Dec. 145). These general propositions of law are well established, and it is unnecessary to support them further by citation of authorities. Keeping them in mind let us consider the relative rights of the parties in the light of the facts as disclosed by the testimony.

For some years prior to eighteen hundred and seventy-seven the Desselles and Connell ditch carried from six hundred or seven hundred to a thousand inches of water to Scotch Gulch. Beyond that Desselles says “it would carry about four hundred inches.” In answer to the question, “How many inches flowed down the ditch beyond Scotch Gulch,” he replies: “Three hundred and fifty inches, used by Joseph Smith in Scotch Gulch, Spell-man and Brother in Allen Gulch, some Chinamen in Sailor Gulch, and Shelly and Company below the town of Waldo for mining and irrigating purposes. ” George Simmons, one of the defendants, in answer to the question, “How does the size of the ditch since you cleaned it out compare with the size of it as it was when the Wimer ditch was dug?” answered: “Oh, it is about the same size.” W. J. Wimer, one of the plaintiffs, testifying in August, eighteen hundred and ninety-three, says that defendants at that time were carrying in their ditch beyond Scotch Gulch three hundred or four hundred inches. He thought three hundred inches at any rate, while plaintiffs were at the same time carrying from one hundred and fifty to two hundred inches. Considering that defendants’ ditch intercepts the stream above that of plaintiffs’, it is probable that water was flowing therein beyond Scotch Gulch to [8]*8the extent of its average capacity. The mines at Scotch Gulch, which the defendants purchased with the ditch from Desselles and Connell, are practically worked out, so that they are unfit for profitable mining. George Simmons says, in effect, that Scotch Gulch is mined out — the most of it; that there are no mines there to amount to anything; that there is one man there now working with a pick and shovel. This was the probable condition of these mines at the date of defendants’ purchase in eighteen hundred and ninety-one, as it does not appear that they have ever been worked by them since they became the owners thereof. We deduce from this the defendants’ intentions at the time of the purchase. It was not to work the mine at Scotch Gulch, but to carry the water beyond, to the extent of the capacity of the old ditch, for use at such points as might be convenient. The evidence on this point is quite meager, and we can only judge of the intended use by that which they are now making of it. George Simmons says they are using a little for mining purposes at their mine, probably fifty inches, and some for irrigating grass and cultivated crops; that they “turned some of it down the river to the ranch, that Wimers ought to have turned the water out to irrigate, ” and “run a little water down to Decker.” He also says they have valuable mining property that it will take a number of years to work out; so that the use which, defendants are making of the water is not dissimilar to that which Desselles and Connell made of it prior to eighteen hundred and seventy-seven beyond Scotch Gulch, except that defendants appear to be employing the same for mining and irrigation on their own account, while Desselles and Connell sold to third parties for like uses and purposes. No question is made but that a valid appropriation prior to that of plaintiffs was made by the predecessors of defendants of the water of the said east [9]*9fork for use at Scotch Gulch for mining purposes, and that the relative position and rights of the parties continued unchanged to the year eighteen hundred and seventy-seven. The contention that defendants’ predecessors abandoned their ditch below Scotch Gulch in that year, by allowing it to become obstructed, and to fall into disuse at that time, presupposes this state of facts, as there can be no abandonment unless such right or privilege existed in some person or persons who could waive its benefits.

4. A valid appropriation having once been made of the water of a stream, it becomes a pertinent inquiry whether it is permissible to change the place of its use. Undoubtedly there could be no objection to such change where it does not injuriously affect third' parties. The predecessors of defendants, prior to eighteen hundred and seventy-seven, used a portion of the water appropriated by them beyond Scotch Gulch.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
39 P. 6, 27 Or. 1, 1895 Ore. LEXIS 16, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wimer-v-simmons-or-1895.