Under § 3198, Rev.Stat. of Arizona of 1887, the common law
doctrine of riparian rights does not now obtain in that territory,
and, as held by the supreme court of the territory, the doctrine of
appropriation was recognized and to some extent in force prior to
and since 1833 in the State of Sonora, now a part of that
territory.
Page 213 U. S. 340
Confirmation of an estate doe not enlarge it, and where the
original Mexican title did not carry riparian rights, the mere
confirmation thereof by the United States doe not give such rights
to the confirmee.
The Legislative Act of Arizona, Howell's Code of 1864, c. 61, §
7, adopting the common law of England was merely the adoption of a
general system of law in place of the Spanish Mexican general
system which was simultaneously repealed, and the regulation of and
rights to water were by the same act made subject to the natural
and physical condition of the territory and the necessities of its
people, and this Court sustains the supreme court of the territory
in its interpretations of the qualification imposed on the general
adoption of the common law in respect to the use of water.
The right to use water is not confined under the customary law
of Arizona to the riparian proprietors. Where the riparian
proprietor is entitled under a general statute to have the damages
to his land taken for withdrawal of water by appropriators
assessed, the decree below will not be disturbed because no
provision was made for compensation, it appearing in this case that
the objection was technical, and the point was not discussed
below.
89 P. 504 affirmed.
The facts are stated in the. opinion.
Page 213 U. S. 342
MR. JUSTICE HOLMES delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity, brought by the appellant to prevent
the defendants from withdrawing water from the San Pedro River, and
from building for that purpose a dam and ditch upon and through the
plaintiff's land. The plaintiff owns a tract extending on both
sides of the river for about 14 1/2 miles and reaching back from
the river for a mile and one-eighth on each side. In derives its
title from a grant of the State of Sonora in 1833, confirmed by a
decree of the court of private land claims on February 14, 1899,
and a patent from the United States in pursuance of the decree,
dated December 14, 1900. By reason of disputes before the date of
the patent and wrongful disputes since, the plaintiff has not made
actual use of all the waters of the river, although they are not
sufficient to irrigate all the plaintiff's land that admits of
irrigation. It has constructed no dams, canals, or the like, and
has not taken the water except for watering stock and other similar
uses of
Page 213 U. S. 343
it in its natural flow. The defendants threaten and intend to
build a dam, as alleged, in place of one built in 1903, but washed
out, and to build and rebuild a ditch through land of the plaintiff
to another ditch already established, and to divert the water
through the same to land of theirs on the north. They set up no
title, except that they have been the first to appropriate the
water. The plaintiff claims as riparian owner, and argues that, as
such, it has a right that cannot to taken from it by simple
appropriation. The territorial court of first instance and the
supreme court dismissed the bill (89 P. 504), and the plaintiff
appealed to this Court.
It is not denied that what is called the common law doctrine of
riparian water rights does not obtain in Arizona at the present
day, Rev.Stats.Arizona 1887, § 3198, but the plaintiff contends
that it had acquired such rights before that statutory declaration,
and that it cannot be deprived of them now. So far as the claim is
rested on the original grant and the Mexican law, it may be
disposed of in a few words, without going into all the questions
that would have to be answered before an opposite conclusion could
be reached.
"Whatever may have been the general law throughout the Republic
of Mexico on the subject of water, it is reasonably certain that,
in the State of Sonora, the doctrine of appropriation, as now
recognized, was to some extent in force by custom. In this
territory, irrigation was practiced in the Santa Cruz valley prior
to the cession, and it is well known the right of appropriation
without regard to the riparian character of the lands was there in
force probably from the time when the Spaniards first settled in
the valley. Our statutes, as well as those of New Mexico, seem to
have had their origin in the Mexican law as modified by
custom."
This is the statement of the territorial court, and we know
nothing to control it. It is not met by arguments as to the general
character of Mexican law, or by inference from the situation and
nature of the grant. The same doctrine seems to be implied by the
Howell Code, c. 55, § 25, which we shall refer to again.
Page 213 U. S. 344
The plaintiff draws another argument from the effect of the
United States patent. It contends that the patent not only confirms
the Mexican title, but releases that of the United States,
Beard v.
Federy, 3 Wall. 478,
70 U. S. 491,
and that, by the grant from the United States, it gained rights as
a riparian proprietor that could not be displaced by a subsequent
attempt to appropriate the water.
Sturr v. Beck,
133 U. S. 541.
But, while it is true that in
Beard v. Federy, supra, Mr.
Justice Field calls such a patent a quitclaim, we think it rather
should be described as a confirmation in a strict sense.
"Confirmation is the approbation or assent to an estate already
created, which, as far as is in the confirmer's power, makes it
good and valid; so that the confirmation doth not regularly create
an estate; but yet such words may be mingled in the confirmation,
as may create and enlarge an estate; but that is by the force of
such words that are foreign to the business of confirmation."
Gilbert, Tenures, 75. It is not to be understood that, when the
United States executes a document on the footing of an earlier
grant by a former sovereign, it intends or purports to enlarge the
grant. The statute under which the Mexican title was decided to be
good speaks of confirmation throughout, and, in the most pertinent
passage, directing a patent to be issued, says that it shall be
issued "to the confirmee." Act of March 3, 1891, c. 539, § 10, 26
Stat. 854, 859. It would be possible, perhaps, to argue to the
contrary from provisions in §§ 8 and 13, that the confirmation
shall only work a release of title by the United States, but we are
satisfied that the true intent of the statute and the reason of the
thing are as we have said.
