This action was commenced for the purpose of condemning twelve and sixty hundredths acres of land belonging to the appellants for use as a storage reservoir for logs, and which is overflowed by reason of the construction of a dam tending to improve the navigability of the'Pa-louse river. The complaint alleges with particularity the necessity for the appropriation and the facts upon which *775respondent bases its right to condemn. The Palouse river is a small stream having its source in the state of Idaho, and flows westward into the state of Washington. At certain seasons of the year its banks are full of water and it becomes in its natural state a floatable stream for logs. Except during the freshets it is a small stream incapable of serving as a highway for logs, except by the use of splash dams and other artificial means. Along its headwaters are forests of pine and other timber, a'large number of acres of which belong to respondent. The stream affords the only means of transporting the timber from the forests to the market. The respondent owns three mills upon said stream and employs a large number of men in connection therewith, which mills depend on their supply of sawlogs from such forests, and depend wholly upon said stream for floating said timber down to the mills. At the town of Potlatch, Idaho, respondent has constructed a large sawmill located a short distance down the stream from the land sought to be condemned, and has built a dam near said mill on said stream for the purpose of improving the navigation of said stream for logs and affording a storage reservoir for holding the logs for said mill.
The complaint alleges specifically the facts found by the court which are hereafter set forth. The appellants demurred to the complaint on the ground that it did not state a cause of action and relied upon two propositions of law in support of said demurrer: 1. That the taking of said land was not for a public use; and 2. That the statutes of Idaho were not sufficiently broad to cover such use. The demurrer was overruled by the court and appellants refused to further plead, and stood on their demurrer. Evidence in support of the allegations of the complaint was introduced, and the court made its findings of fact and conclusions of law and entered a decree in favor of the respondent. The court decreed that the defendants were entitled to receive from the plaintiffs $500 as full compensation for the damages suffered by them for the taking of said land for said purposes. The facts found by the court necessary to the understanding of this case are as follows:
*776After finding that the plaintiff was a corporation duly organized, etc., and that the defendants were husband and wife and in possession of the land sought to be condemned, it found that a large area of land, aggregating hundreds of square miles in the northern portion of Latah county, Idaho, is heavily timbered with a growth of pine and other merchantable and valuable timber; that said territory is drained by the Palouse river and its tributaries and that said lands are adjacent to and lie along the Palouse river and its tributaries; that for many years the said timber area laid undeveloped; that no general business was carried on and no towns or settlements were located in said region; that» said county derived practically no taxes from any property situate in said section; that the title to said land was very largely in the government of the United States; that during the past four or five years the plaintiff corporation has become the owner of large tracts of said timber land, and has invested and expended large sums of money in purchasing said timber and timber lands, and is commencing operations to develop the same; that it is the owner of three sawmills on said river, and that the mill at Potlatch in said county was in the course of construction, and employs, and will continue to employ, a large number of men; that said river is a stream used for floating and rafting purposes and the driving of logs and timber products; that it is capable of serving an important public use and utility, and has been declared to be a navigable stream by the legislature of Idaho; that it is navigable for logs only; that it is not navigable for boats of any character or description ; that it rises in the state of Idaho and flows for a long distance through the territory described, which is heavily timbered with valuable merchantable timber, and flows into the state of Washington; that said sawmills of plaintiff are situated in what is known as the great Palouse farming country; that there is no merchantable saw timber throughout that farming country, and the forests along said river are the natural supply point from which the said farming country secures its timber and timber products, and the said saw*777mills are furnishing and supplying a large part of the demand for lumber throughout said country, both to citizens of the state of Idaho and the state of "Washington; that the only means of transportation of said timber from the forests to the mills at the present time is the said river; that said river is not a wide river, and is not of uniform size during all the seasons, but is subject to the rise and fall dependent on the rain and snow, and, during portions of the year, there is not sufficient water to float the logs in said stream except by the use of artificial means, it being necessary to store the water by the use of dams and splash or flood the logs down, by opening the dams; that it is impossible for plaintiff to transport during the high stages of water, sufficient logs to run its mills during the entire year, although it does take down at such times as many of said logs as is practicable under the circumstances; that during the periods of high water the convenient, economical and practical method of transporting the logs from the forests to the mills is by the use of said splash dams; that said dams cannot be constructed at any place, but necessarily must be built, constructed and maintained at points rendered favorable by the topography of the land on