1. This Court will not exercise its jurisdiction to control the
conduct of one State at the suit of another, unless the invasion of
right complained of be of serious magnitude and proved by clear and
convincing evidence. P.
297 U. S.
522.
2. The mere fact that a dam diverting water for irrigation from
a nonnavigable stream takes the entire surface flow in times of
scarcity gives to an adjacent State lower on the stream no equity
to an injunction against the State in which the dam is operated,
where water rights in both States are based on appropriation for
beneficial uses and where an injunction would wreak great injury
upon farmers in the upper State who are dependent upon the
diversion and would probably not increase the flow in the lower
State because of physical condition of the streambed. P.
297 U. S.
522.
3. The evidence fails to prove the contention that water
diverted from the Walla Walla River and used for irrigation in
Oregon, is used wastefully, to the injury of irrigators in
Washington, or the contention that the pumping of water in Oregon
and its use in irrigating the lands from which it is pumped,
materially lessens the quantity of water otherwise available for
use in Washington. P.
297 U. S.
523.
4. The right of landowners to make reasonable use of percolating
water by pumping from wells and applying it to the surface,
considered and upheld. P.
297 U. S.
525.
Page 297 U. S. 518
5. Oregon and Washington are entitled to their equitable
proportions of the water of the Walla Walla, on the basis of
priority of appropriations. P.
297 U. S.
526.
6. A water priority once acquired, or put in course of
acquisition by the posting of a notice, may be lost by abandonment.
P.
297 U. S.
527.
7. In determining equitable apportionment between States of the
waters of a common stream, a priority allotted in one of the States
by an adjudication to which the other State and its appropriators
were not parties, is not binding on them and will not be counted
if, as to them, the claimant of such priority has forfeited his
right, by laches, abandonment, or other inequitable conduct. P.
297 U. S.
528.
Bill Dismissed.
The object of this original suit was to obtain an apportionment
between the two States of the waters of the Walla Walla River and
tributaries, supported by an injunction. The case was heard on
exceptions to the report of the Special Master, William W. Ray,
Esquire, of Utah, to whom it had been referred.
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 as 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
Page 297 U. S. 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 nonnavigable 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 30 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
tributary,
Page 297 U. S. 520
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 center 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,
259 U. S. 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 2,308. 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 development of the whole community, a development
quite independent
Page 297 U. S. 521
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 landowners and
water owners 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 1892 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
Page 297 U. S. 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. For 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
interference. With that exception, which is negligible, all the
waters have been diverted without interruption and without protest
for more than fifty years. Was this a wrong to Washington?
"Before this Court can be moved to exercise its extraordinary
power under the Constitution to control the conduct of one state at
the suit of another, the threatened invasion of rights must be of
serious magnitude, and it must be established by clear and
convincing evidence."
New York v. New Jersey, 256 U.
S. 296,
256 U. S. 309;
North Dakota v. Minnesota, 263 U.
S. 365,
263 U. S. 374;
Connecticut v. Massachusetts, 282 U.
S. 660,
282 U. S. 669;
Missouri v. Illinois, 200 U. S. 496,
200 U. S. 521.
The master has found:
"There is no satisfactory proof that to turn down water past the
Red Bridge in Oregon during the period of water shortage would be
materially more advantageous to Washington users than to permit
such water to be applied to surface irrigation in Oregon."
This is so because of the nature of the channel of the Tum-a-lum
river. During the period
Page 297 U. S. 523
of water shortage, only a small quantity of water would go by if
the dams should be removed. There is evidence that this quantity,
small at the beginning, would be quickly absorbed and lost in the
deep gravel beneath the channel. Experiments have proved that it
would not reach the McCoy Bridge, only a few miles down the stream.
As to this, the master finds:
"The channel of the Tum-a-lum river between the Nursery Bridge
[which is close to the Red Bridge] and the McCoy Bridge [farther
down] is an extremely wasteful channel. Water turned past the Red
Bridge sinks and becomes part of the underground waters. . . . To
limit the long established use in Oregon would materially injure
Oregon users without a compensating benefit to Washington
users."
These findings are well supported by the evidence. Complainant
has brought forward no adequate reason for disturbing them.
