Arnold v. Huntington Canal & Reservoir Ass'n

231 P. 622, 64 Utah 534, 1924 Utah LEXIS 66
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1924
DocketNo. 4123.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 231 P. 622 (Arnold v. Huntington Canal & Reservoir Ass'n) 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
Arnold v. Huntington Canal & Reservoir Ass'n, 231 P. 622, 64 Utah 534, 1924 Utah LEXIS 66 (Utah 1924).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

This is an appeal from the district court of Emery county. The facts alleged in the complaint and found by the court, in substance, are:

That the defendant is a corporation created and existing for the purposes of appropriating, acquiring, storing, and holding water, and to distribute the same to its members or stockholders for irrigation, power, domestic, and culinary purposes in Emery county, Utah; that the plaintiffs herein, and their predecessors in interest, ever since the organization of said corporation, hereinafter called defendant, have been and now are owners of certain shares of water stock issued by the defendant, and that each of them is entitled to the use of a certain quantity of waterj the amount of which is specifically stated in the complaint and in the findings; that the defendant has acquired and controlled certain water from a certain stream known as the Huntington river, and also owns the water that is stored annually in a reservoir, all of which water is conveyed through said Huntington river to the ditches owned by the defendant and the laterals owned by its members, and is distributed to the plaintiffs and other members and stockholders of the defendant; that the defendant owns and controls three ditches or canals commonly known as the Huntington canal, the North ditch, and the Avery ditch; that during the low-whter season of each year all of the water stored in the reservoir aforesaid has been conveyed through said Huntington river to said Hunt *537 ington canal, and through said canal and said North ditch, both of which are higher up the stream than the Avery ditch, to the water users; that during the low-water season of each year the water that is obtained by the users of water through the Avery ditch is seepage water which, the court found, “seeped through alkali swamps and washed over alkali beds and lands saturated with alkali, and thereby became highly mineralized and unfit for use for irrigation, domestic or culinary purposes”; that during the low water periods the members using water under the said Avery ditch have not received their just proportion of the head and reservoir waters to which they are entitled; that in past years from time to time applications have been made by the members to the defendant for “permission to transfer the waters,” to which the members are entitled from the Avery ditch to the other ditches aforesaid higher up the stream, and that said defendant has granted said applications for transfer and has transferred the use of water from the Avery ditch to the other ditches aforesaid; that on the 20th day of March, 1920, the plaintiffs herein made application to the defendant to have the water represented by their stock transferred from the Avery ditch to the Huntington canal; and that said applications were thereafter granted and the right to the use of the water owned by the plaintiffs was transferred from the Avery ditch to the Huntington canal.

The court further found:

"That in pursuance of said transfer the plaintiffs expended $2,500 in the construction of an irrigation canal leading from the Huntington Canal Company ditch to the lands and property owned by the plaintiffs, and that for some time past, to wit, since July 1, 1922, the waters owned by the plaintiffs and represented by the shares of stock in said company as above alleged have been conveyed through and transferred by said newly constructed ditch from the Huntington Canal Company ditch to the lands of the plaintiffs. That, acting by reason of transfer of their waters as above set forth, the plaintiffs have abandoned and ceased to use the said Avery ditch, and the same has become filled up and would require $2,500 for the cleaning and removing, the rubbish from said Avery ditch.
“That the defendant company is the owner of the water conveyed through the Huntington Canal Company ditch, and the *538 North ditch and the Avery canal; that the Huntington Canal Company ditch and the North ditch are higher up the stream than is the Avery ditch. That proper and full arrangements were made with the Huntington Canal Company for the conveyance of the waters of plaintiffs through said ditch, and the defendant company was duly and regularly notified of the same.
“That the defendant company has for many years last past during the low-water periods of each and every year placed a tight dam at the North ditch intake, which would permit very little, if any water at all, to flow by it to the dam of the Avery canal, and that said defendant company has not permitted the main waters and reservoir waters to pass by the said close dam and run to the dam of the Avery canal. That the only waters that have reached, during the low-water periods, the Avery dam have been seepage and highly mineralized waters, unfit for culinary, domestic, or irrigation purposes.
“That the defendant company has threatened and does now threaten, and will, if not restrained by this court, transfer plaintiffs’ right to use water into the Avery ditch, and said defendant will attempt to and will force these plaintiffs to use the seepage water, and will not permit plaintiffs to receive their, proportion of the head waters and reservoir waters, and will cause the work in the construction of said ditch to become valueless, unless restrained by this court, and if the defendant commits the acts complained of and threatened, these plaintiffs will suffer great and irreparable injury and damage.
“That the plaintiffs have no plain, adequate, or speedy remedy at law.”

In view of the court’s finding that the averments contained in the answer of the defendant were not sustained by the evidence, we have refrained from referring to the- answer. The court’s findings are amply supported by the evidence. Indeed, the findings could have been stronger for plaintiffs in some respects.

Upon the foregoing findings the court made its conclusions of law in favor of plaintiffs’ contentions, and entered judgment confirming the right of the plaintiffs to have the water to which they are respectively entitled delivered to them through the Huntington canal instead of through the Avery ditch, and enjoined the defendant from transferring (the use of the plaintiffs’ water back to the Avery ditch through the Huntington canal, which, it is found, the defendant threatened to do.

*539 The court’s findings of fact are not assailed as not being supported by the evidence, but defendant’s counsel insists that both the findings and conclusions are contrary to law. Counsel’s contention, as we understand him, is to the effect that the transfer of the water permitted by the court is in effect a change in the place or point of diversion, and that neither the defendant nor the court had the power or authority under the law to make the transfer, without a proper application to the state engineer, and upon due notice and hearing of such application. Indeed, about all of counsel’s argument is directed to that question.

The evidence is clear and explicit that no one except the defendant owns or controls, or is interested in, any of the waters of the Huntington river and the Waters stored in the reservoir aforesaid below the intake of the Huntington canal, and that the other two ditches, namely, the North ditch and the Avery ditch, are below the Huntington canal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
231 P. 622, 64 Utah 534, 1924 Utah LEXIS 66, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/arnold-v-huntington-canal-reservoir-assn-utah-1924.