the sides of the river, which affords storage basins for logs, which are very few; that said timber lands owned by the plaintiff are located in that part of the state of Idaho where the working and developing of the timber industry constitutes the principal and main business and occupation of its inhabitants, and that plaintiff in cutting, removing and manufacturing the said timber owned by it, and in the construction of its mill at Potlatch, will employ in said state a large number of men, aggregating many hundreds; that along and adjacent to said river are few farms, and, excepting the lumber industry, the said farming industry constitutes the only industry in which men are engaged in that section of the country; that said farms are situated far from the open market, but the development of the lumber district has and will afford a market at home for the products of the said farms, and the development of the lumber industry is of great im*778portance and benefit to the said farmers residing in that section of the county; that the land upon which said timber now stands is covered-with a fertile and productive soil, and upon the removal of the timber will become valuable agricultural land affording homes for thousands of people, and the removal of the timber will result in the development and building up of that section of the farming country described; that the plaintiff has constructed a dam for the purpose of storing the waters of the Palouse river and furnishing a storage basin for logs for the purpose of improving the floating capacity and navigability-of said river; that said dam extends across said river; that by reason of the construction of said dam a portion of the land situate in the northeast quarter of the northwest quarter of section 7, township 41 north of range 4 west, Boise meridian, is overflowed by water being backed up by the said dam (then follows a complete description by metes and bounds of said land, containing a total area of twelve and sixty hundredths acres); that seven and seventy hundredths _ acres thereof is meadow land and four and ninety hundredths acres is brush land; that where said dam is constructed is one of the few places upon said river naturally fitted for the construction and maintenance of the same; that the use of said river by said dam and storage reservoir is the necessary means to a complete development of the material resources of this state, and the use of the said dam and storage reservoir will become and constitutes a public use within the provisions of section 14, article 1, of the constitution of Idaho and the acts of the legislature of the state of Idaho; that the timber of plaintiff cannot be successfully removed and manufactured by any other means than the use of said river except at an enormous, unreasonable and unprofitable expense; that in the manufacture of said timber into lumber at that place it is absolutely necessary that dams for improving the navigation of said stream and storage reservoirs for- storing and holding said logs be used, and the necessary use is so great that the timber upon the said areas of land cannot be profitably we died without *779the use thereof; that to construct said dam at the point where it is absolutely necessary in the profitable and reasonable use of the stream for the purposes of plaintiff, as aforesaid, it is necessary to overflow the said twelve and sixty hundredths acres of land; that said land is only a portion of a forty acre tract which defendants are in possession of at that point; that there exists a necessity for the appropriation by the said plaintiff of that part of the lands, in the possession of defendants to enable the plaintiff to carry on and conduct its business of lumbering and in developing the material resources of said county; that without such appropriation plaintiff cannot profitably, successfully and completely develop its said timber lands, whereas the use of the said lands will enable the plaintiff to profitably and reasonably develop its properties, and thereby develop the material resources of the state; that the denial of the right to use said lands would be disastrous upon the growth and prosperity of the state, and would tend to hinder and retard the development of the material resources of the state; that the plaintiff has been unable to secure the use of said land by agreement or otherwise with the said defendants, though plaintiff did heretofore and before the commencement of this action request and seek to procure from the said defendants said lands for the said storage basin for logs, which request was refused by the defendants and each of them; that plaintiff, when it made such request of - the said defendants, offered them a reasonable compensation for the said land for any damages resulting from the grant of said land, and defendants refused to accept said offer for compensation; that the defendants purchased said land with the full knowledge that the plaintiff had already constructed a dam and overflowed said land, and that the plaintiff would need the same in- the necessary use of the said river for the purpose of logging and would need the same for the storage of logs; that said land is not more valuable than thousands of acres of other land situated near and adjoining the same and in the vicinity thereof, and the court finds that the award made by the commissioners of $500 is *780a just and fair award of all the damages suffered by defendants by reason of the taking of said land for the purposes mentioned; and as conclusions of law from the foregoing facts the court found that the plaintiff was entitled to a decree adjudging and awarding to him the use and easement of said twelve and sixty hundredths acres of land for the purpose of storing logs, floating logs and improving the navigation of said stream, and the right and privilege of overflowing said land. The proper decree was entered in accordance therewith. This appeal is from the judgment, and the only error assigned is the action of the court in overruling the demurrer to the complaint and entering judgment for plaintiff.
