Big Lost River Irrigation District v. Zollinger

363 P.2d 706, 83 Idaho 401, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 201
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1961
Docket8920
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 363 P.2d 706 (Big Lost River Irrigation District v. Zollinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Big Lost River Irrigation District v. Zollinger, 363 P.2d 706, 83 Idaho 401, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 201 (Idaho 1961).

Opinion

*404 SMITH, Justice.

This is an eminent domain action commenced by appellant irrigation district, hereinafter called the district, to condemn an easement upon and over respondents’ land for public use as a reservoir for storage of water for irrigation purposes. The trial court made a determination in favor of the district on the issue of public convenience and necessity and the district’s entitlement to the easement, and entered judgment in favor of respondents for the value of the estate taken of $18,500, and severance damages of $26,500, from which judgment the district appealed.

The district owns Mackay Dam and Mackay Reservoir, used for the storage of water for irrigation purposes, situate in Custer County. The crest of the spillway of the dam was originally constructed at an elevation of 6,061.6 feet above sea level for impounding water in the reservoir. The dividing line between the land occupied by the reservoir and respondents’ land, prior to this action, was fixed at the contour line of 6,062 feet elevation above sea level.

Some years prior to commencement of this action the district increased the elevation of its dam and spillway to a crest of 6,066.6 feet above sea level in order to create an estimated additional storage capacity of 6,000 acre feet of water. Resultant raises in elevation of water impounded in the reservoir caused additional flowage and erosion in and upon respondents’ lands situate adjacent to the lands which the reservoir theretofore occupied.

The district, in order to acquire rights necessitated by this additional storage, commenced this action by filing its complaint, and causing summons to issue, June 27, 1958, to acquire a flowage easement upon respondents' lands above and adjacent to the reservoir, to the contour line of 6,066.6 feet, and of acquiring a freeboard easement for seepage, saturation and erosion, of an additional one foot in elevation, to the contour line of 6,067.6 feet above sea level.

Respondents, by answer, alleged their ownership, adjacent to the reservoir, of lands aggregating some 1197 acres together with grazing rights which, for some years and presently, constitute their ranch suitable for the production of crops and livestock; also that raising the flow line elevation of the reservoir to the contour line of 6,066.6 feet would cause erosion and destruction of their land lying adjacent to and above the contour level of the freeboard easement sought of 6,067.6 feet elevation above sea level.

Hearing held by the trial court on February 13, 1959, on certain preliminary issues resulted in an agreement, and stipula *405 tion later filed, whereby the parties agreed that the court, in the trial of the case, should determine the area and estate, and value thereof, taken by the district, and the severance damages.

The trial court, May 13, 1959, determined the issue of public convenience and necessity in favor of the district. Pursuant to the agreement and stipulation, the court made appropriate findings, and entered intermediate judgment, adjudging that a flow-age easement, up to the contour line of 6,066.6 feet, and a freeboard easement for seepage, saturation and erosion of lands above that contour elevation, to that of 6,070 feet above sea level, in and upon respondents’ lands, were necessary for the storage of water in the district’s reservoir; also that such constituted a public use of the lands most compatible with the greatest public good and the least private injury.

The court upon trial of the issues of value and damage, gave judgment August 31, 1959, adjudging that respondents recover from the district the value of the easements being condemned in the sum of $18,500, and severance damages in the sum of $26,500, together with interest and costs; and ordered that, upon payment of the judgment, the district shall be entitled to a final decree of condemnation in the premises.

The district, by its assignments of error on this appeal, presents no issue concerning the value of the easements, adjudged in the sum of $18,500. Rather, it presents the issues, whether the trial court properly adjudged condemnation of a free-board area to the contour line of 6,070 feet above sea level; also, whether the court properly determined the severance damages.

Appellant district assigns error of the trial court in ruling that the condemnor— quoting appellant — “was required to condemn a freeboard area to the 6070 elevation line, when the condemnor sought and proposed a freeboard area to the 6067.6 elevation line, on the ground that the determination of the amount of freeboard is a function of the condemnor only, and is not a judicial function.”

It is true that the district in its original complaint alleged it had raised the elevation of its dam to a contour flow level of approximately 6,066.6 feet, which would cause flow and seepage up to a contour level of 6,067.6 feet above sea level. However, respondents in their amended answer alleged, “that if the flow line elevation in Mackay Reservoir is raised to the alleged elevation of 6066.6 feet above sea level, all lands of defendants adjacent thereto and lying below an elevation of 6070 feet above set level will be damaged and destroyed by the waters in such reservoir.” The parties, at the time of the preliminary hearing of February 13, 1959, after waiving *406 a jury, agreed that the trial court should find upon and settle this issue. That agreement, with relevant matter, reads:

“Mr. Anderson: * * * counsel here are going to stipulate in writing * * * that the Court in the course of this trial today and the further trial of the case will have the right to determine the area taken, the extent of the area being taken, the value, the severance damage irrespective of the allegations in the complaint and the amended answer. Further if the proof does not agree with the complaint and answer with respect to the extent of the area being taken the Court may make his own determination irrespective of the pleadings. Is that right?
“Mr. Kerr: Yes.
“The Court: That is my understanding.
“Mr. Kerr: The pleadings will be amended to correspond with the findings.
“Mr. Anderson: Well, whether amended or not the Court can make that determination.
“Mr. Kerr: That is correct.
“Mr. Anderson: We’ll file a written stipulation on that. * * *.
“Mr. Kerr: That is correct.
“The Court: All right. * * * You may proceed.”

On May 11, 1959, the parties filed the referred to stipulation which, among other things, provided:

“That irrespective of the pleadings in the above entitled cause, the court in the trial of such cause determine the area and estate being taken by the plaintiff, and the value of the area and estate being taken by the plaintiff, and the severance damages to the lands of the defendants described in the amended answer.”

As a general rule stipulations of parties or counsel made in pending proceedings are conclusive as to all matters properly contained or included therein. Arnett v.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
363 P.2d 706, 83 Idaho 401, 1961 Ida. LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/big-lost-river-irrigation-district-v-zollinger-idaho-1961.