Connecticut v. Massachusetts, supra, 282 U.S. at p.
282 U. S. 669.
Accepting them, as we do, we accept also the conclusion to which
they point with inescapable directness. To restrain the diversion
at the bridge would bring distress and even ruin to a long
established settlement of tillers of the soil for no other or
better purpose than to vindicate a barren right. This is not the
high equity that moves the conscience of the court in giving
judgment between states.
North Dakota v. Minnesota, supra;
Connecticut v. Massachusetts, supra; Kansas v. Colorado,
206 U. S. 46,
206 U. S. 109.
Far from being that, it is rather "the
summum jus of
power."
Mutual Life Insurance Co. v. Johnson, 293 U.
S. 335,
293 U. S. 339.
In default of reasons for removal more urgent and compelling, the
tillers of the soil will be left where they have settled.
Cf.
Hough v. Porter, 51 Or. 318, 415, 95 P. 732, 98 P. 1083, 102
P. 728;
Matheson v. Ward, 24 Wash. 407, 411, 64 P.
520.
The question must still be met whether the waters, when
diverted, are misapplied or wasted, with ensuing loss
Page 297 U. S. 524
to the complainant. As to this, the findings are explicit, and
they are supported by the evidence.
"The use of water by the irrigators within the State of Oregon
is not unduly wasteful but is, under the circumstances, a
reasonable, beneficial, and necessary use."
Nor does the evidence sustain the allegation of the bill that,
through the diversion of the stream and the application of the
water to new irrigated lands, the underground water supply has been
so shifted to the west that it does not return to the river at such
a point as to be usable by the inhabitants of Washington. As to
this and other charges of damage or wrongdoing, the burden of proof
falls heavily on complainant, more heavily, we have held, than in a
suit for an injunction where states are not involved.
North
Dakota v. Minnesota, supra; Connecticut v. Massachusetts,
supra. The burden has not been borne. On the contrary, the
master finds on the basis of supporting evidence that "a
substantial part of the water applied to irrigation in Oregon . . .
goes into the underground water supply" and returns to the river.
Indeed, he goes farther and concludes that "the use of water for
irrigation within the State of Oregon is beneficial to irrigators
within the State of Washington" by feeding the many springs that
supply the main river later in its course. Whether this is so or
not, certain at least it is that the injury, if there is any, does
not appear "by clear and convincing evidence" to be one "of serious
magnitude."
Connecticut v. Massachusetts, supra; New York v.
New Jersey, supra. Between the high contending parties whose
interests are involved, nothing less will set in motion the
restraining power of the court.
Next to be considered is the practice of the defendant's farmers
in sinking wells upon their farms. This is stated in the
findings.
"In addition to the surface water available for use within the
State of Oregon, the farmers have tapped the subsurface water
supply by sinking about
Page 297 U. S. 525
three hundred wells, from which wells they pump each year
approximately 9,000 acre-feet of water. The water so pumped is used
upon the lands where the several wells are located."
A different question would be here if the water when extracted
had been sold or otherwise employed for use on distant lands. Such
use is unlawful according to the rule in many courts (
Snake
Creek Mining & Tunnel Co. v. Midway Irrigation Co.,
260 U. S. 596,
aff'g 271 F. 157;
Forbell v. New York City, 164
N.Y. 522, 58 N.E. 644;
People v. New York Carbonic Acid Gas
Co., 196 N.Y. 421, 90 N.E. 441;
Bassett v. Salisbury Mfg.
Co., 43 N.H. 569;
Patrick v. Smith, 75 Wash. 407, 134
P. 1076), though the decisions are not uniform.
Acton v.
Blundell, 12 Mees & W. 324. [
Footnote 1] Again, a different question would be here if
the waters, though subterranean, followed a defined channel,
instead of percolating vagrantly through rocks and sand and gravel.
Snake Creek Mining & Tunnel Co. v. Midway Irrigation Co.,
supra; Boyce v. Cupper, 37 Or. 256, 260, 61 P. 642;
Hayes
v. Adams, 109 Or. 51, 57, 58, 218 P. 933;
Meyer v. Tacoma
Light & Water Co., 8 Wash. 144, 35 P. 601;
Horne v.