It is contended by appellant that the provisions of section 14, article 1 of the state constitution, and the statutes of the state in force in regard to the powers of eminent domain, are not sufficiently broad and comprehensive to authorize or permit the respondent, who is plaintiff here, to have condemned the lands in question for the uses and purposes stated in the complaint. Section 14, article 1 of the Idaho constitution, is as follows:
“Section 14. The necessary use of lands for the construction of reservoirs or storage basins, for the purposes of irrigation, or for rights of way for the construction of canals, ditches, flumes or pipes to convey water to the place of use, for any useful, beneficial or necessary purpose, or for drainage; or for the drainage of mines, or the working thereof by means of roads, railroads, tramways, cuts, tunnels, shafts, hoisting works, dumps, or other necessary means to complete development, or any other use necessarjr to the complete development of the material resources of the state, or the preservation of the health of its inhabitants, is hereby declared to be a public use, and subject to the regulation and control of the state.
“Private property may be taken for public use, but not until a just compensation, to be ascertained in a manner prescribed by law, shall be paid therefor.'’
*781Subdivision 3 of section 5210, Revised Statutes, as amended by the laws of 1903, page 204, is as follows:
“Section 5210. Subject to the provisions of this title, the right of eminent domain may be exercised in behalf of the following public uses: . . . . Subd. 3. Wharves, docks, piers, chutes, booms, ferrier, bridges, toll roads, by-roads, plank and turnpike roads, steam, electric and horse railroads, reservoirs, canals, ditches, flumes, aqueducts and pipes, for public transportation, supplying mines and farming neighborhoods with water, and draining, and reclaiming lands, and for storing and floating logs and lumber on streams not navigable.”
It is first contended that the complaint does not state a cause of action under said provisions of the constitution and the statute, in that it nowhere alleges that it is proposed to use the land sought to be taken for a reservoir with a view to public transportation. The allegation on that point is to the effect that said river is narrow and not of uniform size during all seasons of the year; is dependent on rain and snow and during portions of the year it does not carry sufficient water to float logs except by the use of artificial means; that it is necessary to store the water by the use of dams and splash or flood the logs down by opening the dams; that during the period of high water, the convenient, economical and practical method of transporting said logs from the forest to the mills is by the use of such dams; that such-dams cannot be constructed at all places, but must be built at points rendered favorable by the topography of the land on the sides of the river which affords storage basins for logs; that said dam was constructed for the purpose of storing the waters of said river and furnishing a storage basin for logs for the purposes alleged, and for the purposes of improving the floating capacity and navigability of said river, particularly at the season of the year when said river was at the lowest stage. I think the allegations of the complaint are sufficient to show that the land sought to be taken will be used for the purpose of storing and floating logs and timber on said river and im*782proving its navigability, and under said provisions of the constitution and of subdivision 3, section 5210, Revised Statutes, the right of eminent domain has been extended to land for storing as well as floating logs and timber, and is declared to be a public use.
