The plaintiff is owner of twenty acres of agricultural land within the Pioneer Irrigation District, and is entitled to water for its irrigation from what is known and designated as the Phyllis canal of that district, which water is diverted from this canal through certain laterals privately owned by plaintiff. Water for all of the farm, except approximately five acres, which is too high to be irrigated by gravity, is obtained through diversion works and a headgate in the side of the canal. For many years water for this high land was procured by means of a water-wheel, and through a different lateral than that used for the irrigation of plaintiff's low lands. About the year 1910, plaintiff in collaboration with a neighbor, repaired the framework of an old abandoned water-wheel, and constructed a new one in the canal at a point above his land. He utilized this water-wheel thereafter for the purpose of lifting water from the canal to the top of the bank thereof, so he could obtain water for his high land. He procured the consent of the irrigation district to construct a lateral along the north bank of the canal for some distance. This lateral was constructed and used for many years for the irrigation of plaintiff's land, its elevation above the surrounding country obviating the necessity of a flume or fill, and thereby giving the necessary level and grade for the gravity flow of water. In 1917, the district, in order to accommodate him, moved the water-wheel down the canal past a certain corral and public road which had interfered with the use of *Page 373 plaintiff's ditch. The district notified him that it would deliver water for his high land at the place where the wheel was thus installed. Plaintiff continued, as in the past, to use the lateral on the canal bank as a conduit for his water. Soon thereafter, because of alleged injury to the bank of its canal, and because it was claimed that the lateral interfered with the use of the grade by ditch riders, the district notified plaintiff that his lateral must be removed. In March, 1918, the district itself destroyed and removed plaintiff's lateral, which had been constructed and used as aforesaid. Since that time plaintiff has been without water, from the Phyllis canal, for the irrigation of this five-acre tract of high land.
This action was commenced to recover damages because of the destruction of the lateral, and damages for the alleged failure of the district to furnish plaintiff with irrigation water for a period covering many years; and plaintiff also sought thereby to compel the defendant to deliver him water in the future. After the issues were properly formulated, the action was tried by the court, a jury being waived, and judgment entered to the effect that plaintiff was not entitled to recover damages, but the district was required to deliver water during each succeeding season for use on plaintiff's high land, such delivery to be made by it at the north end of a certain flume which crosses this canal, or in lieu thereof, at the water-wheel, and the defendant was further required, in the latter event, to reconstruct the lateral from the water-wheel down the canal bank to the flume so as to connect with that portion of the irrigation system of the plaintiff which was not situated on defendant's right of way. Each party appealed from certain parts of the judgment and decree thus entered, the plaintiff appealing from that portion which denied him damages, and the defendant appealing from that portion which directed it, in the alternative, to deliver water as aforesaid.
A motion to dismiss the appeal of plaintiff was filed and argued, the same being based upon the following facts: By written stipulation it was agreed that on payment of *Page 374 one-half of the costs by each party, each might use the transcript on his appeal to the supreme court; at the time of the oral argument before this court, an affidavit on behalf of the defendant was presented showing that plaintiff had failed and refused to pay his proportion of the costs of procuring the transcript, and it appeared that he still refused to do so, even though his attention was called to the agreement. Rule 9 of the rules of practice of this court, relative to the joint use of transcripts, reads in part as follows:
"When separate appeals or cross-appeals are taken, but one transcript need be prepared or filed; Provided, that each party shall be entitled to use the same and have included therein such parts of the record to which he is entitled as he shall require by appropriate praecipe, if he shall pay to the reporter or clerk the fees, or to the opposite party, or to the clerk or reporter for such opposite party if he has already paid therefor, his proportionate share of the costs thereof," etc.
These rules were adopted and promulgated with the intent that they be strictly complied with in all respects. The plaintiff has not perfected his appeal, since he has not paid his share of the expense of procuring the transcript as he expressly contracted and is required to do, and as a consequence he is not entitled to be heard thereon.
