delivered the opinion of the court..
This is a suit to enjoin interference with the flow of water in the channel of Crooked Creek, in Malheur County. The complaint states in effect that the plaintiffs, J. H. Seaweard and Anderson Loveland, are prior appropriates of water from that stream; that the defendant the Pacific Livestock Co., a corporation, is digging r ditch above their lands and threatening to divert all the water of the creek, to their irreparable injury; and that the defendants Pearl Duncan and Pedro Germain are using water for irrigation to which the plaintiffs are entitled. Germain made default; but, issues having been joined as to the other defendants, the cause was tried, and from the testimony taken the court made findings of fact, and,-based thereon, concluded as matters of law that the Pacific Livestock Co. has. a prior appropriation of 100 inches of water from the creek, and that the relative rights of the other parties to the use of the water of the stream and the extent of the subsequent appropriations thereof are as follows: Loveland, 150 inches; Seaweard, 120 inches; and Duncan, 80 inches — miners’ measurement, under 6-inch pressure, all of which rights are superior to the claim of the corporation to the use of any water in excess of 100 inches. A decree having been rendered in accordance with the findings, the plaintiffs and the Pacific Livestock Co. separately appeal.
The testimony shows that Crooked Creek is a perennial stream
The plaintiffs’ counsel admit that such corporation has a prior appropriation, but contend that errors were committed in awarding it more than 50 inches of water as the measure of its right, in not requiring the dam Avhieh it constructed to be removed, and in not enjoining the use of any water through the new ditch. The legal principles thus maintained are disputed by counsel for the Pacific Livestock Co., and they insist that errors were committed in aAvarding Loveland the use of any water from the
1. An examination of the testimony discloses that from 1899, when Morgan and Hinkey respectively conveyed the real property which the Pacific Livestock Co. now'owns, at the head of Crooked Creek, until 1904, a period of five years, there was no attempt made to increase the area of such arable land originally irrigated, and that during that time Loveland, Seaweard and Duncan, respectively, appropriated water which the corporation continually permitted to flow in the channel of the stream to the head of their ditches. When an ordinarily prudent person makes a prior appropriation to irrigate arid land of which he is the owner, or in the lawful possession expecting to acquire title thereto, if such land will be benefited by irrigation, and the volume of the stream is sufficient therefor, it is reasonable to suppose that he has in mind both the extent of his land and the amount of the water at the time of his appropriation, and that he intends to reclaim the entire area thereof, either by the ditches constructed at the time or by a canal system then in contemplation. But pioneers on the public domain do not ordinarily possess great wealth, and hence cannot rapidly convert arid land into farms; and, such being the case, the law allows a reasonable time in which to complete the appropriation. If the increase in the area of arable land for the irrigation of which water has been diverted varies with and is measured by the lapse of time, the additional application of water annually to meet the augmented demand causes the appropriation to relate back to its inception, thereby cutting off all intervening rights of adverse claimants to the use of such water: Simmons v. Winters, 21 Or. 35 (27 Pac. 7: 28 Am. St. Rep. 727); Hindman v. Bizor, 21 Or. 112 (27 Pac. 13); Cole v. Logan, 24 Or. 304 (33 Pac. 568); Smyth v. Neal, 31 Or. 105 (49 Pac. 850).
2. What is a reasonable time in which to apply water originally intended to be used for some beneficial purpose depends
3. The testimony shows that Morgan and Hinkey were constantly enlarging the area of their arable land until 1899, when they executed deeds thereof; but from that time until 1904 their successors in interest made no attempt whatever to prepare any new land for cultivation, whereby a purpose to expand the appropriation might have been disclosed to persons who desired to make a subsequent use of the water. No cause is assigned for the delay indicated, and, believing it to have been unreasonable, the right of the Pacific Livestock Co. to the use of the water of the creek is limited to the appropriation made by its predecessors in interest, thereby rendering subsequent applications of the excess of such water by others valid: Cole v. Logan, 24 Or. 304 (33 Pac. 568).
4. The testimony shows that without any authority therefor one Ervin Loveland took possession of land owned by a military road company, constructed a ditch from the creek in 1888, and irrigated the premises each season until 1891, when he sold his interest therein to his brother, the plaintiff, who secured a lease of the land and was allotted by the decree 100 inches of water for its irrigation. When such use began the creek contained water that was subject to appropriation; and, this being so, should the irrigation of the land mentioned be continued? It was held by the Supreme Court of California that a trespasser on private land, who diverted water for the irrigation thereof, made the appropriation appurtenant to the premises benefited by the use: Alta Land & W. Co. v. Hancock, 85 Cal. 219 (24
The spring which is the source of the creek mentioned supplies a constant stream, unvarying in the quantity of water that it discharges, which volume the court found to be 800 inches, miners’ measurement, under 6 inches of pressure. There is undoubtedly a surplus of water after supplying the quantity decreed to the several parties, and, this being so, we do not see how the plaintiff can be injured by the maintenance of the enlarged dam or the diversion by the new ditch, as proposed by the Pacific Livestock Co. If the other parties secure the quantity of water allotted to. them, they ought not to complain because of the proposed change in the use by the corporation.
A careful examination of the testimony convinces us that the quantity of water to which the several parties are entitled and the order of their respective rights to the use thereof are correctly stated by the court, and hence the decree is affirmed.
Aeeirmed.