Utah Oil Refining Co., 59 Utah, 279, 202 P. 815;
Clinchfield Coal Corp. v. Compton, 148 Va. 437, 139 S.E.
308. Here, the water level is on such a slope that, without any
pumping, gravity would take the water away from the channel of any
stream, either above the surface or below it. In such
circumstances, the right to pump in reasonable quantities for the
beneficial enjoyment of the overlying land is allowed even by those
courts that have placed the narrowest restrictions on the use of
percolating waters.
Maricopa County District v. Southwest
Cotton Co., 39 Ariz. 65, 86, 90, 97, 100, 4 P.2d 369;
Los
Angeles v. Pomeroy, 124 Cal. 597, 57 P. 585;
McClintock v.
Hudson, 141 Cal. 275, 74 P.
Page 297 U. S. 526
849;
Los Angeles v. Hunter, 156 Cal. 603, 105 P. 755.
[
Footnote 2]
Cf. Ide v.
United States, 263 U. S. 497,
263 U. S. 506.
In saying this, we do not intimate, either one way or the other,
that our conclusion would be different if the geological formation
were other than it is. To all this we add that, once more, as at
other stages of the case, complainant has been unsuccessful in
supplying evidence of damage. As to that, the master finds:
"There is no satisfactory proof that the use of the water from
these wells materially lessens the quantity of water available for
use within the State of Washington."
If any wrong has been done, it is unsubstantial and
uncertain.
What has been said avails, without more ,to repel the claim of
the complainant that, by the dams at the Red Bridge or by the use
of wells or pumps, the Oregon irrigators are wrongfully diverting
or depleting the waters of the river to the prejudice of irrigators
resident in Washington. To repel this claim of wrong, however, does
not dispose of the whole case. The question remains whether the
Oregon irrigators, as a result of all their acts, are taking to
themselves more than their equitable proportion of the waters of
the river, priority of appropriation being the basis of division.
As to this, too, the master has reported in their favor. For the
understanding of his ruling and its satisfactory appraisal, there
is need to recur briefly to the claim of the Gardena Farms.
Washington does not challenge the priorities adjudged in the
Oregon decree. Oregon does not challenge those adjudged in the
Washington decree, except only the priority allotted to the Gardena
Farms. If that, priority is excluded, the Oregon irrigators have
not exceeded their equitable quota at all events in any measure so
substantial
Page 297 U. S. 527
as to call for an injunction in a contest between states. A
notice posted in 1892 fixed the locus of the intake of the canal
for the Gardena project. This intake was far above the point where
the branches of the Little Walla Walla unite with the main stream,
if we except a few prongs of insignificant extent. The projectors
of the canal were thus informed from the beginning that none of the
waters of the Tum-a-lum above the Red Bridge would be available for
the canal during the season of summer irrigation as long as the
Oregon farmers were permitted to maintain the dams that diverted
the waters of the Tum-a-lum into the Little Walla Walla. The
physical conditions were notorious, and were known to the canal
company and, in particular, to its president, the leader of the
enterprise. What was done or omitted in keeping the appropriation
alive against the Oregon farmers in the vicinity of Milton must be
read and interpreted in the light of that knowledge and its
resulting obligations.
A priority once acquired or put in course of acquisition by the
posting of a notice may be lost to the claimant by abandonment or
laches. There must be no waste in arid lands of the "treasure" of a
river.
New Jersey v. New York, 283 U.
S. 336,
283 U. S. 342.
The essence of the doctrine of prior appropriation is beneficial
use, not a stale or barren claim. Only diligence and good faith
will keep the privilege alive.
Seaweard v. Pacific Livestock
Co., 49 Or. 157, 161, 88 P. 963;
In re Water Rights of
Silvies River, 115 Or. 27, 61, 237 P. 322;
In re Water
Rights of Hood River, 114 Or. 112, 131, 227 P. 1065;
State
ex rel. Ham v. Superior Court, 70 Wash. 442, 463, 126 P. 945.
[
Footnote 3] When these are
shown to be lacking, the water right will fail, or fail to the
extent that equity requires.