However, the entire transcript is before us, and has been examined in connection with the appeal of the defendant, and it is evident therefrom that there could have been no findings, based upon the evidence, which would support a judgment allowing compensatory damages. At the most, plaintiff would have been entitled to merely nominal damages. There are certain well-recognized rules for measuring damage resulting from the loss of growing crops, herbage, pasturage, shrubbery and ornamental and fruit trees. This court has repeatedly laid down these rules, in cases of which the following are some:Risse v. Collins, 12 Idaho 689, 87 P. 1006; Hanes v. IdahoIrr. Co., 21 Idaho 512, 122 P. 859; Watkins v. Mountain HomeCo-op. Irr. Co., 33 Idaho 623, 197 P. 247; Kellar v. Sprout,35 Idaho 273, *Page 375 205 Pac. 894; Kingsbury v. Bacon, 38 Idaho 701, 224 P. 438;Mahaffey v. Carlson, 39 Idaho 162, 228 P. 793. There was absolutely no proof adduced as to the actual damages sustained during any one of the years mentioned in the complaint, on which the court could have found for the plaintiff in any substantial amount. No error was committed in rendering that part of the judgment from which the plaintiff attempted to appeal.
An irrigation district is created for the equal benefit and general welfare of all persons owning lands therein. Such district owes a duty to deliver water for each tract of irrigable land within its boundaries. The district holds title in trust to the waters and irrigation works, for the various water users who are entitled to share proportionately in the entire water supply available for irrigation purposes. Such district cannot tax or charge a land owner for the maintenance of its system, and then arbitrarily refuse to deliver him his proportionate share of the water owned by it or under its control. The rights of all persons in the Pioneer Irrigation District are of equal rank, and should be respected. The right to use the water of the district cannot be diverted by the arbitrary act of the board of directors, the water-master or any other officer of such district.
The district had theretofore and for a considerable length of time furnished respondent and allowed him to convey his water in such manner as to flow upon this higher portion of his land in its natural elevated state, and the district was not justified, under the facts in this case, in demanding that he lower the level of this land at his expense to permit the district to furnish water at a point other than where it had previously delivered the water.
It is next contended that he had only acquired a revocable license or easement for the lateral which was destroyed. The court found, on substantial evidence, that during the years 1913 to 1918, inclusive, with the consent *Page 376 of the defendant, plaintiff maintained and operated an irrigation ditch or lateral, which he had constructed, from a point on the north bank of the Phyllis canal and along said north bank from the "old wheel site" to the north end of a flume crossing the canal, and that on March 27, 1918, the defendant caused this lateral to be plowed in and filled up, and prevented plaintiff from reconstructing the same; that prior to that time plaintiff had supplied his high land with water through such lateral; that a portion of the five acres of high land was occupied by a dwelling and farm buildings, and the balance was used for orchard, lawn, gardens and fruit and ornamental trees, and had been annually planted to truck and garden crops; that during each of said years defendant had supplied plaintiff with water in quantity sufficient to irrigate that portion of his property; that during the years 1919 to 1922, inclusive, the defendant failed and refused to supply water for such high land; that defendant had threatened to and would, unless required in this action, refuse to deliver to plaintiff his pro rata share of water for the irrigation of this tract; and that plaintiff had paid all taxes and maintenance charges levied and assessed against his land each year as the same became due. These facts do not bring this case within the rule announced in McReynolds v. Harrigfeld, 26 Idaho 26,140 P. 1096, wherein it was held that a parol license for a ditch right of way, if sought to be declared perpetual, "would be an easement or interest in real property, which can only be created by operation of law," or written grant signed by the party to be charged; and that where the evidence fails to disclose that considerable money has been expended or valuable improvements made in reliance upon such parol license, and further fails to show that benefits or advantages have accrued to the licensor, the right is revocable.
