Helphery v. Perrault
Helphery v. Perrault
Concurring Opinion
Concurring. — In view of the peculiar facts as stated in the complaint in this case, I concur in the conclusion reached by my associates. I am satisfie'd the management and control of canals and laterals as a rule must be left to the company, association or corporation owning and operating the property; otherwise endless litigation would follow. It is the duty of anyone operating a canal to so distribute the water that the legal rights of all consumers should be protected; hence, the necessity of absolute control over the canal and laterals, where conflicting rights may arise.
Opinion of the Court
This action was commenced for the purpose of procuring a writ of mandate compelling the defendants, doing business under the name of the Perrault Ditch Company, to turn out of their main canal and deliver to the plaintiffs “.14 of a second foot of water per second continuous flow,” for the purpose of irrigating certain lands belonging to the plaintiffs. The action is commenced by_ Daniel Helphery and twelve others. Helphery makes the affidavit in which he says “that he, together with the other above-named plaintiffs, own, possess and occupy the following described real estate, all situated in Lemp’s addition to Boise City, Ada county, Idaho, namely, etc.” He further deposes “that he is duly authorized to represent the interests of all the other plaintiffs herein, and is authorized to receive all notices, orders and directions necessary and proper to be made in and about, procuring, using andA distribution ■of the said water mentioned among these several plaintiffs ,....; that it is the desire of each and every of the said
Respondents have argued that plaintiffs’ action should fail, for the reason that the application for the use of the water was not made prior to the first day of January, as prescribed by section 20 of the irrigation act of February 25, 1899 (Sess. Laws 1899, p. 383). We do not think that objection is well taken in a ease where all prior applicants for water have been supplied and the ditch company still has water for rental and distribution. The provisions of section 20 of the act referred to were intended for a regulation between different applicants and also for a protection to the company, as well as the consumer, where one applicant had previously used the water on his land and another applicant had never before applied water'to his land.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- DANIEL HELPHERY v. JOSEPH PERRAULT
- Cited By
- 3 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- Mandamus — Sufficiency of Complaint — Joinder of Plaintiffs — Common Interest of Plaintiffs. 1. Where several land owners contract and agree among themselves to unite in interest and construct their own ditch or lateral,, and make a joint application to a ditch company for sufficient water for all their land as one applicant, they may join as plaintiffs in an action to compel the water company to deliver the quantity of water applied for at their headgate. 2. Where several parties agree among themselves to unite in interest and jointly apply as one applicant for water for irrigation purposes and to use and apply the water in rotation, the fact of joinder and rotation in the use of the water are not valid and sufficient grounds on which the water company may refuse to furnish water to them at their common headgate. 3. The times and order of use and application of water by several land owners under the same lateral to their respective tracts of land are matters of no concern to the water company where the several users by agreement among themselves distribute and use the water at the times and in the manner agreeable to them, and the company has no duty but that of seeing that the requisite quantity of water flows through the headgate into the consumer's ditch. 4. Complaint in this case held sufficient to sustain a cause of action and not demurrable for the misjoinder of parties plaintiff. (Syllabus by the court.)