Gossner v. Utah Power and Light

612 P.2d 337, 1980 Utah LEXIS 947, 1980 WL 579598
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1980
Docket16573, 16592
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 612 P.2d 337 (Gossner v. Utah Power and Light) 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
Gossner v. Utah Power and Light, 612 P.2d 337, 1980 Utah LEXIS 947, 1980 WL 579598 (Utah 1980).

Opinion

HARDING, District Judge:

This is an interlocutory appeal from an order made by the District Court in an action between the parties hereto after a pretrial conference.

The plaintiffs own farm lands along the natural channel of the Bear River in Cache County, Utah, above the reservoir formed by a dam in the river owned by the defendant, Utah Power & Light Company, called the “Cutler Dam.” Subject to certain prior rights, the defendant has the right to divert at the Stewart Dam in Idaho and impound and store in the nearby Bear Lake Reservoir all of the waters of the Bear River to the extent of 5,500 c.f.s., together with the waters naturally flowing into or arising in said reservoir. The storage water is to be released from said reservoir at defendant’s pleasure, through control works and a canal to a junction with the Bear River in the State of Idaho. From this point, the natural channel of the river is used to convey the water to other reservoirs and power generating plants along the river. The plant lowest on the river is the one at Cutler Dam, and the one next above that being at the defendant’s Oneida Dam in Idaho about 25 miles upstream from the Utah-Idaho state line.

To a considerable extent, the defendant can control the volume of water flowing in the natural channel of the Bear River as it courses through the area of the plaintiffs’ farms. Its power plants at Oneida and Cutler can use a maximum of 3,000 c.f.s. in the generation of electricity.

In the fall of 1976, the plaintiffs filed suit against the defendant, Utah Power & Light Company, claiming damages to their crops caused by the flooding of their farm lands along the river. The flooding occurred from releasing more water into the river than it would hold without overflowing onto adjacent lands. The capacity of the river had been gradually reduced over the years by deposits of sediment along its natural channel. Plaintiffs claim that the maximum capacity of the natural channel is now 3,400 c.f.s. We have no information as to its original capacity.

The plaintiffs have proceeded on the theories of absolute liability, or of the negligence of the defendant, in not controlling *339 the volume of water in the river between the Oneida Dam and the Cutler reservoir to prevent flooding and injury and damage to plaintiffs’ crops.

Defendant, Utah Power & Light Company, claims to exercise its rights of operation of its system of dams and reservoirs on the Bear River pursuant to two judicial decrees, namely, the so-called “Dietrich” and “Kim-ball” decrees. The Kimball decree incorporates by reference the terms of the Dietrich decree. The Dietrich decree was entered in Idaho in 1920, and provided in part as follows:

. Utah Power & Light Company has the right to divert at the Stewart Dam . . . and to impound and store in Bear Lake Reservoir ... all the waters of Bear River to the extent of 5500 cubic feet per second of time, together with the waters naturally flowing into or arising in said lakes, all said water to be stored in said reservoir, and to be thereafter released from said reservoir at the said plaintiff’s pleasure, through the plaintiff’s embankment . . . and thence down the natural channel of Bear River, for use at various points of diversion now existing, or which may hereafter be established by the plaintiff for the generation of electric power. “Power rights” include the right to divert and use water for the generation of electric power, and such rights of diversion and use are continuous throughout the year without limitation to time or season.

The Kimball decree, filed in Utah in 1922, was entered in the case of Utah Power & Light Company v. Richmond Irrigation Company, 1 et al. The plaintiffs in the instant case are successors in interest to the defendants in the Kimball decree and are bound by its terms.

Defendant claims the right under the aforesaid decrees to release its storage water into the Bear River channel at its pleásure any time of the year in a volume of not more than 5,500 c.f.s., without any liability for flooding land adjoining the river channel, or for crop damage resulting from the flooding of the land.

At the pretrial conference, the court made certain orders, the pertinent parts being as follows:

(2) The Court rules as a matter of law that the only liability of the defendant, if any, will be limited to floodings resulting from the filling of the river channel with silt if caused by the erection of the Cutler Dam; and that the defendant will be liable absolutely for damages occasioned thereby. In other words, the tort committed by the Utah Power & Light Company, if any, for which it may be liable to the plaintiffs is the blocking of the channel of the Bear River by silt caused by the erection of the Cutler Dam.
The Court further rules as a matter of law that with regard to the release of waters the standard of care imposed upon the defendant is established by the Kim-ball and Dietrich decrees, and inasmuch as it is stipulated that such releases have never exceeded 5,500 c.f.s. there is no liability of the defendant either in absolute liability, or in negligence because of release of water from the Oneida Dam.
(3) It is ordered that the motion for Summary Judgment by Utah Power & Light Company as against all plaintiffs on the ground that the statute of limitations is a bar to the plaintiffs’ claim be, and hereby is, denied as made. The Court holds as a matter of law that the three year statute of limitations (which is applicable to plaintiffs’ claims) began to run from the date when the channel of the Bear River was filled with silt (caused by the erection of the Cutler Dam) so as to cause flooding of the adjacent farm land of plaintiffs.
(4) It is further ordered that the motion for Summary Judgment dismissing with prejudice the complaint of the plaintiffs Ed Gossner and Josephine Gossner, on the ground that they and their predecessors have heretofore conveyed easements to Utah Power & Light Company be, and hereby is, granted.

*340 The plaintiffs’ appeal from the order is limited to three issues as follows:

(1) The Trial Court’s declared intent to utilize an improper date of commencement of statute of limitations.
(2) Error in the Court’s declared intent to limit evidence of fault and causation in the following respects:
(a) to deny introduction of testimony as to the effect of negligent operation of Oneida Dam, and
(b) ruling that the Kimball and Dietrich decrees permit a discharge of 5,500 c.f.s. when, in fact, the decrees limit the discharge of waters to those which can be contained in the natural channel.
(3) The erroneous dismissal of plaintiffs Edwin Gossner and Josephine Gossner by virtue of flood easements.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
612 P.2d 337, 1980 Utah LEXIS 947, 1980 WL 579598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gossner-v-utah-power-and-light-utah-1980.