Here, the parol permission to construct the lateral on the canal bank presents an entirely different situation, clearly distinguishable from the facts in the case last above *Page 377 cited. The right under consideration was acquired by express agreement, and was not a mere passive acquiescence. The expenditure of money and labor in the construction of the ditches, the moving of his house and buildings to this high land by the plaintiff, the planting of shade and fruit trees, berry bushes, and gardens, all of which was done in reliance upon this license or easement, and with full knowledge of the owner of the servient estate, present strong equities in favor of plaintiff. The district itself, by the irrigation of this five-acre parcel of land, would be directly benefited by the increased revenue it would annually receive therefrom in the way of additional maintenance charges it would collect. These facts, with the other circumstances in the case, would preclude the district, on the principle of estoppel, from now questioning plaintiff's right to maintain and use this lateral. (1 Wiel on Water Rights, 3d ed., pp. 600-602; 15 R. C. L., p. 491, sec. 42; Gyra v. Windler, 40 Colo. 366, 13 Ann. Cas. 841,91 P. 36; Bowman v. Bowman, 35 Or. 279, 57 P. 546; ArthurIrr. Co. v. Strayer, 50 Colo. 371, 115 P. 724; ChicosaIrrigating Ditch Co. v. El Moro Ditch Co., 10 Colo. App. 276,50 P. 731; Stoner v. Zucker, 148 Cal. 516, 113 Am. St. 301, 7 Ann. Cas. 704, 83 P. 808; McBroom. v. Thompson, 25 Or. 559 42 Am. St. 806, 37 P. 57. Attention is especially directed to the leading case of Rerick v. Kern, 14 Serg. R. (Pa.) 267, 16 Am. Dec. 497. It will not be necessary to further multiply authorities on this point. At the time of the destruction of this lateral plaintiff had acquired a vested, irrevocable right to its continuation there, subject, however, to the right of the district to furnish a new satisfactory and equally efficient diversion plan, as hereinafter stated and as provided in the decree.
C. S., sec. 8535, provides that where any lateral ditch has been constructed across the land of another, the person controlling the land shall have the right at his own expense, to change the lateral to another part of his land, but such change must be made in such a manner as not to *Page 378 impede the flow of the waters therein, or otherwise injure any person using or interested in such lateral. An irrigation district can change the place of diversion in its canal, provided that by so doing the water user is not injured, even though he has established and acquired a point of diversion which he has the legal right to use. The plaintiff had his lateral on the right of way of the defendant district. The above section would seem sufficient authority for this defendant to change plaintiff's point of diversion in its Phyllis canal, and to establish one elsewhere, provided this was done in such a manner as to insure the delivery of sufficient water to him, although he had acquired an absolute, irrevocable right to divert water at the water-wheel. There is no reason why the district could not change the point of delivery of plaintiff's water to another more convenient to it, if it supplied him the water to which he is entitled, in proper conduits which it had constructed, at a sufficient level and with sufficient capacity to irrigate the land which had theretofore been irrigated from the original point of diversion. It was equitable to permit the district to do so. That is evidently what the trial court had in mind, and attempted to effect in the decree entered. It was contended by the district that the lateral on the bank of its canal interfered with the riding, cleaning, operation and safety of its canal. The court directed and compelled the defendant district to restore the lateral it destroyed, and to furnish water therein, under conditions designed to protect plaintiff, unless it elected to change the point of diversion. Plaintiff is entitled to water for all of his land, and it is the duty of the district to furnish it for him. In effect, the decree directs the defendant to deliver water for the five acres of high ground at the north end of the flume, into a ditch there now constructed, owned and maintained by plaintiff, or, in lieu thereof, to reconstruct his lateral from the water-wheel to the flume with a carrying capacity equal to the one destroyed. Complaint is made by the defendant that the *Page 379 provisions in the decree relative to the construction of the lateral are too indefinite and uncertain to be complied with, and that the same should be by this court ordered stricken from the judgment, under the authority of Hand v. Twin Falls County,40 Idaho 638, 236 P. 536. The facts in the case mentioned are not in point here. We see nothing inherently difficult, indefinite or uncertain in the requirement that defendant construct a lateral of sufficient size and capacity to carry water for said five acres of land.
All the equities seem to be with the plaintiff. The court simply required the defendant to perform its manifest and legal duty, and in so doing granted it an option which was clearly favorable to it in every respect.
The foregoing considerations sufficiently dispose of all the other questions presented here. The findings and judgment, being sustained by competent evidence and by principles of common sense and justice, should be affirmed.
We recommend that plaintiff's appeal be dismissed and that the decree and judgment be affirmed as entered, neither party to recover costs on appeal.
Babcock and Featherstone, CC., concur.