Court Opinion

ID: 5171706
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-01-02 04:56:46.629711+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:26:07.111517
License: Public Domain

RICE, C. J.
This action was instituted by appellant Last Chance Ditch Company against eighty-nine different defendants, for the purpose of obtaining an injunction to restrain the defendants from permitting waste water from the irrigation of their lands from running into appellant’s canal. It is alleged that such waste water carried large quantities of sand and silt into the canal and caused the water in the same to fluctuate so as to interfere with its proper control and management as an irrigation canal. The action was dismissed as to five of the defendants, and thirty-eight defendants appeared and answered. The judgment was in favor of appellant as to all defendants except twenty-six named therein. Ns to those defendants the court found that they had obtained a right by prescription to permit their waste water to flow into the canal, and as to them the action was dismissed. The question presented by the appeal is whether or not the twenty-six respondents had obtained a prescriptive right to permit waster water from their lands to flow into appellant’s canal.
Respondents pleaded that the action was barred by C. S., see. 6611. It was held in Beasley v. Engstrom, 31 Ida. 14, 168 Pac. 1145, that this section does not apply, and that sections 6596? 6597 and 6599 are the sections of the statute of limitations applicable in cases of this kind. . However, respondents pleaded affirmatively that they and each of them had enjoyed an easement in appellant’s canal for the purpose of discharging and disposing of the excess and waste irrigation waters from their lands for a period of more than five years, with the knowledge of appellant, and that the use of such easement has been continuous, uninterrupted, adverse, open, notorious and nonpermissive. "We think respondents *66did not waive the plea that the cause of action was barred by failure to refer to the proper sections of the statute, in view of the affirmative allegations above set forth, and that the issue as to their prescriptive right was raised by the answer.
The respondents having alleged a prescriptive right, the burden rested upon them to establish it by evidence reasonably clear and convincing. We shall consider the proof with relation to the various elements necessary to establish a prescriptive right which are challenged by appellant.
Appellant contends that having shown that it served protests and notices to cease upon the various respondents, that such protests and notices interrupted continuity of the user and disproved the acquiescence of the owner of the canal and thereby interrupted the running of the statute.
Upon this point the authorities are in conflict. The leading case, supporting appellant’s contention is Powell v. Bagg, 8 Gray (Mass.), 441, 69 Am. Dec. 262. Reference should be made also to Dartnell v. Bidwell, 115 Me. 227, 98 Atl. 743, 5 A. L. R. 1320, and the note, wherein many authorities on both sides of the question are collected.
The reason supporting appellant’s contention is stated in Powell v. Bagg, supra, as follows: “From such use of an easement for twenty years, the law will presume a non-appearing grant. But before the lapse of that period, if the owner of land, by a verbal act on the premises in which the easement is claimed, resists the exercise of the right and denies its existence, the presumption of a grant is rebutted, his acquiescence in the right claimed is disproved, and the essential elements of h title to an easement by adverse use are shown not to exist.”
We are of the opinion, however, that the recognized fiction of a lost grant should not be given such controlling efficacy. While it is true that the statute of limitations does not in terms apply to the acquisition of title to an easement by prescription, it is generally held that by analogy such statutes are applicable. The use of an easement constitutes a direct *67invasion of the dominion of the proprietor of the land, and the statute forbids maintenance of an action to prevent such use as has been enjoyed openly, continuously, adversely, and with the acquiescence of the owner for a period of five years or more. The statute announces the policy of the law. It does not appear to be founded upon the fiction of a lost grant, but upon the proposition that it is the policy of the state to discourage litigation of matters which, through the lapse of time, should be considered as settled. ¥e think the acquiescence of the owner of land in case of continuous and adverse user of an easement is presumed, and can be disproved only by showing acts upon his part which interrupt the continuity of the use, or by appropriate action in court to prevent its continuance. (See Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. McFarlan, 43 N. J. L. 605.)
Appellant also contends that as to fourteen of the twenty-six respondents, there was no proof that waste water from their lands ran into the appellant’s canal for a longer period than three-years. We think appellant’s contention must be sustained as to all these respondents, with perhaps the exception of H. D. Carmichael. The proof was to the effect that the land of these respondents had been in cultivation and artificially irrigated from -five to' seven years. There was also evidence that the lands of these respondents lay above the appellant’s canal, and that if there was sufficient waste water therefrom to reach the canal it must have flowed into it. But proof of the cultivation and irrigation of lands is not proof that waste resulted from such irrigation, much less is it proof as to the amount of such wastage. A prescriptive right to waste water into a lower canal cannot be established short of direct proof that the water has actually flowed therein during the period'necessary to establish the right.
It is next contended that the use by respondents was not under a claim of right in themselves. Claim of right is presumed from an open, notorious, continuous and adverse use. It is not consistent, however, with an admission on the part *68of claimant that he did not have such a right. In the case at bar, respondent Wilson testified that he never claimed a free right, and also that he had met with the directors of appellant company in an endeavor to reach an agreement with them as to compensation for the right. The same admission substantially appears in the testimony of Hartley, Modin, Hitt and Wright. The only witness who expressly testified as to a claim of right was I. N. Sullivan.
Finally, it is contended by appellant that the burden is on the party claiming the right by prescription to show the extent and the amount of his user and of the right claimed. This position is undoubtedly correct. (Boynton v. Longley, 19 Nev. 69, 3 Am. St. 781, 6 Pac. 437; Strong v. Baldwin, 137 Cal. 432, 70 Pac. 288; Crosier v. Brown, 66 W. Va. 273, 66 S. E. 326, 25 L. R. A., N. S., 174.) In this ease the court made the following finding: “That the amount of Water available for the irrigation of defendants’ lands as a whole, and the amount of land irrigated by defendants -as a whole, and the amount of waste water permitted by defendants as a whole to run into plaintiff’s said canal has greatly increased from year to year during the past five years; that at all times, whenever there has been sufficient waste water to run off said defendants’ lands into .said canal, all that there was has been permitted to run into plaintiff’s said .canal. ’ ’
In controversies such as the one at bar, the law does not require those claiming a prescriptive right to prove the extent of the right to a nicety, but the burden is upon them to show with substantial certainty the extent of the easement which they have enjoyed for a period of at least five years. The respondents have failed to meet the burden in this respect, with the exception of I. N. Sullivan and W. E. Sullivan, so far as their claim relates to the waste water flowing from their twenty-acre orchard. The testimony with respect to this particular orchard shows that these respondents had twelve and a half inches of water for the irrigation thereof; that the orchard had been irrigated with *69that amount of water since the spring of 1909, and that the waste water therefrom flowed into the canal. This proof shows with reasonable certainty the extent of the easement enjoyed by them. This does not include the other tract of land owned by these respondents. *
The judgment is reversed as to all respondents except I. N. Sullivan and W. E. Sullivan, so far as the same relates to their twenty-acre orchard. Costs are awarded to appellant.
McCarthy and Dunn, JJ., concur.
Budge, J., did not take any part in the decision.