Dameron Valley Reservoir & Canal Co. v. Bleak

211 P. 974, 61 Utah 230, 211 Utah 974, 1922 Utah LEXIS 99
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1922
DocketNo. 3854
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 211 P. 974 (Dameron Valley Reservoir & Canal Co. v. Bleak) 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
Dameron Valley Reservoir & Canal Co. v. Bleak, 211 P. 974, 61 Utah 230, 211 Utah 974, 1922 Utah LEXIS 99 (Utah 1922).

Opinion

FRICK, J.

The plaintiff, a corporation, commenced this action in the district court of Washington county to determine the respective rights of the plaintiff and defendants to the waters flowing in a certain stream in said county. The plaintiff corporation was organized by the water claimants other than the defendant as a convenient- way of distributing the water claimed by them, .and we shall hereinafter treat the plaintiff as the real, party in interest and refer only to the plaintiff as such.

The defendants demurred to the complaint, and, their demurrer having been overruled, they filed their answer in which they fully set forth their claims.to the waters in question.

It is not necessary to refer to the pleadings further.

The case was tried to the court which made findings of [232]*232fact and conclusions of law and entered judgment or decree, from which defendants appeal.

, The overruling of the demurrer is assigned as error. There is no merit to the contention, and we shall not refer to it further.

There are a number of other errors assigned, however, which assail some of the rulings of the court in admitting and in excluding evidence, in making certain findings of fact and conclusions of law, and in entering the decree in question.

The rulings upon the evidence it is not necessary to discuss. We shall therefore refer only to such of the latter assignments as are material to the decision in this case.

It is insisted by the defendants that the court erred in its findings of fact, and conclusions of law and in entering the decree. It is not necessary to set forth the findings of fact in detail, and we shall refer to such only as we deem material to this decision.

The evidence is without conflict that the waters flowing in the stream in question greatly fluctuate in quantity at different seasons of the year. In the spring, when the winter snows are melting, and in case of heavy rains in the mountains where the stream has its sourqe, there are at times large quantities of water flowing in the stream, while in the summer and especially during the fall and winter seasons, the flow of water is very -meager.

In this case the only appropriation of water proved by both sides is that of diverting it from the stream through ditches and putting it to a beneficial use, the defendants having diverted and used some of the water before the plaintiff, and hence defendants are prior in time and therefore prior in right, and the question for decision is: To how much water have the defendants such a prior right?

It is also beyond dispute that both the plaintiff and the defendants have .from time to time increased the area of their cultivated lands and have thus from time to time taken additional water from the stream in case there, was water flowing therein.

The defendants’ lands and diversion appliances are about [233]*233six miles higher up the stream than are the-plaintiff’s lands, and to that extent defendants’ lands are that much nearer to the mountains, where, as before stated, the stream has its source. The court, after stating the character or nature of the improvements made by both the defendants and the plaintiff, and that both parties diverted and used water from the stream, also finds the following facts:

“(5) That during the summer season the said waters recede until they flow less than 1 second foot of water, and that during the spring of each year and owing to the flood waters caused by summer storms, the flow of water in said canyon at times exceeds 25 second feet of water.
“(6) That during each and every year since 1833 the defendants and plaintiff, or their predecessors in interest, have used all the said waters for irrigation purposes when there was any water to use, hut owing to the drought that existed for several years the water in said canyon did not continue to flow as far as Dameron Valley, hut when there was sufficient water the same was conveyed and used for irrigation purposes by the plaintiff and its predecessors in interest in Dameron Valley.
“(7) That the plaintiff and defendants have since 1893 increased their cultivated lands so that the plaintiff is irrigating several hundred acres and the defendants are cultivating approximately 65 acres of land.
“(8) That the lands of plaintiff and defendants, in their native state, are barren and unproductive; hut when irrigated by means of artificial irrigation they grow large crops of grain, hay, and other crops indigenous to this section of the country, and that the use of said waters by plaintiff and defendants as aforesaid has been for a beneficial purpose.”

As conclusions of law the court in substance found that the defendants are entitled to of a second foot of water” to be measured in their ditch or canal “between the point of diversion and crest of the hill which lies between the right-hand fork and the lands which they are now cultivating.” The court then awards plantiff “3% second feet of water measured at the crest of the hill where their ditch goes over the divide after .said defendants have taken their y3 of a second foot of water. ’ ’ The court also directs that—

“When the flow of water in said canyon exceeds 4 second feet, the defendants are to have the excess * * * until they have 1 second foot of water including the % second foot of water above [234]*234referred to, and that the plaintiff is to have the excess of 4% second feet of water, but when the entire flow of water is less than 1 second foot of water, then the plaintiff is to have % and the defendants are to have % of said waters.”

After full directions with regard to measurements, etc., the court entered a decree in accordance with its conclusions of law.

The defendants insist that in awarding them only one-third of a second foot of water the court erred and that such award is contrary-to the evidence.

The undisputed evidence is to the effect that the lands of plaintiff are about six miles lower down the stream than are the lands of the defendants, and that in passing down to plaintiff’s lands much of the water is lost by evaporation and seepage. One of plaintiff’s witnesses testified that in order to have the water flowing in the stream reach down to plaintiff’s lands after it passes defendant’s lands six miles above, in his judgment, would require “a stream a foot wide and a foot deep. ’ ’ While this may be more than a second foot of water, yet, according to the evidence, it seems that unless there was a flow of one second foot of water in the stream when it passed defendants’ lands, the water, by reason of evaporation and seepage, would not reach the lands upon which the water is intended to be used by the plaintiff. The foregoing evidence, as stated, was produced by the plaintiff, and it stands uncontradicted in the record. Indeed, the court’s finding is to the effect that in times of drought there is not sufficient water flowing in the stream to reach plaintiff’s lands.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
211 P. 974, 61 Utah 230, 211 Utah 974, 1922 Utah LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dameron-valley-reservoir-canal-co-v-bleak-utah-1922.