The opinion that we have expressed makes it unnecessary to
decide whether lands in the arid regions, patented after the act of
March 3, 1877, c. 107, 19 Stat. 377, are not accepted subject to
the rule that, priority of appropriation gives priority of right by
virtue of that act, construed with Rev.Stat. § 2339. The Supreme
Court of Oregon has rendered a decision to that effect on plausible
grounds.
Hough v. Porter, 98 P. 1083.
See further
Act of March 3, 1891, c. 561;
Page 213 U. S. 345
United States v. Rio Grande Dam and Irrigation Co.,
174 U. S. 690,
174 U. S.
704-706;
Gutierres v. Albuquerque Land and
Irrigation Co., 188 U. S. 545,
188 U. S. 553.
So it is unnecessary to consider how far, if at all, the defendants
represent an appropriation of the water before the patent was
granted. For that reason, we have not set forth the details found
by the court below as to the dams, ditches, and use of water, going
back to 1877.
But perhaps the main contention of the plaintiff is based on the
legislation of the territory, and especially on the Howell Code of
1864, c. 61, § 7, as follows:
"The common law of England, so far as it is not repugnant to or
inconsistent with the Constitution and laws of the United States,
or the Bill of Rights or laws of this territory, is hereby adopted,
and shall be the rule of decision in all the courts of this
territory."
We assume that this section, however it may affect the case at
bar, was within the power of the legislature to enact.
United
States v. Rio Grande Dam & Irrigation Co., 174 U.
S. 690,
174 U. S.
702-703.
Gutierres v. Albuquerque Land and
Irrigation Co., 188 U. S. 545,
188 U. S. 553.
Act of June 17, 1902, c. 1093, § 8. 32 Stat. 390. But we agree with
the territorial court that, construed with the rest of the Code, it
is far from meaning that patentees of a ranch on the San Pedro are
to have the same rights as owners of an estate on the Thames.
In the first place, this is merely the adoption of a general
system as against another general system (the Spanish-Mexican) that
had been in force and that was repealed by § 1. If there were
nothing more in the Code, it would be going a great way to say that
such a broad phrase forbade the courts to hold that the common law
was adaptable, and established the English rule of riparian rights
only for English conditions, as suggested by Nave, J., below. It
might be argued, with force, that an amendment inserting the words,
"So far only as is consistent with and adapted to the natural and
physical condition of the territory, and the necessities of the
people thereof," merely expressed what was implied before.
Rev.Stat. 1887, § 2935. And the like might be urged with regard to
§ 3198 of the Revised
Page 213 U. S. 346
Statutes of 1887, which, in terms, enacted or declared that "the
common law doctrine of riparian water rights" should not obtain.
But we are not left to rely upon reasonable implications and
argument, for other parts of the original Code are express upon the
point. Therefore we need not consider whether, in any event, the
statute could be supposed to confer property rights not previously
possessed and not subject to legislative change.
Compare
Wisconsin & Michigan Ry. Co. v. Powers, 191 U.
S. 379,
191 U. S. 387,
and
Damon v. Hawaii, 194 U. S. 154,
194 U. S.
160.
By the statutory Bill of Rights, Art. 22, all streams capable of
being used for the purposes of irrigation are declared to be public
property, and no one shall have the right to appropriate them
exclusively except under such equitable regulations as the
legislature shall provide. And then chapter 55, "Of Acequias or
Irrigating Canals," after again declaring streams of running water
public, § 1, enacts that
"all the inhabitants of this territory who own or possess arable
and irrigable lands shall have the right to construct public or
private acequias, and obtain the necessary water for the same from
any convenient river, creek, or stream of running water,"
§ 3. By § 4, when such acequias run through the lands of private
persons not benefited, the damages are to be assessed by the
probate judge in a summary manner, on application of the party
interested. § 4. Preference is given to irrigation over other uses.
§ 5. By § 7, the exclusive right to the water is given to the
persons taking out a ditch for agricultural purposes, and a right
to damages if the water afterwards is taken for mining. By § 17,
precedence is given in time of scarcity to the oldest titles, and
by § 25,
"the regulations of acequias which have been worked according to
the laws and customs of Sonora and the usages of the people of
Arizona shall remain as they were made and used up to this
day,"
and the chapter is to be enforced from the day of publication.
There are many more details, but we have recited enough to show
that the interpretation given by the court below to the general
adoption of the common law by the Howell Code, and
Page 213 U. S. 347
the qualifications imposed upon it, were correct. They simply
follow what has been understood to be the law for many years.
Clough v. Wing, 2 Ariz. 371.
The right to use water is not confined to riparian proprietors.
Gutierres v. Albuquerque Land and Irrigation Co.,
188 U. S. 545,
188 U. S. 556;
Coffin v. Left Hand Ditch Co., 6 Colo. 443, 449, 450;
Willey v. Decker, 11 Wyo. 496. Such a limitation would
substitute accident for a rule based upon economic considerations,
and an effort, adequate or not, to get the greatest use from all
available land. Whether there are any limits of distance is a
question not arising in this case.
A final objection urged is that the plaintiff's land is taken
without compensation. It would seem that this is merely technical
in this case. There does not appear to have been any discussion of
the point below, and it is probable that the water is the only
thing that has substantial value or really is cared for. But the
plaintiff is authorized to have his damages assessed if he desires
by c. 55, § 4 (now Rev.Stat. § 3202), as we have mentioned. We
think that it would be unjust to disturb the decree on this ground,
although in other circumstances the objection might be grave.
Decree affirmed.