Jackson v. SPANISH FORK WEST FIELD IRRIGATION CO.

223 P.2d 827, 119 Utah 19, 1950 Utah LEXIS 204
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 9, 1950
Docket7450
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 223 P.2d 827 (Jackson v. SPANISH FORK WEST FIELD IRRIGATION CO.) 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
Jackson v. SPANISH FORK WEST FIELD IRRIGATION CO., 223 P.2d 827, 119 Utah 19, 1950 Utah LEXIS 204 (Utah 1950).

Opinions

PRATT, Chief Justice.

The plaintiff commenced this action to quiet title in himself to one cubic foot per second continuous flow, of the waters of Thistle Creek, a tributary of Spanish Fork River, and for damages for the interference with his use thereof during a part of the 1948 irrigation season.

The plaintiff is a resident of Spanish Fork Canyon, in the area called Clinton or Birdseye, and claims the right to the use of 1 c. f. s. for the irrigation of 19 acres of farm land, for culinary, and for stock watering purposes. The right is claimed to have arisen by adverse user of the water over the requisite seven year period, and before 1939 when statutory enactments»precluded this method of initiation of water rights.

The period of continuous use claimed by the plaintiff was begun as early as 1891, by his predecessors in interest in the land. In 1899, an adjudication was had as to the rights of the residents of Spanish Fork Canyon and those further down in the valley, which culminated in a decree called the McCarty Decree. This decree fixed the rights of all parties on the stream, including those of plaintiff’s remote grantor. However, it is contended that after the 1899 decree, the predecessors in interest of the plaintiff continued to use the 1 c. f. s. as before, and that this adverse user ripened into a perfected right.

The 19 acres owned by William D. Jackson is near the mouth of Spanish Fork Canyon, on Thistle Creek. This land is of a highly porous nature, composed for the most part of sandy loam. Jackson owns other land in the area [21]*21as well. He has 35 acres feet of water rights in Strawberry-Reservoir and has 20 acres of secondary rights in Thistle Creek, the latter under the McCarty Decree. Jackson’s diversion point from Thistle Creek is the last one in the canyon. That is, all other residents of the canyon area have their diversion points further up the stream than does he for this 19 plus acres of land, although in point of location some of the users are actually further down the canyon than he.

Under the McCarty Decree, the “canyon people” so-called, were allowed substantially all the water they needed, so long as the flow of the Spanish Fork River remained above 344.5 c. f. s. at a point measured below the mouth of the canyon. This is generally during the early spring high water season. After the flow recedes below this point, but above 253.5 c. f. s. they were allowed 2% of the flow, and between 253.5 and 118.4, they were entitled to 1% of the flow of Thistle Creek and its tributaries. These rights were all secondary and tertiary rights, and after the flow receded below 118.4 c. f. s., only 30 acres of primary rights existed in the canyon people, and are not material to this inquiry. The McCarty Decree provided in its terms for weir measurements, but for convenience in measuring on the part of all concerned, these weir measurements have been converted to second feet, and the figures are not in dispute. The water to which the canyon people are entitled is also apportioned among the canyon users, by the decree.

The Strawberry Reservoir Project provides irrigation water for much of the south end of Utah County, but is so situated that while the lower users of the Spanish Fork River can utilize this water, the people in Spanish Fork Canyon cannot. Accordingly, an agreement was entered into by and between the property owners in Spanish Fork Canyon, and the Irrigation Companies representing the [22]*22lower users of the Spanish Fork River, whereby the canyon users might purchase Strawberry Reservoir water from the Federal Government, and exchange it for the waters of Thistle Creek and its tributaries. In this way the canyon people would use water direct from Thistle Creek and its tributaries which actually belonged to the lower users, and the lower users would use the Strawberry water purchased by the canyon people. The procedure then was that the canyon people when they desired to use water, would, through the water master, notify the Strawberry Reservoir Water Users Association, who would turn the desired amount into the Spanish Fork River to replace the water which the canyon people would withdraw from Thistle Creek. The amount so released from Strawberry Reservoir, would then be deducted from the acre feet subscribed by the individual property owners in the canyon. When canyon users were not using the waters of Thistle Creek on this exchange basis the waters of that creek flowed on into the Spanish Fork River and were used by the lower users pursuant to their appropriations. The canyon users were also allowed to let their secondary and tertiary rights accumulate by letting the lower users receive all the waters of Thistle Creek, and then they would receive a corresponding credit and use their secondary and tertiary water rights in consolidated turns. Thus, when Strawberry Reservoir water is referred to herein as being used by the canyon people, the reference is to waters of Thistle Creek used by the canyon people and replaced for the lower users by having Strawberry Reservoir water released to them and charged against his subscription therein. The right to the use of the 1 c. f. s. according to testimony for plaintiff was perfected prior to the existence of rights in Strawberry Project on the part of his predecessors in interest, and before any exchange contract with the lower users had ever been made.

According to Jackson, the 1 c. f. s. was allowed to flow [23]*23onto the land continuously through what is known presently as the Jackson West Ditch. This ditch serves no other land or water user. Jackson rotates the water from field to field, to sustain his crops growing on the 19 plus acres, and uses it for stock watering. These were the same uses as those to which the 1 c. f. s. was put by his predecessors in interest. In addition, he has a well near his house, from which his family secures culinary water, which well is fed by percolating water from the irrigation of an adjoining field. This well was used for the same purpose by his predecessors in interest. When the field adjoining the house is not irrigated every four days, the well recedes rapidly to a point where it cannot be pumped for culinary use, and the water becomes discolored and carries bad odors and tastes, and is unfit for human consumption.

During the irrigation season of 1948, the water master at the instance of the defendants herein, shut off the water flowing in the Jackson West Ditch, through which Jackson took the 1 c. f. s-. stream, and refused to let him have water except as he had the right to water under the McCarty Decree, or Strawberry Reservoir water. In consequence, plaintiff complains that the hay growing on the 19 acres failed to mature, in fact burned brown, and the land was also ruined for pasture, and for this he asks damages. A temporary restraining order against the defendants allowed plaintiff the use of the water after August 19, 1948.

It is contended by the appellants that the evidence does not support the determination of the lower court that plaintiff and his predecessors in interest have acquired title to 1 c. f. s. by adverse user for a period of seven years. As to the necessary requirements for so initiating a right see Wellsville East Field Irrigation Co. et al. v. Lindsay Land & Livestock Co., et al., 104 Utah 448, 137 P. 2d 634, and cases cited and discussed therein. No worth[24]*24while purpose would be served by delineating the evidence in detail. Sufficient to say that plaintiff’s evidence by several witnesses established the adverse use for the requisite length of time.

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Related

Jackson v. SPANISH FORK WEST FIELD IRRIGATION CO.
223 P.2d 827 (Utah Supreme Court, 1950)

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Bluebook (online)
223 P.2d 827, 119 Utah 19, 1950 Utah LEXIS 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jackson-v-spanish-fork-west-field-irrigation-co-utah-1950.