Big Cottonwood Tanner Ditch Co. v. Shurtliff

189 P. 587, 56 Utah 196, 1919 Utah LEXIS 125
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 28, 1919
DocketNo. 3374
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 189 P. 587 (Big Cottonwood Tanner Ditch Co. v. Shurtliff) 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
Big Cottonwood Tanner Ditch Co. v. Shurtliff, 189 P. 587, 56 Utah 196, 1919 Utah LEXIS 125 (Utah 1919).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

This case is here on second appeal. See 49 Utah, 569, 164 Pac. 856. The first appeal was taken by Vincent and Mary Shurtliff, hereinafter called respondents, alone, while the plaintiff corporation and other defendants in the action, hereinafter styled appellants, now appeal. On the first appeal the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and the decree made and entered by the district court were affirmed as to all the defendants except the respondents on this appeal, and were also affirmed in favor of the plaintiff corporation except upon two questions hereinafter more specifically stated. The cause was accordingly remanded to the district court, with directions to hear further evidence upon the two questions reserved and to make findings of fact and conclusions of law and to enter 'a decree upon those questions. The district court has fully complied with the directions of this court in that regard, and the present appeal is from the judgment or decree entered pursuant to the directions of this court as just stated.

In view that certain parties now attempt to appeal whose rights as fixed by the district court in the former decree were affirmed by this court, the case might present some complications were it not for the fact that counsel for all of the appellants have, in their brief, limited their contention, which, stating it in their own language, is as follow's:

“There is only one fact or point to be determined, and that one is: Shall the respondents, Shurtliff, have an additional fixed quantity of water flowing constantly for culinary uses above and over their proportion as determined by the number of shares owned by them, [199]*199or shall they he required to supply themselves with culinary water out of their share or proportion decreed to them hy the court?”

In support of their contention, counsel vigorously insist that the district court erred in its construction of the former opinion respecting what was adjudicated by this court. They also urge with much vigor that this court erred in its former conclusions of law, and that we should revise and modify those conclusions, and in that connection say that in the former opinion we held that the appellants there (respondents here) were not entitled to water for culinary and domestic purposes in addition to the water, awarded them for irrigation. In making these contentions, counsel inadvertently have themselves placed an erroneous construction upon what is said in the former opinion in regard to the rights of the respondents to the use of water for domestic and culinary purposes In addition to the water awarded’them for irrigation. By reference to 49 Utah, page 574, 164 Pac. 856, it will be seen that the writer stated the propositions for which counsel for the respondents were contending with regard to their water right for irrigation: (1) That they were not bound by the arbitration agreement of 1879 entered into by Harker, their predecessor in interest, because they were not parties to that agreement; and (2) that they should have been awarded the water originally appropriated by their predecessor before the arbitration agreement of 1879 was entered into, and that the water should have been apportioned to them in second feet instead of in shares, as was done by the district court. It was there said that counsel was in error on both propositions. Counsel for appellants on this appeal, however, now insist that what we there said applied to the water rights of the respondents both for irrigation and for culinary and domestic purposes. In that contention counsel are clearly in error. If counsel will only cursorily examine all that is said on pages 575 and 576 (164 Pac. 858 and 859) upon those subjects, they will see that we segregated the water rights'.claimed by the respondents for culinary and domestic purposes from that claimed by them for irrigation purposes, and that we did not consider the water claimed by them for culinary and domestic [200]*200purposes in anything we said on page 574 (164 Pac. 858). but did state their claim to the latter right on page 575 (164 Pac. 858), and again on page 577 (164 Pac. 859), where their assignments of error on the former appeal were referred to. In that opinion, therefore, we affirmed the district court’s findings of fact and conclusions of law and decree respecting their rights to irrigation water as fixed by the district court, but refused to affirm the court’s findings, conclusions of law, and decree respecting their rights to the use of water for culinary and domestic purposes. We, however, adjudicated that they were entitled to water for culinary and domestic purposes in addition to water for irrigation; but, in view that in the opinion of the majority of this court their claim in that regard seemed grossly excessive and wasteful, the cause was remanded to the district court to determine their necessities in that regard. See pages 586, 587 and 589 (164 Pac. 862, 863, and 864). True, the cause was also remanded for another purpose, but, in view that all parties now seem satisfied with the changes that were made by the district court on the last hearing in that regard, that phase of the case requires no further consideration.

In view of what has already been said, it necessarily follows that the question propounded by appellants’ counsel, namely, are the respondents on this appeal entitled to a continuous flow of water for culinary and domestic purposes, must be answered in the affirmative. Further, that the district 1 court did not err in awarding to the respondents water for culinary and domestic purposes in addition to the quantity of water they were awarded in the former decree for irrigation purposes. Nor can counsel’s contention that the district court erred in its construction of the former opinion prevail.

The court, however, entered judgment by which it awarded the respondents on this appeal a continuous flow of one-half of a second foot of water for culinary and domestic purposes, measured at the diversion point, in addition to their water right for irrigation. This award was based upon a finding that it was necessary to divert that quantity of water from [201]*201the main ditch in order to overcome the waste by seepage, evaporation, etc., and in order to supply respondents with pure and potable water at their dewelling, which, the evidence now shows, is 807 feet distant from the point of diversion and that for that distance the water is conducted in an open ditch over porous and gravelly soil. The evidence also show's that the quantity of water wasted each day in conducting the same, as just stated, amounts to at least 130,000 gallons, and there is some evidence which makes the waste considerably greater in amount than that. Taking the figures just stated, however, the evidence is conclusive that in order to provide respondents with pure and potable water there must each day be diverted from the main ditch into respondents’ culinary ditch over 323,000 gallons, of which, necessarily, a vast amount must be wasted by seepage, evaporation, etc. That fact was manifestly apparent to the district court, as it must be to all others; but in view that at least since 1883 respondents’ means of diversion from the main ditch was the open ditch aforesaid, the court felt constrained to permit that condition to continue indefinitely. The court, however, awarded respondents the quantity of water aforesaid conditionally merely.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 587, 56 Utah 196, 1919 Utah LEXIS 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/big-cottonwood-tanner-ditch-co-v-shurtliff-utah-1919.