Page 297 U. S. 528
Such, according to the master, has been the fate of the Gardena
filing. True, a court in Washington determine in 1928 that the
priority was to be recognized as of 1892. The decree was of no
force against Oregon or Oregon appropriators not parties to the
suit.
United States v. Oregon, 295 U. S.
1,
295 U. S. 12;
Priest v. Las Vegas, 232 U. S. 604. As
to them, priority had lapsed, if the claimant had forfeited it by
inequitable conduct. The label of the acts is unimportant, whether
laches or estoppel or abandonment. What matters is their quality.
Persistence in such conduct may extinguish the equitable right. It
may bar an equitable remedy. Irrigators in another state,
unaffected by the decree, are at liberty to show the facts, and,
upon the basis of that showing, to fix their user of the
stream.
Laches and abandonment, chargeable to the Gardena users, are
found in the report. Not till 1930 was there a claim in their
behalf to the beneficial use of the waters of the river arising
above the bridge. Not till then was such a claim advanced by
Washington itself or by any of its residents. Without a sign of
challenge, the Oregon users were allowed to develop their little
settlement in the faith that their enjoyment of the waters was
uncontested by anyone. During these many years of growth, Gardena
Farms, in particular, evinced by many acts its recognition and
acceptance of the existing situation. These acts are narrated
carefully in the findings of the master. There is no need to repeat
them here. Viewing them collectively, he concludes that the Gardena
Farms district has never put the waters of the river arising above
Red Bridge to a beneficial use during the irrigation season, that
the intention to apply them to such a use was abandoned, if it ever
existed, before the commencement of this suit, and that, for a
period of nearly forty years, there has been recognition of the
superior right of the Oregon appropriators. Here surely is not the
diligence that equity
Page 297 U. S. 529
exacts of the suitor who invokes its distinctive
jurisdiction.
We have dwelt upon the question of abandonment, for it has been
much considered in the report and in the arguments of counsel. In
so doing, we have not meant to hold that, in the absence of
abandonment, there would be an inequitable apportionment calling
for relief by injunction, unless indeed the flow of the stream
should unexpectedly increase. We are to bear in mind steadily that
the controversy is between states, and not between private
litigants, the burden and quantum of the proof being governed
accordingly.
North Dakota v. Minnesota, supra. At present,
there would be no benefit to Gardena, or none that has been proved,
if the waters of the Tum-a-lum were not obstructed by the dam. In
all likelihood, they would be lost in the deep gravel of the
channel, and would not reappear beyond until the shortage season
had gone by. So also there would be no benefit, or none that has
been proved, if the use of the Little Walla Walla were less than it
has been. The chief points of junction with the main river are
below the intake of the canal where Gardena is privileged to tap
the waters of the stream. No evidence brought to our notice by
either of the parties carries with it a suggestion that other
Oregon priorities would be cut down or displaced if the Gardena
priority were established to the full. We need not go into the
question more fully at this time.
The case comes down to this: the Court is asked, upon uncertain
evidence of prior right and still more uncertain evidence of
damage, to destroy possessory interests enjoyed without challenge
for over half a century. In such circumstances, an injunction would
not issue if the contest were between private parties at odds about
a boundary. Still less will it issue here in a contest between
states, a contest to be dealt with in the large and ample way that
alone becomes the dignity of the litigants concerned.
Page 297 U. S. 530
A decree will be entered confirming the report of the master,
and dismissing the complaint upon the merits, the costs and
expenses of the suit to be divided between the parties in
accordance with the usual practice.
Michigan v. Wisconsin,
270 U. S. 295,
270 U. S.
319-320;
North Dakota v. Minnesota,
263 U. S. 583.
It is so ordered.
[
Footnote 1]
For a full collection of the cases,
see 55 A.L.R.
1390.
[
Footnote 2]
Many cases are collected in Kinney, Irrigation and Water Rights,
2d ed., vol. 2, pp. 2162-2167; Wiel, Water Rights in the Western
States. 3d ed., vol. 2, §§ 1042
et seq.
[
Footnote 3]
See Kinney, Irrigation and Water Rights (2d Ed.) vol.
2, pp. 1978, 1988, 2004, and Wiel, Water Rights in the Western
States (3d Ed.) vol. 1, § 371, 567
et seq.,
collecting the decisions.