Horse Creek Conservation District v. Lincoln Land Co.

92 P.2d 572, 54 Wyo. 320, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 22
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1939
Docket2093
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 92 P.2d 572 (Horse Creek Conservation District v. Lincoln Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Horse Creek Conservation District v. Lincoln Land Co., 92 P.2d 572, 54 Wyo. 320, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 22 (Wyo. 1939).

Opinion

*327 Riner, Chief Justice.

So far as appellate procedure is concerned, this cause is here pursuant to the provisions of Section 89-4910, W. R. S. 1931, a portion of the law governing direct appeals to this court for the purpose of obtaining the review of an order of the district court of Goshen County granting a new trial. The appellant, Lincoln Land Company, will be generally hereinafter referred to as the “defendant” or the “Land Company,” and the respondent, Horse Creek Conservation District, as the “plaintiff” or the “District.” While other facts appearing in the record will be mentioned in connection with the discussion of the several questions involved, a brief history of the litigation and the facts material to be considered are as follows:

The proceeding was initiated on April 10, 1933, by the District in accordance with the procedural steps required by Sections 122-422 to and including Section 122-427, W. R. S. 1931, in order to invoke the operation of that part of Section 122-421 reading:

“and in case the owner or owners of any such ditch, canal or reservoir shall fail to use the water therefrom for irrigation or other beneficial purposes during any 'five successive years, they shall be considered as having abandoned the same, and shall forfeit all water rights, easements and privileges, appurtenant thereto, and the water formerly appropriated by them may be again appropriated for irrigation and other beneficial purposes, the same as if such ditch, canal or reservoir had never been constructed.”

*328 In other words, it originated as a proceeding before the State Board of Control to secure a declaration of forfeiture of an appropriation of the waters of Horse Creek, in Goshen County, Wyoming, made by the predecessors in interest of the defendant and adjudicated under date of June 12, 1888, by a decree of the territorial district court of Laramie County when that subdivision of the state included what is now Goshen County, Wyoming. .This appropriation of water thus adjudicated was for 45.48 cubic feet of water per second of time for the irrigation of 4500 acres of land, with a priority number of “52” and a priority date of September, 1884.

Subsequent to a hearing conducted by the Board of Control, as provided by law, at which the parties interested submitted evidence, that body, under date of April 20, 1934, entered its order declaring the water rights aforesaid, adjudicated as above described to the predecessor in interest of the Land Company, abandoned. Thereafter such proceedings were had — including an appeal from another order of the district court of Goshen County made in the course of the litigation, sustaining objections to its jurisdiction of the matter, Horse Creek Conservation District v. Lincoln Land Company, 50 Wyo. 229, 59 P. (2d) 763,—that pleadings were filed in the district court above mentioned to try the issue whether said water rights had in fact been abandoned. Trial was had to the court without a jury, and on April 22, 1938, there was filed in that court its form of “Findings and Decree” duly entered on that date, wherein it was adjudged that the aforesaid order of the Board of Control was reversed and vacated, the prayer of plaintiff’s petition for forfeiture of the water rights involved was denied and the petition dismissed with prejudice, and in substance that the Land Company was the owner of and had the right to use the water rights above described.

*329 The District in due time served and filed a notice of appeal from this decree, a record on appeal to this court, and on June 1, 1938, its specifications of error. June 2nd following, the district judge of the County aforesaid was notified of the filing of these specifications of error, and under date of June 20,1938, entered his order granting a “new trial of the issues in said cause.” This order assigned no specific reasons for the court’s action in this respect. It is from this order that the present appeal was taken by the defendant. The Land Company on the same day that it served and filed its notice of appeal from the order aforesaid, to-wit, June 28, 1938, filed also its specifications of error relating thereto, asserting, first, that the court had no jurisdiction at the time to make such an order “for the reason that the Clerk of this Court had notified the Judge thereof before whom this action was tried in writing on the 2nd day of June, 1938, that the record on appeal in this cause was perfected and on file in her office and more than fifteen days had elapsed after said Judge received said notice before he made and entered the order appealed from, to-wit: a period of eighteen days”; second, that the record on appeal failed to “show any grounds that would justify the granting of an order for a new trial of said cause”; and, third, that the court erred in granting a new trial.

At this point it is well to recall that Section 122-427, supra, requires that in cases of this character the issue tried by the district court “shall be whether or not such water rights have in fact been abandoned.” Referring to plaintiff’s petition we find it is therein averred that it is the owner of water rights “authorizing it to divert and take for beneficial use the waters of Horse Creek,” under some six permits, with priorities of date May 25, 1908, July 18, 1908, October 13, 1913, and July 16, 1920, respectively; and concerning the charge of abandonment of the water right of the defendant, it is *330 pleaded that “at the time when plaintiff filed its application for its permits hereinabove set forth and for more than thirty-five years prior thereto, the defendant had not used or attempted to use under said water right any of the available quantity of water flowing in the channel of Horse Creek; that said water right had been prior to the filing of plaintiff’s application for a legal declaration of the abandonment of said water right, long since lost and forfeited by nonuser during a period of many years and for more than five years immediately prior to the filing by plaintiff of its applications for said permits and ever since hitherto up to and including the time that plaintiff’s petition was filed with the State Board of Control to obtain a legal declaration of abandonment of said water right”; and also that “the defendant has not for more than thirty-five years last past, maintained any ditch, canal, diversion works and/or laterals whereby water could be diverted during any of said period of time from Horse Creek and be conveyed therefrom and to any of the lands of the defendant, Lincoln Land Company, claimed to have been irrigated with water diverted under said water right; that no crops have been raised upon said lands by reason of any irrigation thereof and that the said lands remain at this time and have during said period of more than thirty-five years last past in the same condition they were in prior to September 18th, 1884.” These allegations of plaintiff’s petition were denied by the answer filed on behalf of the defendant.

The decree of the district court mentioned above as entered on April 22, 1938, made certain findings of fact, among which were the following:

“4. That there have been adjudicated rights to take and appropriate waters out of Horse Creek with dates of priority earlier than the appropriation of the Defendant for 411.81 second feet of water.”

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Bluebook (online)
92 P.2d 572, 54 Wyo. 320, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 22, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horse-creek-conservation-district-v-lincoln-land-co-wyo-1939.