Glenwood Irrigation Co. v. Myers

465 P.2d 1013, 24 Utah 2d 78, 1970 Utah LEXIS 601
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 3, 1970
DocketNo. 11524
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 465 P.2d 1013 (Glenwood Irrigation Co. v. Myers) 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
Glenwood Irrigation Co. v. Myers, 465 P.2d 1013, 24 Utah 2d 78, 1970 Utah LEXIS 601 (Utah 1970).

Opinion

CALLISTER, Justice:

Plaintiff initiated this action to have defendant’s right to divert all of the water of Glenwood Springs for a nonconsumptive power use declared forfeited for nonuse for a period of five years and to enjoin his further diversion thereof. Plaintiff moved for summary judgment, which the trial court granted, and defendant appeals.

In December of 1960, defendant filed an application for extension of time within which to resume use of water with the state engineer. In this verified application defendant stated that the date the water was last used beneficially was 1956.

Section 73-1-4, U.C.A., 1953, provides :

When an appropriator or his successor in interest shall abandon or cease to use water for a period of five years the right shall cease and thereupon such water shall revert to the public, unless before the expiration of such five-year period the appropriator or his successor in interest shall have filed with the state engineer a verified application for an extension of time, not to exceed five years, within which to resume the use of such water and unless pursuant to such application the time within which nonuse may continue is extended by the state engineer as hereinafter provided. * * The filing of such application for extension of time shall extend the time during which nonuse may continue until the order of the state engineer thereon. * *
Such applications for extension shall be granted by the state engineer for periods not exceeding five years each, upon a showing 'of reasonable cause for such nonuse. Financial crisis, industrial depression, operation of legal proceedings or other unavoidable cause, * * shall constitute reasonable cause for such nonuse.

Section 73-1-4 further provides for publication of the application and for protest thereto.

Plaintiff filed a protest to defendant’s application on the grounds that the water [81]*81right had been abandoned or forfeited for nonuse and no longer existed and that the use for power purposes interfered with plaintiff’s rights.

The state engineer, in a memorandum decision, stated that the burden of proof rested upon the one asserting an abandonment or forfeiture of an existing right and that he could only conclude that the right existed as described in the decree.1 In regard to the protestant’s claim of interference with its rights, the state engineer observed that the protest was not the proper subject matter for this type of filing, since the application merely permits the applicant to discontinue use of the water but retain the right for future use. The application was approved on the 11th of February, 1963, and granted applicant an extension of time within which to resume the use of the water to December 30, 196S.

Plaintiff did not pursue the statutory procedure provided in Section 73-3-14, U.C.A., 1953:

In any case where a decision of the state engineer is involved any person aggrieved by such decision may within sixty days after notice thereof bring a civil action in the district court for a plenary review thereof. * * *

Plaintiff waited until January 9, 1968, almost five years after the decision of the state engineer, to file this action to declare defendant’s right forfeited to the public and to enjoin further diversion of the water. Plaintiff to support its claim of forfeiture untimely filed an affidavit of defendant’s immediate predecessor in interest, in which it was sworn that the water was not used for power purposes during the calendar year of 1956 nor for any other purpose from August 1, 1955.2 The trial court cited this affidavit as evidence in its amended decision to support its finding that the appropriator had ceased to use the water for a period of five years, and the right had therefore reverted to the public.

The precise question of forfeiture was put in issue before the state engineer, and plaintiff had available the procedure in Section 73-3-14, U.C.A., 1953, to determine the validity of defendant’s right. An appeal is the only method provided in the statute by which a decision of the state engineer may be reviewed.3

In Shields v. Dry Creek Irr. Co.,4 the state engineer denied plaintiff’s application [82]*82on the ground that there was no unappropriated water unless it was the result of nonuse or abandonment, and he ruled that the question whether water once appropriated had reverted to the public for nonuse or abandonment required a legal determination beyond the jurisdiction of his office. Plaintiff then brought his action as an aggrieved person, as authorized by Section 73-3-14, in the district court to review the state engineer’s decision. This court held that the “trial de novo” provided in Section 73-3-15, comprehended a trial of all pertinent issues to determine whether the party had met his burden of proof.

There are several other factors which militate against the decision of the trial court. The defendant, in reliance on the decision of the state engineer, proceeded to complete the work necessary to resume use. Under the date of August 9, 1968, defendant received a letter from the state engineer stating that the proof of his resumption had been field examined and reviewed; his description of resumed use was found correct, and the proof was accepted as evidence that the use of water under the original right had been resumed. Under these circumstances, plaintiff is now estopped to assert defendant’s forfeiture. This is particularly applicable, since plaintiff did not avail itself of the statutory review and sat idly by while defendant in reliance on the engineer’s decision materially altered his position. This action constitutes a circumvention of the orderly statutory procedure.

The review procedure of Section 73-3-14, U.C.A., 1953, further provides that the state engineer must be joined as a defendant in all suits to review his decision. His participation appears appropriate in this action since Section 73-2-1 confers upon the state engineer full authority to bring suit to enjoin unlawful appropriation and diversion. Plaintiff in this action has attempted to exercise the authority specifically granted to the state engineer, to enjoin an unlawful diversion, which is the consequence if defendant’s right has reverted to the public.

The total effect of plaintiff’s action is to render nugatory the decision of the state engineer without following the procedure provided and without the participation of the state engineer.

Plaintiff in its pleadings asserted that it contemplated improvements in its water system which would reqrtire pipelines and that it would be impossible to administer the system and permit defendant’s claimed use of the water. Plaintiff admitted in its pleadings that defendant returned the water to its natural channel.

In Adams v. Portage Irr. Reservoir & Power Co.,5 this court observed that [83]*83water flowing in natural channels is public, and one cannot obtain exclusive control thereof, although the right to use may he granted as provided by law. Any diversion from the natural channel or interference with the natural free flow effected by the work, labor or art of man may be exercised only in the manner prescribed by law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
465 P.2d 1013, 24 Utah 2d 78, 1970 Utah LEXIS 601, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/glenwood-irrigation-co-v-myers-utah-1970.