Montezuma Canal Co. v. Smithville Canal Co.

218 U.S. 371, 31 S. Ct. 67, 54 L. Ed. 1074, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 2033
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedNovember 28, 1910
Docket1
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 218 U.S. 371 (Montezuma Canal Co. v. Smithville Canal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Montezuma Canal Co. v. Smithville Canal Co., 218 U.S. 371, 31 S. Ct. 67, 54 L. Ed. 1074, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 2033 (1910).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

The decree of the Supreme Court of the Territory of Arizona (11 Arizona, 99; 89 Pac. Rep. 512), which is appealed from, affirmed a decree of a District Court of the Territory determining the rights of appropriators within the county of Graham to the waters of the Gila River.

In the brief of counsel for the appellee it. is suggested, that the appeal, should be dismissed because the matter in dispute does not exceed the sum of five thousand dollars, and because the appellant has no substantial financial interest in the cause. We think, however, that the record sufficiently shows that the jurisdictional amount is involved, and that the appellant has such interest as entitles it to prosecute the appeal. We shall, therefore, consider , the case upon the merits.

The issues below were made up by an amended complaint, in which the Smithville Canal Company and the Central Canal Company and the water-users under these cánals were plaintiffs, and the Montezuma Canal.Company and other canal companies, as . also the water-users under such canals, were defendants. The general nature of the controversy, is indicated by the character of the *373 decree entered in the District Court , just stated. Incorporated in the answer of the Montezuma Canal Company and its water-users were averments, in the nature óf a cross.bill against the San Jose Irrigatihg Company and the San Jose Extension Canal Company and various other defendants, setting up a former judgment recovered in the District Court of. Graham County by the Montezuma Canal Company as settling between the Montezuma Company and said co-defendants rights in the water of the river. The San Jose Irrigating Company, it is to be remarked, was incorporated in 1892, and in 1904 the San Jóse Extension Canal Company was incorporated, and undertook the management, repair and operation of a part óf the canal previously under the control of the San Jose Irrigating Company.

The trial court made findings of fact and stated conclusions of law thereon, but certified no rulings in respect to the admission or rejection óf evidence. The Supreme Court of the Territory made no express findings of fact, but entered a general judgment of affirmance, manifestly based, upon the correctness of the findings of the trial court. Under such circumstances the findings of the District Court furnish a sufficient statement of the facts for the. purposes of this appeal. Stringfellow v. Cain, 99 U. S. 610. The question for decision, therefore, is whether such findings are sufficient to support the decree. Ib.

We are concerned, however, only with the error assigned-by the Montezuma Canal Company, as that company alone appealed to the Supreme Court of the Territory, and it is the only party to the record now seeking a reversal of the judgment of affirmance entered by the appellate tribunal.

The contentions urged- by the Montezuma Company are twofold: First, that due effect was not given to the prior judgment which it pleaded and which determined its rights in the water of the Gila River as against , the *374 appropriators of water from that river at points above the head of its canal; and, second, that error was committed in the appointment of a so-called water commissioner, charged with the duty of distributing the water among the different canals according to the adjudged priorities. There being then no controversy in respect to the rights to water decreed in favor of the canals situated below the head of the Montezuma Canal Company, the findings in respect to those canals need not be particularly referred to.

Before stating the contents of the decree which was entered in the trial court we make a condensed statement of the facts embodied in the findings upon which the decree w’as based* in order to a comprehension of the controversy arising for determination.

There are 23,728 acres of land in the county of Graham, Territory of Arizona, which are irrigated by water diverted from the Gila River by means of twenty-five ditches or canals. These canals extend from a point in section 29, township 6 south, range 28 east, at first in a southwest- 1 -wardly and then in a northwestwardly direction, to a point forty-one miles distant at the northeast corner of the southeast quarter of section 35,. township 4 south, range 23 east. Commencing with the head of this irrigation system the canals in question, in their order as respects the flow of the waters of the river and the number of acres irrigated by each canal, are as follows: Brown, 100 acres; Sanchez, 400-acres; Mejia, 320 acres; Fourness, 260 acres; San Jose,'3,000 acres; Michelena, 450 acres; Montezuma, 3,750 acres; .Union, 2,900 acres; Sunflower, 400 acres; Graham, 962 acres; Central, 2,675 acres; Oregon, 1,100 acres; Smithville, 1,760 acres; Bryce, 515 acres; Dodge, 450 acres; Nevada, 800 acres; Curtis, 800 acres; Kempton, 850 acres; Reid, 100 acres; Ft. Thomas, 960 acres; Thompson, 240 acres; Military, 400 acres; Saline, 46 acres; Zeckendor'f, 500 acres. The Montezuma Canal *375 was first constructed. The six canals situated above ..the head of that canal weré constructed as follows: The San Jose and the Michelena. in 1874, the Mejia in 1877, the Sanchez in 1883, the Fourness in 1891 and the Brown in 1896. The first canal below the Montezuma is called the Union, and was constructed in 1879. Among other things it was found that the Unión Canal “carries water for one hundred acres that was. reclaimed in 1874 and irrigated by water that was then diverted from the river and carried to the land by the Montezuma Canal. . . ,

Embodied in the “conclusions of law” made by the court is a statement that William Ellsworth and other named individuals “were the persons or successors in. interest to the persons who in 1875 appropriated water for and applied it to the first 300 acres of land” in ceUain named sections, “and who are diverting and carrying water thereto-through the’San Jose Canal. . .

One-hálf of a miner’s inch per acre, was found to be necessary for the irrigation of the lands .served by , the various canals. It was further found that a surface flow of 7,500 miners’ inches in the Gila River at the head of the irrigation system furnished more water than is needed to irrigate the entire acreage shown by the evidence to have been in cultivation-in the year 1904; and it was also found that “there is a'greater flow than this- amount during the larger part of the year, so that the amount of water available for irrigation purposes is more than one-half of a miner’s inch per acre for a greater length of time feach year than the time during which the supply is less than one-half inch peí acre.”

Substantially all .of the canals referred to'are now controlled by incorporated canal companies, respepting whom the trial court fpund as follows:

“The different-incorporated canal companies, who are parties plaintiff arid defendant herein, are djily and regularly incorporated under the laws of this Territory, and *376

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Bluebook (online)
218 U.S. 371, 31 S. Ct. 67, 54 L. Ed. 1074, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 2033, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/montezuma-canal-co-v-smithville-canal-co-scotus-1910.