Ephraim Willow Creek Irr. Co. v. Olson

258 P. 216, 70 Utah 95, 1927 Utah LEXIS 21
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 1927
DocketNo. 4469.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 258 P. 216 (Ephraim Willow Creek Irr. Co. v. Olson) 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
Ephraim Willow Creek Irr. Co. v. Olson, 258 P. 216, 70 Utah 95, 1927 Utah LEXIS 21 (Utah 1927).

Opinion

THURMAN, C. J.

This action was instituted by plaintiff the Ephraim Willow Irrigation Company and numerous individual plaintiffs to quiet their title to the use of the waters of Willow creek, in Sanpete county, for irrigation, stock-watering, and culinary purposes.

It is alleged in the complaint that the volume of water in said creek is about 90 second feet, and that the greatest volume of flow is generally reached about the 25th day of May of each year, and that sometimes the water reaches a volume of 105 second feet; that at about that time the water begins to recede until about the 15th day of June of each year when the volume of water is only about 30 second feet, all depending upon the quantity of snow in the mountains and the rainfall during the season. The complaint alleges that in 1861 the stockholders of plaintiff corporation and the other plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest, by means of dams and ditches constructed by them, diverted all of the water of said creek for irrigation, culinary, and stock-watering purposes, and that ever since the year 1875 plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest have beneficially and economically used all of said waters except when their use has been unlawfully interfered with by the defendants. It is then alleged in the complaint that the defendants during various years, at various times, have diverted portions of said waters from a tributary of said creek known as the “Manti Mountain stream,” or “Parley’s Canyon stream,” and have prevented the water so diverted by them from reaching the plaintiffs, and that said diversion by said defendants has been wrongful and in violation of plaintiffs’ rights and to their great and irreparable injury. Plaintiffs further allege that defendants threaten *98 to continue to interfere with the rights of plaintiffs, as above stated, and allege upon information and belief that the defendants will, unless restrained and enjoined by decree of court, continue to wrongfully and unlawfully divert said water and interfere with plaintiffs’ rights thereto to their great and irreparable injury. Plaintiffs pray that their rights to said waters be adjudicated, and that it be determined that they are the owners of the right to the use of all of said waters for the purposes aforesaid and that defendants have no right or title thereto, and that they be enjoined and restrained from in any way diverting or using said waters or interfering therewith. Plaintiffs also pray for general relief.

Defendants, answering, admit the description of Willow creek, as alleged in the complaint, and admit that they have diverted a portion of the waters of the said Manti Mountain stream, but deny each and every allegation of the complaint not admitted in their answer. For a further and separate answer defendants allege that they are the owners of the right to the use and entitled to the right to use one-fourth of one second foot of the waters of said Manti Mountain stream for the purpose of watering sheep, cattle, and horses. For a further answer and by way of counterclaim, defendants allege that for more than 40 years they and their predecessors in interest have been the owners of and entitled to the possession of 2,690 acres of grazing land situated in certain sections and townships described in the answer, on what is known as the “East Mountain,” lying east of and between the cities of Manti and Ephraim; that Manti Mountain stream is a natural stream of water arising in the Wasatch Mountains and is a tributary of Willow creek, described in plaintiffs’ complaint. The answer further alleges that the defendants and their predecessors in interest, in the ownership of said lands, for more than 40 years next prior to the commencement of this action, during the months of May, June, July and August of each year, grazed large numbers of cattle, horses, and sheep upon said lands, and for *99 that purpose it was and is necessary to divert from said Manti Mountain stream one-fourth of one second foot of water and run the same down over and upon said lands for the purpose of watering said sheep, cattle, and horses; that in the year 1885 said defendants and their predecessors in interest made a ditch from near the head of said Manti Mountain stream down to what is known as “Pretty Valley” for a distance of about 1% miles; that they completed said ditch in the spring of said year and diverted one-fourth of one second foot of the water of said stream and conducted the same by means of said ditch down to said Pretty Valley, where they impounded the same in a small reservoir for stock-watering purposes. The necessity of said water for said purposes is alleged, and it is further alleged that ever since the spring of 1885 the defendants and their predecessors in interest annually during the spring and summer seasons have continued to divert and use said water in the manner stated for the aforesaid purposes; that said diversion and use of said water has been adverse, open, notorious, peaceable, exclusive, under claim of right as against all the world, and continuous from season to season each and every year, since and including 1885. It is also alleged that said use of said water by said defendants and their predecessors in interest, during all of said time, was well known to plaintiffs and was prior in time of appropriation to the rights of the plaintiffs and began at a time when there was surplus public water in said Manti Mountain stream and in said Willow creek and when said water was subject to appropriation by the use thereof.

Defendants pray that their right to the use of one-fourth of one second foot of the waters of Manti Mountain stream, during the months of May, June, July, and August of each year, be quieted in defendants. Defendants also pray for costs and for general relief.

Plaintiffs, in reply to defendants’ cross-complaint, deny each and every allegation thereof, except as alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint.

*100 It thus appears from the pleadings that plaintiffs claim title to the water rights in question by prior appropriation, and that the defendants claim by prior appropriation and adverse use.

The issues were tried to the court without a jury. The court found in favor of the plaintiffs on the issue of prior appropriation and in favor of defendants on the issue of adverse use. Conclusions of law and decree were entered in accordance with the findings. Plaintiffs moved for a new trial, which was denied by the court. From the judgment entered plaintiffs appeal and assign as error the admission of evidence, over plaintiffs’ objection, certain findings of the court, and the order denying plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial.

Defendants do not challenge the findings of the court as to plaintiffs’ prior appropriation of the water. The only question involved is the defendants’ right by adverse use.

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Bluebook (online)
258 P. 216, 70 Utah 95, 1927 Utah LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ephraim-willow-creek-irr-co-v-olson-utah-1927.