Mosher v. Salt River Valley Water Users' Ass'n

209 P. 596, 24 Ariz. 339, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 215
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 17, 1922
DocketCivil No. 1982
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 209 P. 596 (Mosher v. Salt River Valley Water Users' Ass'n) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mosher v. Salt River Valley Water Users' Ass'n, 209 P. 596, 24 Ariz. 339, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 215 (Ark. 1922).

Opinion

FLANIGAN, J.

The Salt River Valley canal extends in a westerly direction through the city of Phoenix. The prescriptive easement and right of way to this canal for the flowage of water for irrigation purposes is owned by the United States, which, by agreement of date September 6, 1917, authorized the appellee, Salt River Valley Water Users’ Association, to care for and operate the canal as a part of the Salt River-Arizona Irrigation project. Appellant is the owner of a tract of land in the Churchill addition to the city of Phoenix, which land extends from the east line of Central Avenue two city blocks easterly to the west line of Second Street. When the canal was first constructed through this area the grounds were unimproved desert land, but with the growth of the city the property has become valuable for business purposes, and appellant is the owner of business buildings thereon fronting on the east line of Central Avenue. These buildings are situated on both sides (north and south) of the canal, a passageway being left on each side between the buildings and the canal. There is also a roof over the canal, at such height, however, as not to interfere with the [341]*341maintenance, operation and cleaning thereof. The right to the easement for the canal was established by a judgment of the United States District Court for Arizona, in a suit between the appellant and her predecessors in interest on the one hand, and certain employees of the United States Reclamation Service and appellee on the other, and the dimensions of the canal where it extends through appellant’s property were fixed by the judgment at fourteen feet in width and four feet in depth.

In 1913 the city of Phoenix, in connection with proceedings of that city for the paving of Central Avenue in this vicinity, constructed a siphon under the avenue in lieu of the ditch then existing. This siphon, according to the finding of the court, was constructed with the knowledge and consent of appellant and her predecessors in interest.

Prior to the filing of the complaint herein, the appellant, without notice to appellee of her intention so to do, began the construction of a wooden platform or flooring over the west half of that portion of the canal on her premises between the east line of Central Avenue and the west line of First Street. This platform was constructed about four feet above the bottom of the canal and consisted of timber joists two inches by eight inches laid upon timbers placed on the sides, or banks, of the ditch, the flooring thereon being of inch boards. The court found that one of the .purposes of appellant in constructing this flooring was to place thereon a building to be used for business purposes. Finding No. 8 sets forth other acts of appellant as a part of the work which brought about this litigation:

‘.‘That a portion of said irrigation ditch through said block 1 of Churchill addition, for more than ten years prior to the filing of the original complaint in this cause, has had earth banks thrown up along the sides of said ditch for the purpose of confining the [342]*342flow of water of said ditch; that prior to the filing of the original complaint in this canse the defendant removed that portion of said earth banks existing above the wooden sideboards pnt in on the south side of said ditch under order of the United States District Court for the District of Arizona [the -litigation referred to above], from the west line of First Street for a distance of approximately fifty feet westerly from said west line of First Street, the amount of earth so removed being a depth of from one and one-half to two feet; that the removal of said earth bank leaves nothing but the wooden inch boards placed along the sides of said canal to confine the flow of water, and that when said canal is being operated to full capacity, and fluctuations in the flow thereof are brought about either by rain or through other causes beyond 'the control of the plaintiff, said canal, on account of the removal of the portion of said bank aforesaid, is likely to overflow at said point, and damage property of the defendant and others in the vicinity thereof.”

Almost immediately after learning that this construction was progressing and of the removal of the earth above the side boards in the ditch as set forth in the finding just quoted, appellee brought this action, praying for a temporary restraining order against further work by appellant, for temporary injunction pending the trial, for judgment commanding the defendant to remove the structure already there, and to replace the earth removed, and for permanent injunction against further interference with the easement rights of the United States in the ditch. The restraining order and temporary injunction were accordingly issued, and upon final hearing judgment was rendered as prayed, the court making findings of fact. The case is before us on appeal from such judgment.

The court found that the United States of America is the owner of the easement or right of way for the canal as an irrigation ditch, and that there is necessarily incident to such easement over the premises of appellant the right to maintain, operate, and clean [343]*343the same; that ever since the original construction of the canal it had existed as an open earth ditch until, under the order of the United States District Court, wooden boards were placed on the sides thereof on the premises of the appellant; and “that the Salt River Valley Water Users’ Association and its predecessors in interest have, ever since said ditch was constructed, exercised the right to operate, maintain, and clean the same as an open ditch.” The court also found:

“That ever since said irrigation ditch has been constructed there has been accustomed to accumulate along the bottom and sides of said ditch earth and debris of various kinds, and that in order to keep said ditch in operating condition so that the same may carry the necessary amount of water for the irrigation- of the lands below the same, it is necessary for the plaintiff to have access to said ditch for the purpose of cleaning^ and repairing the same. That ever since said siphon has been constructed earth and debris of various kinds have been accustomed to accumulate in the said siphon; that by means of racks or screens in the canal above the point in question, and by the removal at times of a check in said canal at a point below said siphon, the greater portion of the debris and foreign material could be eliminated from said siphon and that portion of the ditch affected by this action, but this would not entirely eliminate the necessity of access to said ditch and siphon for the purpose of cleaning and repairing the same.”

There would seem to be no question, as asserted by appellee, that—

“If the easement right that the appellee and its predecessors in right acquired by prescription is broad enough to entitle the appellee to continue the operation of the canal in question in the same manner as it has heretofore been operated, to wit, as an ordinary open earth ditch, the judgment of the lower court was unquestionably correct.”

The finding that appellee and its predecessors in interest have ever since the ditch was constructed ex[344]*344ercised the right to operate, maintain and clean the same as an open ditch is not, of course, to be disregarded.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
209 P. 596, 24 Ariz. 339, 1922 Ariz. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mosher-v-salt-river-valley-water-users-assn-ariz-1922.