Logan, Hyde Park & Smithfield Canal Co. v. Logan City

269 P. 776, 72 Utah 221, 1928 Utah LEXIS 18
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 4, 1928
DocketNo. 4556.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 269 P. 776 (Logan, Hyde Park & Smithfield Canal Co. v. Logan City) 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
Logan, Hyde Park & Smithfield Canal Co. v. Logan City, 269 P. 776, 72 Utah 221, 1928 Utah LEXIS 18 (Utah 1928).

Opinion

CHERRY, J.

This is an appeal by Logan City, etc., from a decree confirming the several titles of the plaintiffs and the cross-defendant, Utah Power & Light Company, to the use of certain waters of Logan river, in Cache county, and enjoining the defendants Logan City and its officers from interfering with or disturbing the exercise of such rights by fluctuating or causing a variation in the natural flow of the water of the river.

The plaintiffs and the cross-defendant, whose claims and interests herein are similar, are severally the owners of extensive rights to the use of the waters of Logan river for irrigation and power purposes. Eleven of the plaintiffs are mutual irrigation companies, who represent and distribute water for irrigation to numerous stockholders. Their rights are exercised by direct diversions of water at numerous *224 places from the river, and the waters thus diverted are thereafter subdivided and apportioned by means of canals, ditches, gates, measuring devices, etc., to and among the numerous persons by whom it is used. Their systems and methods of diversions and distribution are such that any frequent substantial variation or fluctuation of the flow of water in the river results in serious injury and damage to them, because such fluctuation disturbs and makes impractical the proper diversion and apportionment of the water between the plaintiffs themselves, and between the numerous persons to whom the water is distributed by them for use. Several of the plaintiffs and the cross-defendant have rights to divert and use water from the river for generating power. Their diverting works and plants are so situated that frequent fluctuations in the flow of water in the river very seriously interfere with and disturb them in the exercise of their rights.

The defendant Logan City owns and operates an electric power plant, situated on the river some distance upstream from the points of diversion of the plaintiffs and the cross-defendant. There the waters of the river are diverted and used by the city for generating power, and returned to the river above any point of diversion of the plaintiffs or the cross-defendant. There is and can be no objection on the part of plaintiffs and the cross-defendant to such use by the city, except so far as the manner of use materially impedes and varies the natural flow of the water in the river, and interferes with the exercise of the rights of the plaintiffs and cross-defendant. It was alleged and proved, and found by the court as a fact, that the city had installed and was using in its power plant a device called an automatic governor, the purpose and effect of which was to regulate the quantity of water passing through a pipe line to its works, and accommodate the same to correspond from time to time with the demands upon the plant for electrical power. The diverting works of the city consists of a dam across the river, above which the water is impounded. A *225 pipe line from the dam conducts the water to the city power plant. When the water impounded is high enough to overflow the dam, the variation in the quantity of water used by the city does not fluctuate the flow of water in the river below, because a lessening of the quantity taken through the pipe line would automatically increase to the same extent the quantity flowing over the dam and down the river.

There are times, however, especially during the irrigating season, when the water in the river does not overflow the city’s dam. Then the whole volume of the river must flow through the city’s pipe line and power plant, or be impounded above its dam. It is during such times that the grievances complained of occur. At such times the operation of the automatic governor at the city’s plant results in a frequent and substantial impediment and fluctuation of the flow of water in the river, “varying in each 24 hours,” as the court found, “from one cubic foot per second to fifteen cubic feet per second, and that said fluctuation occurs at irregular intervals, causing at times a diminution in the natural flow, and at other times an increase over the natural flow, of said stream at the respective points of diversion of the plaintiffs and cross-defendant.”

The acts of the city in thus fluctuating the natural flow of the river were by the court held wrongful and materially injurious and prejudicial to the rights of the plaintiffs and the cross-defendant, and to prevent a continuance thereof an injunction was granted. The decree confirms certain rights of the plaintiffs and cross-defendant to the use of the waters of the river for irrigation and power purposes, and adjudges that whatever right the defendant Logan City has to impound, divert, and use the waters of Logan river for power purposes is subsequent, inferior, and subordinate, to the rights of the several plaintiffs and the cross-defendant, and the city, its officers, agents, etc., are perpetually enjoined from so operating its diverting works and power plant as to impound, obstruct, or impede in any manner the free and natural flow of the waters of the river *226 to which the several plaintiffs and cross-defendant are entitled, respectively, at their several points of diversion.

At the trial the main subject of controversy was the superiority or priority of rights to the use of the waters of the river as between the opposing sides, each of whom asserted rights paramount to the other. Presumably this was upon the theory that, if Logan City had the prior and superior right to its use of the water for generating power, it could, in connection with the exercise of its right, fluctuate the natural flow of the waters of the river in the manner complained of, without legal consequence to the rights of those who diverted water at lower points on the stream. Whether or not a prior right to the use of water for the purposes mentioned would include the right to fluctuate the flow of water in the river to the extent complained of is a question which we need not and do not here decide. It is enough to say that a junior appropriator has no such right. The trial court found upon the evidence that the righs of the lower appropriators were prior and superior to the rights of the city. If that finding is correct, the city is precluded from asserting a right to fluctuate the flow of the river by reason of priority of right.

The principal contention of appellants is that the trial court erroneously decided this question. There was pleaded by the plaintiffs and cross-defendant, and introduced in evidence, the record of a former judgment and decree of the district court of Cache county, dated February 21, 1922, entered in an action in which the plaintiffs and the cross-defendant in the present action and Logan City were all parties. The pleadings in the action showed that the action was brought for the purpose of determining, confirming, and quieting the titles of the parties thereto to the use of the waters of Logan river. Logan City was a party defendant, and was required to set up any adverse claim it had to the rights asserted by the other parties to the action. It filed an answer, setting up and claiming a right to 10 second feet of water for culinary, domestic, and municipal *227

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Bluebook (online)
269 P. 776, 72 Utah 221, 1928 Utah LEXIS 18, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/logan-hyde-park-smithfield-canal-co-v-logan-city-utah-1928.