Dissenting. — I am unable to concur in the conclusion reached in this case. My associates state the two propositions presented by counsel for respective parties and decide the case on the doctrine of stare decisis. It is evident from the brief of appellant’s counsel that they were anxious to have a decision on the constitutionality of the two sections of our statute in question in this case, from this court, as it is now constituted. It is equally evident from the brief of counsel for respondent that they were content with the former ruling of the *746court on the constitutional question; hence invoke the doctrine of stare decisis.
Having expressed my views in a former decision of this court as to the constitutionality of the law in question (Sweet v. Ballentine, 8 Idaho, 431, 69 Pac. 995), I will only discuss the application of the doctrine of stare decisis as applied to the case at bar by my associates. I have no quarrel with the opinion as to the application of the doctrine of stare decisis in cases where property rights have attached or grown up under some existing law that has been declared valid by a court of last resort.
An 'examination of the former decisions of this court will disclose that when this question has been presented it has upheld the rule as above announced. The opinion in the case of People v. Alturas County, quoted approvingly by my associates in the majority opinion written by Mr. Justice Quarles as late as 1899, gives the reason why the former judgment of the court should not be disturbed: “It will thus be seen that more than two years ago this court held said act to be constitutional. Since then the people of these two counties, doubtless relying on the judgment of both the legislative and judicial branches of government, have acted on the theory that said act was valid; and the former decision of the court having been acted upon by the people who have adjusted the business matters of the county, funded old indebtedness, and created new, should not be disturbed at this late day.” Then follows the quotation from this decision in the majority opinion. Under the facts in that case I think the writer very, clearly and forcibly announced the doctrine urged by counsel for respondent, and I am in full sympathy and accord with'it. In that ease the counties of Blaine and Lincoln had been organized out of the territory theretofore comprising Alta and Logan, and formerly Alturas county. Officers had been appointed and afterward elected for the new counties. The courts had been organized and recognized the new counties as political divisions of the state. New records had been procured for the two new counties and the old records ■transcribed into the new. All of the old indebtedness had been adjusted, new bonds issued and passed into the hands of innocent purchasers. Well it may be said that much confusion would follow the action of the court in disturbing conditions *747existing at the time of the attack on the former judgment of the court.
The case of Fisher v. Horicon Iron Mfg. Co., 10 Wis. 355, an extract from which appears in the majority opinion, is in harmony with the views expressed in People v. Alturas County. The syllabus in this case shows what question was before the court and the reason for the application of the rule announced in the opinion quoted by my associates: “When the supreme court of the state had decided that the ‘act covering mills and mill dams’ was constitutional, and rights and interests have grown up and become vested under the law as then construed by the court, the court will now adhere to that ruling although all its members may be of opinion, if it were a new question, that the decision should have been against the constitutionality of the act.” The fact that property rights had grown up under a former decision of the court seems to be the controlling principle and the reason for adopting the rule of stare decisis.
In 23 American and English Encyclopedia of Law, first edition, page 24, referred to in the majority opinion, I quote the entire section, to wit: “4. Single Decision and Decision in Series. — While a number of decisions seemingly corroborative of a previous one add strength to it and make it the more difficult to overrule or reverse it, mere numbers of eases upon the issue will not make the decision conclusive. Much more depends upon the opinion of the court and the emphasis placed upon the decision than upon the fact that any ease has been followed subsequently. For a variety of reasons, several eases similarly decided are stronger than one. There is less likelihood of error; any points, decisions, or statutes overlooked in the one may be considered in subsequent eases; and the ease of reversing one decision is greater than the overthrow of a series. If there is but one case upon a point, and there seems no good reason for a reversal, that will ordinarily be taken as a fixed precedent. It is where there is a conflict of opinions or an evident error in the decision that a court will overrule one case, when it would hesitate more about condemning several. Much depends upon the importance of the decision- and the weight to be attached to it. Whether the court is emphatic in its approval, whether the decision is one affecting or changing important interests, and whether it is expedient or good policy to *748sustain or overrule a particular decision, are questions which have much influence upon the court.”
