EAST BENCH IRRIGATION COMPANY v. State

300 P.2d 603, 5 Utah 2d 235, 1956 Utah LEXIS 200
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 11, 1956
Docket8487
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 300 P.2d 603 (EAST BENCH IRRIGATION COMPANY v. State) 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
EAST BENCH IRRIGATION COMPANY v. State, 300 P.2d 603, 5 Utah 2d 235, 1956 Utah LEXIS 200 (Utah 1956).

Opinions

WADE, Justice.

What provisions should be included in the district court’s judgment is the question raised by this appeal. The State Engineer rejected the applications of the respondents, who are the plaintiffs in this action, to change the place of diversion and the place and manner of use of the waters of the South Fork of the Sevier River. The district court on appeal reversed that decision and we affirmed its holding that the applications should be approved but reversed some other provisions of that judgment.1 Each side of this controversy is greatly concerned in obtaining the full benefit of the favorable parts of our previous decision and in not allowing the opponent more advantages than that decision requires.

Upon the remand, each side prepared and" submitted to the district court findings, conclusions and judgment in accordance with its views, and after full argument the trial court prepared, signed and entered its own findings which differed in some respects from all of the proposals. The court’s [238]*238findings and conclusions cover and are in accord with the points discussed in our previous opinion and their sufficiency is not seriously questioned, but the judgment merely directs the approval of the applications, directs that the engineer supervise the changes but does not set out the rights, liabilities, limitations or duties of the parties which we decided in our previous decision. Although the court’s judgment does not follow their proposals, the respondents contend that it is sufficient. They argue that since the court, on appeal from the decision of the State Engineer, can only decide the questions which the State Engineer could have decided in the first instance, the judgment of that court should merely direct the approval of the applications, state that the changes must not impair vested rights of others and order the engineer to supervise the changes in accordance with law. They also suggest that it would be unconstitutional for the State Engineer to adjudicate questions of law which are presented by the approval or rejection of such applications, and therefore the judgment of the district court can do no more than direct the approval or rejection of such applications. On the other hand the appellants, who are the protestants and defendants in this action, contend that the judgment of the district court completely ignored and disregarded our previous decision.

There are two kinds of applications which the State Engineer must approve or reject and his decision may he appealed to the courts: one is an application to- appropriate unappropriated public waters, and the other is an application to change the place of diversion or the place or use of water.2 The statutes require the approval of such an application before any right to make such an appropriation or such change can be acquired; in both cases the engineer must give notice of the application with opportunity for a protest and a hearing before his approval or rejection. Such applications must be approved if the engineer finds reason to believe that some rights under such application may be acquired without impairing vested rights of others.3 The engineer’s decision is based on his understanding of the law applicable to the facts as he views them.

The State Engineer is an executive, not a judicial officer. His decision on such an application may be based on his views of very complicated questions of law and fact, but he does not adjudicate either the law or the facts in the case and it is doubtful that the legislature, under our Constitution, has authority to confer upon the State Engineer the power to make such an adjudication. He is not required to be trained in or to be qualified to pass on such ques[239]*239tions of law. He does have special training in the operation and control of natural streams and irrigation and other artificial use and control of water and water rights, His office must keep records of and he has the supervision and control of the streams and water systems of this state. Although he is especially qualified to understand the facts involved in these problems, the legislature has not made his decision of such facts binding on the courts on an appeal, but provided for a trial de novo on both law and facts in the district court in case of an appeal from his decision.4

Since the engineer's decision to approve or reject such an application is based on his views of the law as applied to the facts which he finds reason to believe exist or may result from the approval of such application, the legislature appropriately provided for an appeal to the courts from his decision, where such questions of law and fact may be adjudicated.

Such an appeal is taken by commencing an action in the district court, where a trial de novo is provided for on all issues which could have been raised under the application to the State Engineer. Such action is strictly limited to the trial of such issues as could have been raised before the engineer, and an appeal to this court is provided from the decision of the district court. The decision of these courts on such appeal from the State Engineer’s decision has the same effect and no more on the rights of the applicants to proceed with their proposed project as the same decision of the engineer would have had without an appeal.5 However, the decision of the engineer is merely the decision of an administrative or executive officer, not the decision of a court; it does not adjudicate the law or the facts in issue, it neither becomes the law of the case nor is it res judicata of the issues involved, nor does it become a binding precedent on the law in future cases as does the decision of the district court and of this court on such appeal. The decisions of such courts where the decision of the State Engineer is appealed to them are not merely the decisions of an administrative or executive officer or body, they are the adjudications of courts acting as such, they become the law of the case, are res judicata, and are binding precedent on the law the same as other decisions by such courts on other matters. This is obviously true notwithstanding some language used in previous cases which may suggest a holding to the contrary. Such suggested holdings to the contrary were at most mere dicta, for such holdings were not necessary to sustain the decision [240]*240of those cases.6 There is no basis for any contention that the decisions of these courts on an appeal from the State Engineer’s decision do not have the same effect as an adjudication of the issues involved as do the decisions of such courts under similar circumstances in other matters.

However, we must not lose sight of the fact that there are a number of reasons why some questions which are considered by the courts in cases on an appeal from the engineer’s decision are not necessarily adjudicated by the courts’ decisions in such cases.

One such issue which cannot be adjudicated on such an appeal is the extent or priority of rights which the applicant hopes to acquire under such application. This for the obvious reason that an adjudication of such rights is premature for no cause of action for the adjudication of such rights can accrue at that time.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Terry Hall v. Bpm Lumber, LLC
Kentucky Supreme Court, 2024
Rocky Ford v. Kents Lake
2020 UT 47 (Utah Supreme Court, 2020)
Western Water, LLC v. Olds
2008 UT 18 (Utah Supreme Court, 2008)
In Re Gen. Determination of Rights of Water
2004 UT 67 (Utah Supreme Court, 2004)
Green River Canal Co. v. Thayn
2003 UT 50 (Utah Supreme Court, 2003)
S & G, INC. v. Morgan
797 P.2d 1085 (Utah Supreme Court, 1990)
Crafts v. Hansen
667 P.2d 1068 (Utah Supreme Court, 1983)
Reimann v. Richards
363 P.2d 499 (Utah Supreme Court, 1961)
Shields v. Dry Creek Irrigation Company
363 P.2d 82 (Utah Supreme Court, 1961)
EAST BENCH IRRIGATION COMPANY v. State
300 P.2d 603 (Utah Supreme Court, 1956)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
300 P.2d 603, 5 Utah 2d 235, 1956 Utah LEXIS 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/east-bench-irrigation-company-v-state-utah-1956.