It is contended that the right of eminent domain under the provisions of said section 5210 can only be exercised in the improvement of streams not navigable, and that as the territorial legislature had declared, by act approved February 14, 1879. that the Palouse river was a navigable stream, the -right of eminent domain could not be exercised to improve the navigability of said stream'. I cannot concur in that contention, as it is clear the provisions of said section 5210 are applicable to all streams not navigable in fact. It is alleged in the complaint and found as a fact by the court that the said stream is not even navigable for logs a part of the season, and I have no doubt that said section applies and was intended to apply to all such streams. Judge Hanford, in the United States circuit court for the state of Washington, in Voltz & Metcalf v. Potlatch Lumber Co., held that said stream was-not a navigable stream except during portions of the year, and that the evidence in that case clearly showed that during a portion of the year logs could be floated upon it; that the period during which they could be floated without the aid of artificial means was comparatively short, constituting only a month or two of the entire year; that during the remainder of the year said stream was not navigable. The decision in that case has not been published in the reports. The court holds that said stream is not navigable in fact, upon the evidence produced on the trial. It is clear to this court that the declaration of a state legislature cannot impress upon a stream a character of navigability for logs when the stream does not carry water sufficient to float a log. If a stream is not navigable in fact, the mere legislature declaration that it is navigable in fact cannot make it so. (Murray v. Preston, 106 Ky. 561, 90 Am. St. Rep. 232, 50 S. W. 1095; Duluth Lumber Co. v. St. Louis Boom Co., 17 Fed. 419, 5 McCrary, 382.)
*783It is alleged in the complaint, and the court found in the case at bar, that said river was not navigable for commercial purposes in its natural state, and it is clear from the allegations of the complaint and findings of the court that it is not navigable for logs or timber products during a great portion of the year unless aided by artificial means and devices. The language used in paragraph 3 of said section 5210, as amended, refers not to streams capable of floating logs, but to streams which are navigable in fact; for it was certainly understood by the legislature that many of the streams of this state which would float logs during flood time did not carry sufficient water to float logs during the remainder of the season, and in order to make them so, the right of eminent domain would need to be exercised for the purpose of procuring land in order to improve the same for storing and floating logs and timber.
Then the question is fairly presented: Does the use of said dam and storage basin of twelve and sixty hundredths acres under the aforesaid facts constitute a public use within the provisions of said sections of our constitution and statutes ? The conclusion by this court upon that question is of very great and lasting importance to the complete development of the material resources of our state.
In limine, we shall make a few observations upon the power of eminent domain. That power is an incident of sovereignty inherent in the federal government and the several states by virtue of their sovereignty. This power with all its incidents is vested in the legislatures of the several states. (1 Lewis on Eminent Domain, sec. 237; Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 7th ed., 755; Hollister v. State, 9 Idaho, 8, 71 Pac. 541.)
