Clearwater Farms LLC v. Giles

2016 UT App 126, 379 P.3d 1, 815 Utah Adv. Rep. 10, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 130, 2016 WL 3369543
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedJune 16, 2016
Docket20140575-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2016 UT App 126 (Clearwater Farms LLC v. Giles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clearwater Farms LLC v. Giles, 2016 UT App 126, 379 P.3d 1, 815 Utah Adv. Rep. 10, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 130, 2016 WL 3369543 (Utah Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

Opinion

ROTH, Judge:

1 Plaintiffs Clearwater Farms LLC and Clearwater Holdings LLC (collectively, Clearwater) appeal the district court's ruling in favor of Shane Robert Giles and Brandi Lynn Giles, individually and as co-trustees of the Shane Robert Giles and Brandi Lyon Giles Family Trust; and Jacob Jay Giles and Sharon Vickie Giles, individually and as co-trustees of the Giles Family Trust (collectively, the Gileses). We conclude that the district court did not err when it considered only historical use to determine a road's width, We also conclude that the court did not err when it ruled that the Gileses did not obstruct or interfere with Clearwater's water rights. Accordingly, we affirm.

BACKGROUND 2

12 Clearwater and the CGileses own adjacent parcels of land near - Lake Shore in an unineorporated area -of Utah County, A farm lane (the Road), which has been in existence since at least the early twentieth century, runs from south to north and crosses the CGileses' land, paralleling the course of the Spanish Fork River, before turning west and terminating in a dead end on Clearwater's property. In 1996, the Gileses purchased the farmland. Approximately two years later, another individual named Morley, Clearwater's predecessor, purchased a twenty-one-acre parcel of land directly to the north, The following year the Gileses subdivided their land to create two building lots and built a house on each. In connection with the subdivision approval, Utah County required the CGileses to improve a segment of the Road leading to the northernmost lot and to dedicate that segment to the county with a fifty-six-foot wide right-of-way. This dedication left a three-hundred-foot long section of the Road solely on the Gileses' property in its original condition, essentially unimproved and with the smaller historical right-of-way footprint.

18 At one time, an irrigation ditch (the Morley ditch) ran along the west side of the unimproved section of the Road, Prior to the CGileses' purchase of their farmland, this ditch provided irrigation water to the Morley prop *3 erty, but due to flooding of the Spanish Fork River and a subsequent rise in the farmland's elevation from silt deposits, irrigation of the Morley property from the ditch became impossible. The Gileses agreed to allow Morley to build a pump house next to side of the Road, complete with an electric pump attached to a six-inch pipe, thereby, allowing Morley to irrigate his property. Morley buried the six-inch pipe in the irrigation ditch, leaving only a swale to identify the location. Morley used this water delivery system until approximately 2003 when he decided that the cost of electricity to run the pump made it impracticable to continue, In 2009, Morley cut the six-inch pipe, left it in the ditch, and built a new pump house entirely on his own property with a diesel pump to transport water from a diversion point further north on the Spanish Fork River at a more affordable cost, The following year Clearwater purchased the Morley property and several other parcels of land adjacent to the Gileses' property "to construct a few homes" because, according to Clearwater, the farmland was "ripe for 'subdivision.'"

[ 4 The parties' dispute arose in 2011 when Clearwater wanted to remove the six-inch pipe from the Morley ditch and replace it with a forty-two-inch pipe. The CGileses were uncooperative. When Clearwater took preliminary steps to install the larger pipe, the Gileses called local law enforcement to their property. The parties ultimately came to an agreemenit in April 2012 that provided Clear-water with an easement across the CHleses' property for utilities and water. But Clear-water claimed that, because of the delay in reaching this agreement, it was unable to irrigate for the 2011 growing season. In addition, the dispute over the width of the right-of-way continued between the parties. Clear-water eventually filed this action in an attempt to establish a fifty-six-foot wide right-of-way on the remaining three-hundred-foot long section of the Road located on the Giles-es' property and to seek damages for lost crop revenue that allegedly resulted from the Gileses' interference with, and obstruction of, Clearwater's rights to transport water through the Morley ditch during the 2011 growing season.

T5 Following a benely trial, the district court rejected Clearwater's claims. The court determined that Clearwater was not entitled to a fifty-six-foot wide right-of-way on the remaining three-hundred foot section of the Road located on the Gileses' property. The court reasoned that the Road had already been dedicated as a public highway through usage over the years (something the parties had stipulated to), thereby requiring the court to look at the "historical use of the road to determine its width" and not its "potential future use" as Clearwater argued. The court found that the width "reasonable and necessary for a farm lane" to ensure safe travel was thirty feet 3 The court also concluded that Clearwater was not entitled to damages for lost crop revenue, because the GHileses had not obstructed Clearwater's water rights. Clearwater timely appealed.

ISSUES AND STANDARDS OF REVIEW

1 6 Clearwater raises two issues on appeal, both involving questions of statutory interpretation. First, Clearwater asserts that the district court erred when it found that the Road was limited to a width of thirty feet, because the court "expressly refused to consider any factors other than historical use" after the parties agreed that the Road was a public highway. Clearwater argues that the phrase "facts and cireumstances" as used in section 72-5-104 of the Utah Code includes "future use of a public right-of way" We review for correctness the district court's decision regarding whether the statute required the court to consider historical use "but grant the court significant discretion in its application of the law to the facts." See Haynes Land & Livestock Co. v. Jacob Family Chall Creek, LLC, 2010 UT App 112, 17, 233 P.3d 529 (citing Utah County v. Butler, 2008 UT 12, 19, 179 P.3d 775). "Additionally, we review the district court's factual findings only for clear error." Id. 17 (citing Wasatch *4 County v. Okelberry, 2008 UT 10, 18, 179 P.3d 768).

T7 Clearwater next asserts that the district court erred by not awarding damages for lost crops due to the Gileses' obstruction, or alternatively, due to their interference with Clearwater's water rights under Utah Code sections 78-1-7 or 78-1-15. "The proper mterpretatmn and application of a statute is a question of law which we review for correctness, affording no deference to the district court's legal conclusion[s]." Id. 19 (alteration in original) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).

ANALYSIS

T8 Clearwater describes the "main premise" of its argument with regard to both issues as follows: "[Elasements can, and should be expanded to meet the needs of the dominant estate's reasonable and necessary use of the easements." Clearwater "maintains that the court erred in not allowing the reasonable expansion and alteration of [the] existing easements" for road access and water delivery over the Gileses' property. We first address Clearwater's arguments regarding the width of the public right-of-way. We then consider Clearwater's claim for damages due to lost crops.

"I.

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2016 UT App 126, 379 P.3d 1, 815 Utah Adv. Rep. 10, 2016 Utah App. LEXIS 130, 2016 WL 3369543, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clearwater-farms-llc-v-giles-utahctapp-2016.