Clausen v. Salt River Valley Water Users' Ass'n

123 P.2d 172, 59 Ariz. 71, 1942 Ariz. LEXIS 145
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 9, 1942
DocketCivil No. 4430.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 123 P.2d 172 (Clausen v. Salt River Valley Water Users' Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clausen v. Salt River Valley Water Users' Ass'n, 123 P.2d 172, 59 Ariz. 71, 1942 Ariz. LEXIS 145 (Ark. 1942).

Opinion

McALISTER, J.

— This is an appeal by C. F. Clausen and Maude Clausen, his wife, from a judgment dismissing their complaint against the Salt River Valley Water Users’ Association and ordering that they take nothing thereby. The purpose of the action was to recover damages to real estate owned by plaintiffs.

The facts alleged in the amended complaint are substantially as follows: On July 24,1897, Casey C. Montgomery filed a homestead entry on the west half and the southeast quarter of the southeast quarter of section 4, township 2 north, range 3 east, of the Cila and Salt River Base and Meridian, then vacant and unoccupied land of the United States, and in March, *74 1903, received from the United States a patent therefor. Through various mesne conveyances this land became, in 1927, the property of J. M. and H. C. Sparks and their wives, who later that year subdivided it into small tracts suitable for improvement as citrus home-sites and designated the subdivision as Squaw Peak Tract. Still later that year they sold the plaintiffs tracts 10, 11 and 12 of the subdivision and referred in the deed of conveyance to the plat of the subdivision which showed the right of way of the Arizona canal, extending over and upon a portion of tract 10. At the time of the purchase the plaintiffs knew that this canal had existed adjacent to the north side of said land substantially in the same condition as it then was for approximately 40 years, without any means for discharging any of the waters flowing therein upon said tract and that its south bank at that point was amply sufficient to prevent any breakage thereof in case an excess amount of water ran into it from any source.

It is further alleged that, relying upon the manner in which the canal had been constructed and maintained, the plaintiffs expended a large sum of money in developing, improving and setting out to high class citrus fruits said premises so as to make them a desirable citrus homesite and have continued to improve the same, the citrus trees thereon now being eleven years old, and the tract of land, prior to the damaging thereof.by the defendant by constructing the cement spillway in question, was a choice citrus homesite of the value of approximately $10,000.

The Arizona canal was constructed by a corporation, The Arizona Canal Company, prior to 1896, from Granite Reef Dam on the Salt River to a point on New River, approximately a distance of 50 miles. It runs in’ a northwesterly direction on the north side of Salt River. The Arizona Canal Company ob *75 tained from the United States, on or about February 4, 1896, the right to construct, operate and maintain the canal over the described premises pursuant to the Act of Congress of March 3, 1891, and that company operated and maintained it until sometime after the year 1905, when it was conveyed to the United States as a part of the Salt River Arizona Reclamation Project, the care, operation and maintenance of which the defendant took over in October, 1917, and has since had.

As originally constructed the canal was 20 feet wide and 5 feet deep, being designed to carry 300 second feet of irrigation water, and most of the material taken from the excavation was deposited on the south side thereof and packed down to make a bank to prevent the water from the canal from flowing over the south bank. Since its construction the canal has been enlarged so that it will now carry a larger quantity of water, but at all times it has been maintained as a trench excavated in the ground with a strong earth bank on the south or lower side, about 4 feet above the natural level of the ground with no bank on the north or higher side, the result being that the canal intercepts all surface water flowing into it from the north side and takes it into the canal system operated by defendant, whereupon it is used for irrigation purposes, any excess amount thereof being carried down the canal and through the laterals connected therewith, the south bank thereof as maintained being a barrier to any surplus water flowing over or across it upon the lands of the plaintiffs hereinbefore described.

It also appears from the amended complaint that in July, 1940, the defendant, for the purpose of improving the canal by making it more convenient to operate in times of flood, by preventing loss of irrigating water through breakage thereof at other points, and by preventing damages to other persons in the *76 vicinity through, breaks which occasionally occur, constructed a concrete spillway on the south side of the canal upon that portion of it situated upon plaintiffs’ tract No. 10, being on the high side of the premises of plaintiffs, by lowering, a depth of 2 feet for a distance of 200 feet, the earth bank which had theretofore been maintained and that the defendant has ever since maintained this spillway and intends to continue to maintain it; that as constructed it is capable of discharging, and is intended to and will discharge, upon the lands of plaintiffs when the canal is full and checked up below plaintiffs’ land, 1800 second feet of water and when full but not checked up 1000 second feet of water; that the spillway has been designedly constructed for the purpose of discharging, and will discharge, water flowing in the canal whenever it, for any cause whatsoever, rises above the top of said spillway, and all of the water so discharged will be cast violently upon plaintiffs ’ premises. The lay and grade of the land and the condition of the soil, which the cultivation for citrus requires, are such that discharging any considerable quantity of water thereon, through the spillway, will cause deep gulleys to be washed therein, rocks and debris cast thereon, citrus trees damaged, up-rooted and destroyed, and other improvements damaged by rushing water and the deposit of stones and mud thereon.

The plaintiffs further aver that due to the great length of the canal above plaintiffs’ land and the fact that it is smaller at its lower end below plaintiffs’ premises than it is above them, and the fact that great fluctuations in the water flowing therein frequently occur and that often floods come which discharge large volumes of storm water in the canal, large quantities of water will pass therefrom through the spillway at frequent intervals, occasionally several times during a single year, and on an average of not less than twice *77 each year, and that by reason of being so rendered subject to flooding and washing by waters discharged by said spillway, plaintiffs’ premises have become wholly unsuited for use as a citrus homesite and the value of the trees thereon has been wholly destroyed and the usefulness of the land has been greatly impaired and by reason of these facts, the construction and maintenance of the spillway constitutes a taking or damaging of plaintiffs’ land and the improvements thereon within the meaning of section 17, article II, of the Constitution of the State of Arizona.

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Bluebook (online)
123 P.2d 172, 59 Ariz. 71, 1942 Ariz. LEXIS 145, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clausen-v-salt-river-valley-water-users-assn-ariz-1942.