It will be seen that the author, as in all the cases cited so far, ends his section with the announcement “whether the decision is one affecting or changing important interests.” Note 1 to this section, referring to Morse v. Goold, 11 N. Y. 285, 62 Am. Dec. 103, is as follows: “The effect of such judgment of affirmance rendered by a divided court is as conclusive upon the rights of the parties to the judgment as any other, although it is not considered as settling the question of law as to cases which may arise between other parties.” Etting v. Bank of United States, 11 Wheat. (U. S.) 59, 6 L. ed. 419, furnishes some very instructive reading. It is an opinion by Chief Justice Marshall and is referred to by the author in his note 1 above referred to. These are the authorities referred to in the majority opinion, and I assume are the foundation for the judgment.
I will now take up the other view of the situation as presented by the case at bar. In 23 American and English Encyclopedia of Law, first edition, page 36, under the head of “Limitations of the Rule,” the author says: “There are certain reasonable limitations to this as to almost all rules. There are clear and palpable mistakes of law which should be corrected, especially when it can be done without injury to any person or property. If no injury or injustice would result to anyone, and a future and permanent benefit would undoubtedly result, the correction should be made at once. No prior decision is to be reversed without good and sufficient cause, yet the rule is not in any sense iron-clad, and future and permanent good to the public is to be considered rather than any particular ease or interest. Even if the decision affects real estate interests and titles, there may be cases where it is plainly the duty of the court to interfere and overrule a bad decision. Precedent should not have an overwhelming or despotic influence in shaping legal decisions. No elementary or well-settled principle of law can be violated by any decision for any length of time. The benefit to the public in the future is of greater moment than any incorrect decision in the past. Whenever a correction can be made without working more harm than good, it should be done.”
*749In Hart v. Burnett, 15 Cal., beginning at page 530 and ending at page 631, a very exhaustive opinion as well as instructive, at page 602, we find this significant language quoted from Chancellor Kent: “But I do not wish to be understood to press too strongly the doctrine of stare decisis when I recollect that there are more than one thousand cases to be pointed out in the English and American books of reports which have been overruled, doubted, or limited in their application. It is probable that the records of many of the courts in this country are replete with hasty and crude decisions; and such cases ought to be examined without fear and reversed without reluctance, rather than have the character of our law impaired, and the beauty and harmony of the system destroyed by the perpetuity of the error.”
Again, it is said: “Even a series of decisions is not always conclusive evidence of what is law; and the revision of a decision very often resolves itself into a mere question of expediency, depending upon the consideration of the importance of certainty in the rule, and the extent of property to be affected by a change of it.”
This case cites with approval Martin v. Martin, 25 Ala. 201, in the following language: “A series of decisions made and followed up from the earliest judicial times is binding upon the judges, but says that if those decisions be opposed to the state or federal constitutions, they would take pleasure in discarding them.”