The provisions in regard to the power of eminent domain and the taking of private property for a public use contained in said section 14, article 1 of our constitution, emanate directly from the people instead of from the legislature, and are therefore, legal and valid, emanating from the highest power. In meeting the marvelous industrial development of many of the United States in the last one hundred years, it *784has been found impossible in many instances to follow or apply the letter of the common law in regard to the power of eminent domain. To follow it in the application of that power in many instances would greatly hamper, retard, and in many instances defeat,' the development of the great natural advantages, resources and industrial opportunities of many of the states of the Union. And the framers of our constitution thoroughly understood those facts, and understood that a complete development of the material resources of our young state could not be made unless the power of eminent domain was made broader than it was in many of the constitutions of the several states of the Union. In Idaho, owing to the contour of the country, its mountain fastnesses and the great difficulty of preparing and constructing means and modes of communication .and transportation, and also owing to the arid condition of the state, the necessity for irrigation in the development of the state’s agricultural resources and in the development of its boundless mineral wealth, it was considered a necessity to the complete development of the material resources of the state to enlarge and broaden the power of eminent domain in the state; hence the adoption of said section 14, article 1 of our constitution. In many of the state constitutions the right to exercise the power of eminent domain is made to depend upon the question whether the use contemplated is or is not a public use in the most narrow and restricted meaning of the phrase “public use.” The decisions under many state constitutions, therefore, are of little value as precedents for eases arising under constitutions like that of Idaho, Colorado and other western states, which make the character of the use, whether strictly public' or otherwise, the criterion of the right to exercise the power. There are two well-marked and conflicting lines of decisions by the ourts in dealing with the constitutional rights to exercise the power of eminent domain. One class of those decisions is represented by Brown v. Gerald, 100 Mo. 351, 109 Am. St. Rep. 526, 61 Atl. 785, 70 L. R. A. 472, which draws a sharp distinction between “public use” and “public benefit,” and *785guards the private rights of property against the assertion of the power of eminent domain for public benefits as distinguished from public use. The other line of decisions is represented by Nash v. Clark, 27 Utah, 158, 101 Am. St. Rep. 953, 75 Pac. 571, 1 L. R. A., N. S., 208, which case was taken by error to the supreme court of the United States, 198 U. S. 860, 49 L. ed. 1085, 25 Sup. Ct. Rep. 676. That was an action to condemn land for the enlargement of a private ditch, and the supreme court of the United States there held that the peculiar local conditions in the state of Utah justify the enactment of a statute under and by which an individual land owner may condemn as for a public use a right of way across his neighbor’s land for the enlargement of a private irrigating ditch in order to obtain water to irrigate his land, which would otherwise remain valueless. The latter class of cases .takes the view that the general welfare and benefit of the public should prevail over private property rights, even though the use for which the power of eminent domain is asserted is not in a strict sense a public use, and, as stated in the note to State ex rel. Tacoma I. Co. v. White River P. Co., 31 Wash. 648, 82 Pac. 150, 2 L. R. A., N. S., 842: “The influence of peculiar local conditions and necessities in determining the choice between these two tendencies is plainly discernible.” The case of Talbot v. Hudson, 16 Gray (82 Mass), 417, belongs to the latter class, and it was held in substance that in determining whether the use is public, it has never been held essential that the entire community, or that any considerable portion of it, should directly enjoy or participate in the benefits to be derived from the purpose for which the property is appropriated. That it is enough if the taking tends to enlarge the resources, increase the industrial energies and promote the productive power of any considerable part of the inhabitants of a section of the state, or leads to the growth of towns and the creation of new channels for the employment of private capital and labor, as such results indirectly contribute to the general prosperity of the whole community.
*786It is declared in said section of our constitution that the necessary use of lands to the complete development of the material resources of our state is a public use. And I think it clearly appears from th'e allegations of the complaint and the findings of the court that for the complete development of the vast lumber and timber interests of that section of the state along the Palouse river, the power of eminent domain may be exercised over said twelve and sixty hundredths acres of land. Our attention has not been called to any definition of the term“public use”' — that is, a certain criterion to determine when the power of eminent domain may be exercised. In Olmstead v. Camp, 33 Conn. 532, 89 Am. Dec. 221, it was contended that the term “public use” should be distinguished from the term “public benefit,” and that by “public use” was meant the possession, occupation and direct enjoyment by the* public. In determining that question the court said: “It seems that such a limitation on the intention of this important clause would be entirely different from its accepted interpretation and would be as unfortunate as novel. One of the most important meanings of the word ‘use’ is defined by Webster as ‘usefulness,’ ‘utility,’ ‘advantage,’ ‘productive of benefit.’ ‘Public use’ may, therefore, well mean public usefulness, utility, advantage; or what is productive of general benefit; so that an appropriation of private property by the state under its right of eminent domain for purposes of great advantage to the community is a taking for public use. Such, it is believed, is the construction which has uniformly been put upon the language by the courts, legislatures and legal authorities.” (See Words and Phrases Judicially Defined, p. 5828.) It is further stated in Olmstead v. Camp, supra: “It is a subject (public use) which does not admit the definition, as the defined limits of to-day might not answer for the changed condition of to-morrow..... The power (of eminent domain) acquires a degree of elasticity to be capable of meeting new conditions and improvements of the ever-increasing necessities of society.” (See Dayton Gold & Silver Min. Co. v. Seawell, 11 Nev. 394.) At page *7875829 of volume 6, Words and Phrases Judicially Defined, the author cites a number of decisions under the following propositions: “The-term ‘public use’ is flexible, and cannot be confined to the public use mentioned at the time of forming the constitution. All improvements that may be. made, if useful to the public, may be encouraged by the exercise of eminent domain. Any use of anything which will satisfy reasonable public demand for facilities for travel, for transmission of intelligence or of commodities, would be a public use.” That term is a flexible one, and necessarily has been of constant growth as new public uses have developed. (Randolph on Eminent Domain, 35.) And it has been said that what is a public use under eminent domain statutes will depend somewhat upon the nature and wants of the community for the time being. (Brown v. Gerald, supra.)
