Fenstermaker v. Jorgensen

178 P. 760, 53 Utah 325, 1919 Utah LEXIS 11
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1919
DocketNo. 3129
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 178 P. 760 (Fenstermaker v. Jorgensen) 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
Fenstermaker v. Jorgensen, 178 P. 760, 53 Utah 325, 1919 Utah LEXIS 11 (Utah 1919).

Opinion

FBICK, J.

The plaintiff commenced this action against the defendant's to qniet the title to certain water, and to enjoin the defendants from using the same and interfering therewith. The defendants denied plaintiff’s claims to the water in question, and as a counterclaim, alleged that they were the owners of a large portion of the water in question. It is not necessary to set forth the pleadings.

The evidence produced at the trial is very voluminous, covering nearly 750 typewritten pages of legal cap, all of which we have carefully read. In view of the great mass of evidence, therefore, we cannot set it forth in this opinion even in condensed form. We shall, therefore, do no more than to state the controlling facts in the course of the opinion.

The case in some of its aspects is unique in that neither the plaintiff nor the defendants, nor the predecessors in interest of either, have based or now base the right to the use of the water in question otherwise than by having used the same for useful and beneficial purposes; that is, no formal appropriation, as since that time has been usual and customary, was ever made.

The plaintiff claims, and he produced much evidence tending to support his claim, that his predecessors in interest, through whom he claims, obtained a prior right in the year 1895, to the use of the water in question to irrigate the land which he owns and upon which he lives; that he succeeded to the rights of his predecessors by purchase in the year 1900, and that said water, during all of the several years since 1895, has been used on the land aforesaid for irrigation and domestic purposes. We remark that while, as hereinbefore stated, the defendants ’ land lies near the head of the stream, yet they do not claim all of the water which reaches the plaintiff’s land lower down the stream. This is due to the fact that [328]*328several springs arise between defendants’ land above and plaintiff’s land below, the water of which reaches plaintiff’s land and is used by him. The defendants, however, claim all of the water which, flows in the stream flowing over their land the source of which is above the springs aforesaid. Their claim is also based upon the alleged actual use by their predecessors in interest to whose rights they succeeded in 1910. They contend that the water claimed by them was used prior to the time that plaintiff’s predecessors applied it to a beneficial use. The evidence is undisputed that plaintiff’s land is arid and unproductive without irrigation, and that it lies about 314 miles westerly from the westerly end line of defendants’ land, which extends a considerable distance easterly. The plaintiff’s land is situated at the mouth.of a narrow canyon, while defendants’ land is up the canyon on higher ground and in what may be termed a basin, in which, however, the ground is hilly and broken. The evidence is not very clear upon the point, but it seems that defendants’ land is perhaps 500 feet higher in elevation than plaintiff’s land. Some is perhaps much higher than that. There is a small stream called Meadow creek which flows through the canyon in question. This creek in passing over defendants’ land is divided into several branches, which, however, unite immediately west of their land and about 3% miles east of plaintiff’s land. The water in question is produced from melting snows which fall during the winter season upon the mountains and hills which lie in the vicinity and to the east of plaintiff’s and defendants ’ lands. The quantity of the flow in Meadow creek varies from year to year in accordance with the amount of precipitation, but, according to the evidence, the flow ordinarily does not exceed a second foot of water, even in what is called the high-water season, which, the record shows, occurs during April and to the middle of May, and, in some years, perhaps a little later than that. After the 1st of June the flow diminishes, and during a portion of the year there is but little water in the stream. Indeed, there is evidence to the effect that at times in the low-water season the water which flows in the creek and which comes from defendants’ land and [329]*329to the east thereof does not reach plaintiff’s land below. We shall refer to this phase of the case again later.

While defendants’ counsel have assigned a number of errors which relate to the rulings of the court during the trial, yet. for the reasons hereinafter stated, there are really no questions of law involved on this appeal. The real controversy arises with respect to questions of fact.

The findings of fact go into great detail and are too long to be set forth in this opinion. It must suffice to say that the court in effect found the issues in favor of the plaintiff and adjudged him to be entitled to all the water of Meadow creek, with the exception that the defendants are permitted to use the water flowing in said creek as it passes through or over their land for a period of twenty-four hours in each week. The court, however, required the use of the said water upon particular parcels of land which are described in the decree and which amount to 24.79 acres. Defendants complain of that portion of the findings and decree; and contend that the findings are not supported by the evidence. While the evidence relating to the quantity of land upon which the defendants’ predecessors in interest used water and the time when the same was first used is conflicting, yet there is no doubt that the predecessors of the defendants and through whom they claim did use a portion of the water to irrigate some meadow land at a time prior to the time when plaintiff’s predecessors commenced the use of the water on his land lying at the mouth of the canyon below defendants ’ land. The evidence is, however, to the effect that the defendants’ land which lies on both sides of Meadow creek is not adapted for general farming, but that some of it is adapted for pasture and the production of hay for which, purpose it has been used for many years. The evidence also shows that small quantities of grain have been raised on defendants’ land, and that at least a portion of .the water at different times has been used by de-' fendants’ predecessors in interest to irrigate some land bordering on said creek for the purpose of producing hay, a quantity of which was produced on said land each year since the 80’s. There is a dispute, however, respecting the quantity of water that was used for that purpose, and the amount of [330]*330land upon which the same was used, and the time when it was first used thereon. The evidence is, however, clear that plaintiff’s predecessors did not commence the use of water on his land until the spring of 1895, while it is equally clear that at least some of the water in question was used by defendants’ predecessors on their land for the purposes aforesaid prior to that time. As before stated, the evidence is undisputed that a portion of the water which is claimed by plaintiff and which has been used by him comes from springs which are below defendants’ land and hence that portion of the water has never been used by them. Then again, the evidence is clearly to the effect that the water which flows over defendants’ land and which finds its way into the different- branches of Meadow creek and finally into the main branch of that stream if no! interfered with will, except in rare instances hereinafter to be noticed, flow down and reach, plaintiff’s land, which, as before stated, is used for general farming purposes.

There are some facts in this case which are clearly established.

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Bluebook (online)
178 P. 760, 53 Utah 325, 1919 Utah LEXIS 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fenstermaker-v-jorgensen-utah-1919.