Gila Water Co. v. Gila Land & Cattle Co.

249 P. 751, 30 Ariz. 569, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 269
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 5, 1926
DocketCivil No. 2495.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 249 P. 751 (Gila Water Co. v. Gila Land & Cattle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gila Water Co. v. Gila Land & Cattle Co., 249 P. 751, 30 Ariz. 569, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 269 (Ark. 1926).

Opinion

*571 ROSS, J.

The appellee Gila Land & Cattle Company, hereinafter called the plaintiff, brought this action against the appellants Gila Water Company and F. A. Gillespie, its president, hereinafter called defendants, to recover damages alleged to have been suffered by reason of the defendants’ wilful, unlawful and wrongful acts in depriving plaintiff of the use, during the growing season of June, July, August and September, 1924, of irrigating water, to which plaintiff was entitled by virtue of a decree of the superior court of Maricopa county, rendered in 1922, in an action between the corporation parties.

It was alleged in the complaint that the defendant Gillespie owned a majority of the outstanding stock of defendant company; was a member of its board of directors and its president; and, as such, personally directed or dictated the wilful, unlawful and wrongful diversion of plaintiff’s irrigating water. It is further alleged that defendants’ acts were in utter disregard of plaintiff’s rights.

The defendant Gila Water Company in its separate answer admitted that a court decree theretofore made and entered had established the plaintiff’s prior and superior right to twelve cubic feet flow per second of the normal flow of the waters of the Gila River, or so much thereof as was necessary for the proper irrigation of plaintiff’s lands under reasonably efficient means for diversion and carriage. It admitted it took all of the normal flow in river from July 1st, but alleged it was under a permission or authority from plaintiff’s officers; denied it diverted during the season “any water which the plaintiff was entitled to have, receive, or divert from said Gila River at plaintiff’s point of diversion.”

Defendant Gillespie’s answer was a general denial.

The case was tried with a jury, whose verdict was in favor of plaintiff and against both defend *572 ants for $24,450 actual damages, and $5,000 punitive damages, upon which judgment was duly entered.

The appeal is from the order refusing a new trial and from the judgment.

The main controversy at the trial was as to whether the defendants had violated the decree of 1922. It is true defendant Gillespie’s general denial put in issue plaintiff’s rights as settled by the decree, but upon the trial neither defendant questioned the finality and conclusiveness of plaintiff’s prior and superior right to the quantity of water decreed to it providing it was necessary to the proper cultivation of plaintiff’s land, but concentrated their whole effort in an endeavor to show that the normal flow at their dam did not amount to twelve cubic feet per second, or, if at any time it did, it was permitted' to pass their dam. It was in evidence that very much more than twelve cubic feet flow per second reached defendants’ dam during all the times in question, but defendants claimed, and undertook to show, that this water was not of the normal flow of the river, but was water they had developed by their subsurface dam or had bought from the Salt River Valley Water Users’ Association, delivered at points along the Salt and Gila Rivers, many miles above defendants’ land, and conveyed to it in the natural beds of such rivers. The. question as to whether the water that reached defendants’ dam was of the normal flow, and the percentage thereof, was the subject of much testimony, expert and nonexpert, and the conflicts therein were resolved by the jury in their verdict in favor of plaintiff’s contention that twelve cubic feet flow per second, or more of it, was of the normal flow, and this verdict, as we have uniformly held, is binding upon the court. There appears to have been no contention on the trial that plaintiff did not need *573 the water for the irrigation, of its land, nor that it obtained it.

The only remaining questions on the merits are those concerning the damages and the responsible party therefor. Before taking up these questions, however, we will consider the defendants’ assignments based upon the admission and rejection of evidence, the instructions given and refused. The defendant Gila Water Company has made in its brief twenty-five, and defendant Gillespie in his brief thirty-one, assignments. They are largely the same, and what we shall say applies generally as well to one as to the other.

Fifteen of the assigned errors, 8 to 22, inclusive, are directed to the admission of evidence over objection or refusal to strike on defendants’ motion, or the rejection of evidence offered by defendants. The defendants have not argued these separately, but as groups or classes, nor have they pointed out, except in a general way, why evidence objected to was improperly admitted or that offered improperly rejected. For instance, in assignment No. 8, the witness was permitted to give his opinion as to the number of cuttings of alfalfa, if water had been applied the latter part of June, and also the yield per cutting. Just why the admission of this testimony was error we are not told. We can infer from what is said about like testimony of another witness that defendants’ contention is that plaintiff’s damages under the law where the crop is a perennial, such as alfalfa, are limited to the value of one cutting, the one growing when the water is stopped. We are cited to no authority for such a proposition, and do not believe any exists.

Testimony as to the rental value of some of plaintiff’s lands is made the subject of assignments, on the ground that witnesses were not qualified. We think the evidence was sufficient to permit their *574 testimony; they having testified to being acquainted with such lands and with the prevailing rental value in the Salt Eiver Valley of lands of similar character. The preliminary question of their competency was for the trial court.

Error is assigned upon the court’s excluding evidence of the condition of the Gila Eiver at times prior to 1924. But the defendants did not advise the court at the time of offering this evidence the purpose for which it was tendered, or how it could affect the question, of the condition of the river during 1924. If the purpose was to show that in previous years, no drier than 1924, there had been little normal flow in the river at defendants’ dam, it probably should have been admitted, but, as that question was fairly understood and developed in the course of the trial, the exclusion of the offer could hardly have prejudiced the defendants.

Prom what we ffiave heretofore said, it is apparent the refusal of the court to instruct a verdict for defendants was not error. The instructions asked by defendants and refused by the court were either erroneous or fully covered by the instructions given to the jury. Of the former kind is one to the effect that defendants were under no obligation to let the normal flow of the river pass their dam, if it would not flow to plaintiff’s dam and be available for use “on its lands up to and including the amount of twelve second feet.” This, of course, is unsound; the decree adjudging plaintiff’s rights being “that whenever the normal flow of said river at defendants’ dam is less than twelve second-feet the defendant shall not be required to permit any water to pass over its dam.”

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Bluebook (online)
249 P. 751, 30 Ariz. 569, 1926 Ariz. LEXIS 269, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gila-water-co-v-gila-land-cattle-co-ariz-1926.