Cameron v. Blalock
Cameron v. Blalock
Opinion of the Court
This is an appeal from the decree given by the Circuit Court of Jackson County upon the final hearing in the adjudication of the relative rights of the various claimants to the waters of Rogue River and its tributaries. At the time the decree was entered, Dan Cameron, the appellant herein, gave notice in open court of an appeal from that part of the de
In the statement and proof of claim which Cameron filed before the State Water Board, he claimed to be the sole owner of said ditch, and to be entitled to divert from said creek through said ditch, for placer mining purposes, during the mining season of each year, seventy second-feet of water. The decree limits his right to twenty second-feet, and defined the mining season to be between November 1st of each year, and the first day of the next succeeding June. He also claimed the right to use, after June 1st, enough water to clean up any gold remaining in his sluices after suspending his mining operations for the season, and the right to run through his flumes during the dry season, sufficient water to keep the same from drying up and rotting away. The decree prevents him from using water for either of said purposes at any time after Jnne 1st of any year.
The proof shows, and the fact is not disputed, that the ditch was dug and the appropriation made in 1860; that this was the first appropriation ever made from that stream by anyone for any purpose; that Cameron is now the owner of the rights acquired through said appropriation, and that water has been used for mining purposes through that ditch by Cameron, or by his grantors and predecessors in interest, every year since the ditch was dug. The use of water for the purpose of cleaning up and-saving the gold, which has been separated from the gravel in the process of placer mining is an essential part of
Cameron complains of the limitation contained in the decree upon the quantity of water he is permitted to use during the mining season. The entire record is not before us, and from the part of the record which is here, there is no way by which we can determine the quantity of water which his ditch will carry, or the quantity necessary to be used in carrying on his placer mining operations, nor have we any way in which we can determine the quantity of water flowing in said stream. For that reason, we are unable from the record before us, to find any error in the decree, limiting his use to twenty second-feet of water during the season. It has always been the policy of the law, and still is, to permit any person to make any beneficial use of any surplus water flowing in any non-navigable, public stream, and if there is
The respondent George W- Blalock has made no appearance here and has filed no brief. He also filed with the State Water Board, as did Cameron, a statement and proof of claim, in which he asserted that he was the sole owner of the ditch in controversy. It appears from the certified copies of the deeds offered in evidence that Cameron has acquired the entire ownership of the ditch and the rights of the original appropriators. Blalock’s claim of ownership is based upon two facts: (1) On July 20, 1900, James Owens as executor of the estate of Annie E. Evans, deceased, executed a deed conveying to Blalock, a tract of land, which deed purported to convey, “also the right, title and interest that Jacob Evans and Annie E. Evans had in and to a certain water ditch and water right formerly owned by Chapin and Wakeman, known and commonly designated as the big ditch.” One of the deeds, a certified copy of which was offered by Cameron in support of his claim of ownership, was a deed from Jacob Evans, conveying his entire interest in that ditch to one of Cameron’s grantors, and there is nothing in the record to show that Evans ever subsequently acquired any interest in the ditch. There was evidence, however, tending to show that Annie E. Evans, in her lifetime, used water through that ditch to irrigate eight acres of the land conveyed by her executor to Blalock, and that since acquiring the eight acres of land, Blalock
Blalock and wife in executing the deed from themselves to Cameron, inserted in the deed a clause which reads as follows: ‘ ‘ except 155 acres more or less in Section 22, in Township 34, South Range 4 West, purchased from the Evans Estate as shown on the records of Jackson County, Oregon. Except my right and title to the Wakeman and Chapin water right and ditch.”
This deed was delivered to an agent of Cameron, who caused the same to be recorded without noticing that said reservation or exception had been inserted before its execution. The reservation was proper in so far as excepting from the operation of the deed, the lands owned by Blalock, and if Blalock
Thus it was held in Ison v. Sturgill, 57 Or. 109 (109 Pac. 579, 110 Pac. 535), that where an appropriation for the irrigation of land was made by means of a ditch by one having only a revocable license in the ditch, the rights of the appropriator to use the water thus appropriated for the irrigation of the land, would not be terminated or defeated by the revocation of the license.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.