In Houghton v. Austin, 47 Cal. 646, we find another long, instructive case on the question at bar, and approves the case of Hart v. Burnett et al., at page 668; we quote: “The question of the conclusiveness of adjudications is not necessarily dependent upon the number of them.....We must give force to the qualifications expressed in the words ‘settled,’ ‘acquired in,’ and the like. They cannot mean ‘settled’ by the mere fact of the adjudications, for then there would be no use in the terms; they would be without meaning, for every judgment on a title would, on this construction, settle the law. .... The rule itself implies that the doctrine protected by stare decisis cannot stand of itself. But it is a solecism to say that causes should be tried upon wrong principles — be decided *750against law — whether it be for the purpose of justice or not, so to decide them. The law is not so false to itself as to require its own permanent overthrow, unless the subversion be necessary to the public interests; and whether it be so necessary in a given ease, is for the court, as a matter of legal discretion, whenever the rule is invoked. 'No such rule ever existed as that a court should be absolutely bound by a previous decision. And it would be especially dangerous to apply this inexorable standard to questions decisive of the constitutional rights of the citizen. One provision of the constitution can impose no greater obligation than another. It may be that some time in the far distant future, a plain provision of the organic law may be temporarily lost sight of in the heat of a popular excitement. .... There may be those who assume that the judges of this court are utterly ignorant of the spirit of the times in which we live; but we are willing to believe we have reached the condition of ‘progress/ when it is supposed by persons, however influential, that judges are to be driven from carrying into judgment their conscientious convictions of what the law demands, by suggestions of public hostility, encouraged, perhaps, by those who affect to regret that the courts should place themselves in opposition to the prevailing sentiment. We are by no means convinced, however, that .the people feel the intense affection for the sections of the code which the parent entertains for his own bantling. There is a certain regard for the democratic idea which underlies all our institutions which the mere demagogue always fails to appreciate. It is based on the firm conviction that the masses of the people will ultimately understand that the violation of a -constitutional privilege in the person of the humblest citizen is a greater evil than any inconvenience which may be supposed to exist under the government the people have solemnly adopted.”
Again, in San Francisco v. Spring Valley W. W., 48 Cal. 493, we find this statement in the syllabus: “Stare Decisis. — -Even if property rights have grown up under an erroneous decision with regard to the construction of a clause in the constitution, it is better that inconvenience should be submitted to, rather than such decision should stand, and a valuable provision in the fundamental law be obliterated.”
*751In Ex parte Koser, 60 Cal. 177, at page 204, in discussing the application of the rule of stare decisis, the court saj's: “Nor can the doctrine stare decisis be invoked to prevent us front inquiring into the constitutionality of the sections of the Penal Code.” If, in Ex parte Andrews [18 Cal. 678], the act of 1858 was decided to be valid, in Ex parte Newman [9 Cal. 502], the same act was declared to be in conflict with the fourth section of the first article of the former constitution. In holding the sections of the Penal Code to be obnoxious to constitutional objection, we but return to the rule which, for more than three years, was the established rule in California. But if the case Ex parte Andrews stood alone — No such rule ever existed as that a court should be absolutely bound by a previous decision. And it would be especially dangerous to apply this inexorable-standard to questions decisive of the constitutional rights of the citizen.' (Houghton v. Austin, 47 Cal. 666.)
The supreme court of Texas in a very elaborate and well-considered opinion (Willis v. Owen, 43 Tex. 41) on pages 48, 49, speaks in no uncertain terms as to the application of the doctrine of stare decisis: “This doctrine grows out of the necessity for a uniform and settled rule of property, and definite basis for contracts and business transactions. If a decision is wrong, it is only when it has been so long the rule of action, as that time and its continued application as the rule of right between parties demands the sanction of its error. Because, when a decision has been recognized as the law of property, and conflicting demands have been adjusted, and contracts have been made with reference to and on faith of it, greater injustice would be done to individuals, and more injury result to society by a reversal of such decision, though erroneous, than to follow and observe it. But when a decision is not of this character, upon no sound principle do we feel at liberty to perpetuate an error, into which either our predecessors or ourselves may have unadvisedly fallen, merely upon the ground of such erroneous decision having been previously rendered. The questions to be considered in these eases have no application whatever to the title or transfer of property, or to matters of contract. They involve the construction and interpretation of the organic law, and present for consideration the structure of the govern*752ment, the limitation upon legislative and executive power, as safeguards against tyranny and oppression. Certainly, it cannot be seriously insisted that questions of this character can be disposed of by the doctrine of stare decisis."
