Adams v. Portage Irrigation Reservoir & Power Co.

72 P.2d 648, 95 Utah 1, 1937 Utah LEXIS 35
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1937
DocketNo. 5882.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 72 P.2d 648 (Adams v. Portage Irrigation Reservoir & Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adams v. Portage Irrigation Reservoir & Power Co., 72 P.2d 648, 95 Utah 1, 1937 Utah LEXIS 35 (Utah 1937).

Opinions

LARSON, Justice.

Plaintiffs, a group of sheepmen, owners of grazing lands in Box Elder county, Utah, instituted this action in the district court of Box Elder county against the defendants, Portage Irrigation, Reservoir & Power Company, a corporation, hereinafter called the Company, the Town of Portage, a municipal corporation in Box Elder county, hereinafter referred to as the Town, and the Works Progress Administration, to establish the right of plaintiffs to the use of part of the waters of certain springs in Portage Canyon for culinary and stock watering purposes and to enjoin defendants from interfering with plaintiffs’ use thereof. The ultimate facts are not seriously disputed, but the deductions and conclusions the trial court made therefrom are questioned and assailed. The salient facts follow:

The Town of Portage is an agricultural community, with a population of between 500 and 600 people, in the northern part of Box Elder county. The defendant Company, made up primarily of residents of the Town, regulates and distributes for irrigation purposes, along with other waters, those from Portage Canyon. The Town in 1921 established a reservoir and installed pipe lines from the lower springs in Portage Canyon for supplying its inhabitants with water for culinary and domestic purposes and the watering of lawns and livestock. Higher up near the head of the canyon, the plaintiffs severally own certain lands, some on the Portage side of the mountains and some near the top but over *7 the divide, totaling about 13,520 acres, situate mostly in township 14 north, range 4 west, Salt Lake meridian, and suitable only for spring and fall grazing. On and over these lands they grazed, during lambing season in the spring and for a time in the fall, collectively, for over 40 years, varying from year to year, from 10,000 to 15,000 head of sheep. In the spring, while there are snow patches and drifts, the sheep water from the melting snows and from small ponds or reservoirs constructed by plaintiffs by making dams across the draws or swales.

What is known as the upper springs in Portage Canyon, the waters involved in this action, arises in sections 9,10, 16, and 17 in township 14 north, range 4 west of the Salt Lake meridian, about 4 miles from the town and three-fourths of a mile upstream from the intake springs of the Town culinary system. Some of the springs arise upon lands of plaintiffs, Adams, in sections 10 and 16 and some of the springs are on the lands of one Harris, not a party to the action. The waters from these springs, about one second foot (cubic foot per second), except as plaintiffs used it for camp purposes and watering sheep, flowed down the canyon about 4 miles where the Company diverted it for irrigation purposes. In November, 1935, the Town secured approval of the Works Progress Administration of an allotment of $3,941, with which the Town proposed to gather the water of the upper springs into pipes and conduct it down the canyon 4,000 feet to the culinary water system intake box through an 8-inch vitrified clay pipe. By agreement with the Company, the Town in return was to have 20 gallons per minute flow to add to its lower spring system for culinary purposes; the rest of the stream to be released from the pipe into ditches of the Company. This would shut the spring area and creek dry and no water would be available for the camps or sheep of plaintiffs. When the Town undertook to proceed with the construction, plaintiffs brought this action. The trial court entered a decree permitting the Town to proceed with its work, constructing intake boxes and laying pipes, *8 but required the Town to install, at the upper springs, or headworks, a 4-inch standpipe from which plaintiffs could draw water for camp purposes and for watering sheep to the number of 15,000 head at not to exceed 3 gallons per day per head, when there was no snow water available during the spring and fall and when their sheep were grazing upon their lands, but not between July 1st and October 1st of each year. The defendant Works Progress Administration made no appearance in the action and no judgment was made in regard to it. The other two defendants, the Town and the Company, severally appeal assigning errors, and plaintiffs cross-appeal and assign cross-errors.

Appellants’ assignments may be grouped into the following propositions: (1) Error of the court in denying defendants’ motion to strike certain paragraphs of plaintiffs’ complaint. (2) Errors in the admission and rejection of evidence. (3) Insufficiency of the evidence to support certain findings of fact. (4) That the evidence and findings do not support the judgment. (5) That the judgment is void for uncertainty, that it is so uncertain it cannot be enforced. We shall discuss these assignments in their order.

(1) Defendants, before answering, filed a motion to strike several paragraphs of plaintiffs’ complaint as sham and redundant. These paragraphs referred to the Works Progress Administration and its activities. The matters alleged in those paragraphs have no relationship to the issues and matters in dispute between plaintiffs and the appealing defendants. They could only serve the purpose of matters of inducement by showing that the defendant Town was financially able to carry into effect its threat to pipe the waters and interfere with plaintiffs’ use thereof. Motions to strike pleadings or parts thereof are addressed to the judgment and discretion of the trial court. A ruling thereon, except under circumstances which amount to a clear abuse of discretion, will not be disturbed on appeal. 5 C. J. S., Appeal and Error, 484; Gottschalk v. Village of Posen, 252 Ill. App. 352; Frankel v. Hudson, 271 Mo. 495, *9 196 S. W. 1121. The rule is well stated by the Kansas court in Nelson v. Schippel, 143 Kan. 546, 56 P. (2d) 469, 470, as follows:

“It has been, frequently held motions to strike, to make definite and certain, and to separately state and number rest in the sound discretion of the trial court from which rulings ordinarily an appeal does not lie. Unless it is shown such alleged error prejudiced the substantial rights of a party, it will not be reversed.”

In the instant case, the order did not affect anyone. The Works Progress Administration did not appear, no judgment was made with respect to it, and no order or judgment as to appellants was made which was in any way founded upon the allegations covered in the motion to strike. The order refusing to strike did not determine the action, affect substantial rights of the parties, nor the progress of the trial. It is therefore not error.

(2) Appellants’ second assignment as to rejection of evidence likewise cannot be reversible error. They produced a former justice of the peace, without records, and attempted to prove by him that the Town had made arrests to prevent pollution of the waters which the Town used as culinary water in ditches before the installation of their pipe lines in 1921. Such testimony, if received, would not go to questions of water rights between the parties, nor of adverse user, unless it tended to show use by the parties arrested (one of plaintiffs’ herders) of the waters, which :would be against appellants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 P.2d 648, 95 Utah 1, 1937 Utah LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adams-v-portage-irrigation-reservoir-power-co-utah-1937.