Belle Fourche Irrigation District v. Smiley

176 N.W.2d 239, 84 S.D. 701, 1970 S.D. LEXIS 162
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedApril 7, 1970
DocketFile 10574
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 176 N.W.2d 239 (Belle Fourche Irrigation District v. Smiley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Belle Fourche Irrigation District v. Smiley, 176 N.W.2d 239, 84 S.D. 701, 1970 S.D. LEXIS 162 (S.D. 1970).

Opinion

ROBERTS, Presiding Judge.

This action was brought by plaintiff Belle Fourche Irrigation District against defendant R. A. Smiley to enjoin him from interfering with the rights of the plaintiff in the waters of the Belle Fourche River and from diverting for irrigation waters impounded by the Keyhole Dam in Crook County, Wyoming, and released by the Bureau of Reclamation through the channel of the Belle Fourche River for the use of the plaintiff.' The State of South Dakota and’the water resources commission, with leave of court, intervened and filed a complaint in intervention alleging that the commission is authorized by law to regulate and control the development, conservation and allotment of the waters of the state according to principles of beneficial use and priority of appropriation and that defendant without right of appropriation diverts waters from the Belle Fourche River for the irrigation of lands owned by him which are upstream from plaintiff's diversion point and thereby unlawfully interferes with the irrigation *703 of lands in plaintiff district and with interveners in administering the water laws of the state. Following trial, the court made findings of fact and conclusions of law and entered judgment enjoining defendant from diverting waters of the Belle Fourche River for the irrigation of land owned and controlled by him and his wife, except that the defendant has water rights with priority date of May 1, 1953, which entitle him to divert 2.78 feet per second of water from such river for the irrigation of a portion of his land not to exceed 195 acres during the period of May 1 to October 31, each year. From the judgment, defendant appeals.

The Belle Fourche River, a nonnavigable stream, whose headwaters are in the State of Wyoming, flows in this state southeasterly across Butte County to its junction with the Cheyenne River in Meade County. For an understanding of the locale, a photostatic copy of a sketch map of a part of the Belle Fourche River basin is here inserted.

*704 The pertinent stipulated facts are summarized as follows:

The Belle Fourche Project is a federal irrigation works authorized by the Reclamation Act of June 17, 1902 (43 U.S.C.A. § 371 et seq.). The Secretary of Interior pursuant to the provisions of that act entered into a contract on October 25, 1905, with the Belle Fourche Valley Water Association, a corporation, for supplying water for the benefit of shareholders and for the guaranty of payment of construction costs and operation and maintenance charges apportioned to shareholders. The Belle Fourche Irrigation District was thereafter formed under the laws of this state providing for the organization and management of irrigation districts. Plaintiff entered into a contract with the Secretary of Interior, dated November 26, 1923, providing that cooperation with the United States thereafter be had through the district and that payments of construction costs and operation and maintenance charges be made through the district utilizing its powers of assessment and levy conferred by state law. Effective January 1, 1949, there was a transfer of the maintenance and operation of the irrigation works to plaintiff district. The operation of the project has continued under the 1949 agreement and water for domestic and municipal uses and the irrigation of lands of water users within the district is presently provided by plaintiff.

Plaintiff obtains most of its water supply from the Belle Fourche River. A concrete dam, situate one and one-half miles down stream from the City of Belle Fourche, has a diversion capacity of 1440 cubic feet of water per second through an inlet canal, which is six and one-half miles long, either into the Belle Fourche Reservoir or into a canal known as the Johnson Lateral. Ormond Dam, which is situate about nine miles east and three miles north of Belle Fourche, is an earthen structure extending across Owl Creek. Waters of the Belle Fourche Reservoir are impounded behind this dam and the area irrigated by water so stored lies easterly of the reservoir.

The Keyhole Dam across the Belle Fourche River in Crook County, Wyoming, was authorized to be constructed under federal reclamation laws and was completed in 1952. A contract *705 was entered into between the Federal Bureau of Reclamation and plaintiff district for the release of water stored in such reservoir for reasonable and beneficial use in plaintiff district.

The lands owned by appellant across which the Belle Fourche River flows are situate about four miles west of the City of Belle Fourche. The lands were purchased by appellant and conveyed to him in the years 1940, 1943 and 1951. All the lands in question were settled upon and patents issued to predecessors in interest subsequent to the enactment by Congress of the Desert Land Act of March 3, 1877 (43 U.S.C.A. § 321 et seq.).

The appellant since purchase of the land here involved has used varied amounts of water from the Belle Fourche River for domestic and livestock requirements and since 1953 has pumped water from the river, including waters released from the Keyhole Reservoir, for irrigation of his lands. The waters diverted and used by the defendant would have been beneficially used by the plaintiff district during those times when the flow of water at the diversion dam did not exceed 1440 cubic feet of water per second except when the Belle Fourche Reservoir was full or there existed an emergent situation in the irrigation works. The appellant diverted water from the river at times when the flow at the diversion dam was below its capacity and the reservoir was not full and there was no emergency of the nature indicated.

The plaintiff district at all times herein material had ample storage facilities in the reservoir behind Ormond Dam to store and use for beneficial purposes all of the waters of the Belle Fourche River to which it claims a right. The plaintiff district and its water users have been and will continue to be deprived by the acts of the defendant of amounts of water to which they would otherwise have been or will be entitled to use for the annual wetting, irrigation and fertilization of their irrigable land.

It was further stipulated that A. M. Blackford, if called as a witness for the plaintiff, would testify as follows: "I came to the Smiley place in the Spring of 1946. I was there until the Fall of 1955. I was a partner in the livestock end of the farmincc *706 operation and crops raised and on part of the equipment. However, when I came on the place, the equipment and machinery which was there belonged to Mr. Smiley. There was no pump or irrigation equipment or irrigating being done at that time, namely, in 1946. There was an old ditch which came out of a reservoir across the road South and West of the buildings one mile. That ditch terminated in a field just North of and adjacent to the farm buildings. It did not appear to have been used for many years. It was washed out and filled up and part of it was obliterated. This field I would estimate was about 30 acres. I believe it was in 1952 when Mr. Smiley said we should get some irrigating going and he started looking into and investigating rights and so forth. In the Spring of 1953 he told me it was okay to go ahead and that he figured he had the right to pump water out of the Belle Fourche River.

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Bluebook (online)
176 N.W.2d 239, 84 S.D. 701, 1970 S.D. LEXIS 162, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/belle-fourche-irrigation-district-v-smiley-sd-1970.