This court in a very recent decision, published July 1, 1903, written by Mr. Chief Justice Sullivan, and concurred in by Mr. Justice Ailshie (the writer took no part in 'the decision for the reason that the rights of the parties had been litigated before him while sitting as a district judge), laid down the rule for the application of the doctrine of stare decisis. This being my first opportunity to express my views on the question that was at issue in that case —Parke v. Boulware, ante, p. 225, 73 Pac. 19—I now give it my full and unqualified approval. The facts as stated by the court were as follows: "This action was brought to recover $500 damages for an alleged wrongful destruction of certain dams alleged to have been situated in appellant’s irrigating ditch, by means of which appellant raised water out of his said ditch onto his land for irrigating purposes, and also for a perpetual injunction restraining respondent from interfering with said dams and ditches or of the flow of the water therein. The defendants (who are respondents here) answered and denied that appellant or his predecessors in interest constructed the water channel claimed by him as a ditch, and averred that the same is one of the natural channels of Cassia creek, through which water has from time beyond the memory of man ever flowed, and that said channel was known as the north fork of Cassia creek; that said channel had been used by respondents and their predecessors in interest for more than twenty years from Cassia creek to and upon their lands, and averred that the use of said channel by appellants had been in common with.that of respondents; and denied that they had cut away and removed said dams or that they threatened to remove the same." ” The case was tried in the lower court, judgment entered, and appeal taken to this court, and on hearing reversed; another trial was had below, judgment entered, another appeal taken, and upon the hearing the doctrine of stare decisis was sought to be invoked The court said: "The doctrine of stare decisis is not applicable to this case. We cannot regard that rule as showing any application to this case. That rule or doctrine grew out of the necessity for a uniform *753and settled rule of property, and to form a definite basis for contracts and.business transactions.”
It would seem from all the authorities bearing on the question of the application of the doctrine of stare decisis that if property rights have grown up or have been settled under an existing decision of the court of last resort, the judgment will usually be upheld. This is certainly the correct rule; has been twice so declared by this court, and if it is shown in the case ■at bar that such a condition exists, then it should prevail here.
Are the reasons for the application of this rule sufficient? What property rights have grown up under these two sections of the statute? Does the fact that they have remained on the statute books since 1875 make them valid or give them special meaning; or is it because they were permitted to repose for a term of twenty-seven years before anyone attempted to enforce them that they are to be given new meaning or special vitality ? Does the fact that the two political parties were seeking for an •advantage give these sections force and validity? Does the fact that the legislature met in 1903 and did not repeal or modify this law give it additional strength, or is their silence •on the subject to be so construed that the doctrine of stare decisis must be invoked and a new rule for the application of the doctrine established by this court? Does the fact that “bills were introduced making it a penal offense to violate the existing law on the subject” add force to the law or change the doctrine of stare decisis? It-is true, as stated in the majority opinion, that “these facts are a part of the public history of the state,” but does that add force and validity to the law, or does it change the doctrine of stare decisis ? If property rights have been settled or grown up since this law was first declared constitutional by a divided court in June, 1901, then there is •some reason for the application of the rule invoked by my associates in the majority opinion. Did anyone ever hear of the government permitting property rights to attach to the public domain, excepting by proper entry under the land laws of the United States? It is as much a matter of public history that the government will not permit an individual to fence the public domain and thus withdraw it from the use and benefit of *754the public as is the actions of the political parties in attempting-to juggle with a statute and thus acquire political advantage.
The constitutional rights of the people cannot be disposed of in this way, nor can the doctrine of stare decisis be invoked to-accommodate the whims or caprices of either or both parties.
I cannot concur in the statement in the majority opinion as-to the “respective rights and interests of settlers on the one hand and sheep owners on the other, as between themselves, have become fixed and settled.” The court records show that a vast number of suits have arisen, three of them finding their why to this court. The dangerous conflicts we have had in this= state have not been between the settlers and stock men, but between conflicting stock interests.
For the foregoing reasons, based on the decisions of all the-courts, including the only two expressions of our own court,. I do not believe the doctrine of stare decisis should control, and that appellant was entitled to a decision on the merits of the case.