There is no doubt when a person or corporation exercises the power of eminent domain, he or it assumes certain obligations to the public, and the grant of the right of eminent domain carries with it the right of public supervision and reasonable control. The improvement of said river is not for the use of the respondent alone, although under the conditions which exist it may be more benefited than others. But the river will be open to anyone who may have occasion to use it for floating logs and timber produets. Under the provisions of section 835, Bevised Statutes, the construction of any dam or boom on any creek or river in this state that will unreasonably delay or hinder the floating or passage of timber down the same, is prohibited. (Powell v. Springston Lumber Co., ante, p. 723, 88 Pac. 97.)
There are many streams in this state that will float logs or lumber during the flood time or spring freshets and will not do so during the time that such streams are at the ordinary stage cf during low water. If it be true that all such streams are navigable under the provisions of said section 5210, and for that reason the right of eminent domain, cannot be exercised with reference to such streams, the power therein given as a mere shadow, without any substance, and amounts to *788nothing. For unless the stream is floatable for logs, there can be no good purpose or reason for storing logs in it or along it. The legislature well knew that many of our streams .were floatable for logs in places, and not in others; it had in view those streams in the enactment of section 5210, and it intended to and did grant the right to exercise the power of eminent domain in order to make such streams floatable at places where they were not floatable unless improved by dams or otherwise. Shall we hold that the legislature did the foolish thing of granting the power of eminent domain on streams not floatable for logs and timber, and hold that it has neglected to do so on streams that might with a little improvement be made of great service in the transportation of logs and timber? A reasonable construction should be given to that section of our statute and constitution, and not one which would make the law ineffectual for any purpose whatever. And if, under the provisions of said section 14, article 1 of the constitution, the power of eminent domain may be exercised when “necessary to the complete development of the material resources of the state,” and the lumbering interest is one of the material resources of the state, and that resource cannot be completely developed without the exercise of the power of eminent domain, then that power may be lawfully exercised. The legislature cannot annul that provision of the constitution by legislative enactment. The timber interest of our state is one of the great material resources of the state, and it is stated in said section 14 of the constitution as follows: “The necessary use of lands .... to the complete development of the material resources of the state .... is hereby declared to be a public use.” But it is contended by counsel that said provision is not self-executing. We may concede that contention. But the legislature has prescribed the procedure for subjecting land to a public use or for exercising the right of eminent domain. Thus by legislative enactment that provision of the constitution is made effective. The people in this constitution have declared that the necessary use of lands to the complete development of the material re*789sources of the state is a “public use,” and the legislature has provided the procedure to subject such lands to that use. The complaint states a cause of action, and the judgment of the trial court must be sustained. Costs are awarded to the respondent.
Ailshie, J., concurs in the conclusion.