North Salt Lake v. ST. JOSEPH WATER AND IRR. CO.

223 P.2d 577, 118 Utah 600, 1950 Utah LEXIS 201
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 18, 1950
Docket7455
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 223 P.2d 577 (North Salt Lake v. ST. JOSEPH WATER AND IRR. 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
North Salt Lake v. ST. JOSEPH WATER AND IRR. CO., 223 P.2d 577, 118 Utah 600, 1950 Utah LEXIS 201 (Utah 1950).

Opinion

LATIMER, Justice.

This suit was instituted in the court below by the town of North Salt Lake to condemn the water rights and water system of the St. Joseph Water and Irrigation Company, a public utility, and a 600 foot pipe line extension belonging to the defendant Lauren W. Gibbs. The plaintiff will be referred to as the town, the St. Joseph Water and Irrigation Company as the water company, and the other parties by their real names. The trial court permitted the town to condemn the system of the water company, but prior to the time the jury returned itsver diet on the. amount of *604 damages the court granted the town’s motion to dismiss as to defendant Lauren W. Gibbs. The jury assessed the damages suffered by water company; that dispute has been settled, and that part of the law suit no longer concerns us. The appeal with which we are concerned is by Lauren W. Gibbs and Dora Squires, C. Y. Robinson and Mary Godbe Gibbs.

St. Joseph Water and Irrigation Company was organized on the 26th day of July, 1910. It was a public service corporation, engaged in the distribution and sale of culinary water. Its lines ran generally through an area known as “North Salt Lake.” This area was located to the west of United States Highway No. 91, just to the north of the Salt Lake-Davis County line.

In the year 1929, a dispute arose between the St. Joseph Water and Irrigation Company and the Odell Water Company as to the territory to be served by each of the companies, particularly with respect to the north and south boundaries. The area served by the Odell Water Company was generally north of that served by the St. Joseph Water and Irrigation Company and that dispute concerned connections made by the Odell Company in the area served by the St. Joseph Company. At that time the Commission fixed the North-South boundary of the area to be served by each, but did not fix the East or West boundary lines. For the purpose of this suit it may be assumed that the Commission made no finding which would prevent the St. Joseph Company from serving users located east of the highway including the property owned by appellants. Prior to 1944 there had been little development in that territory and the water company had serviced mostly people who resided west of the roadway. Toward the south end of the area and adjacent to the main line of the water system, the water company had maintained a few service connections. Until the appellant Gibbs started to *605 subdivide and sell the Gibbs family property, water had not been distributed by the company in that limited area.

In the year 1944, control of the water company passed •from the early owners as the stock was purchased by Ward Holbrook and members of the Gibbs family. This latter family had for many years owned a large tract of land lying east of the highway but at the time of the purchase of the water company stock it appeared on the official records as being owned by the Charles W. Gibbs Company. Charles W. Gibbs, a brother of Lauren W. Gibbs, was an officer, stockholder and director of the company bearing his name, and upon purchase of the stock in the water company he became secretary of that company. After the Gibbs family acquired an interest in the water company, Lauren W. Gibbs commenced negotiations for subdividing the tract of land standing in the name of the Charles W. Gibbs Company. The negotiations were evidence by a letter written by Lauren to his brother, Charles, outlining the oral agreement which had been discussed. This letter was dated August 4, 1945, and its principal provisions were that Lauren was to buy approximately 100 acres of the property below the upper canal; that he was to form a subdivision; that he was to pay a purchase price of $500 per acre; and that title to the property purchased was to be taken in the name of his wife, Mary Godbe Gibbs.

On December 14, 1945, the directors of the water company passed a resolution permitting Lauren Gibbs to connect on to the system and to construct an extension line running easterly from the connection to the proposed subdivision. The company was to acquire the system under a plan of repayment by money received from the sale of water. That part of the resolution dealing with the cost of construction and the method of repayment is couched in the following language:

“With the understanding that work- be done by Mr. Gibbs and that the cost of the labor and material be paid for by Lauren W. Gibbs with the *606 understanding that the said Lauren W. Gibbs be refunded all accounts collected for water service and water connections during the period of five years from the time of completion of the extension in accordance with the conditions of paragraph 11 of the rules and regulations.”

On that same date Lauren made application to the water company for connections to sixty homes which he contemplated constructing in the proposed subdivision. The company was to be paid $20.00 for each connection. In the letter of application he refers to certain conversations held with officers of the water company in which he asserts they verbally agreed to furnish water. In connection with this agreement it was understood by Lauren that approval of the applications for the connections and the furnishing of the water by the water company was dependent upon the quantity of water available.

On December 18, 1945, Lauren Gibbs forwarded a check in the sum of $800 to the water company to pay for forty of the sixty proposed connections. On March 31, 1945, the company issued a notice to applicants for service that no additional connections would be approved by the company as it had agreed to serve water to approximately sixty houses and it was doubtful that there was sufficient water available to service the applications which were pending.

Apparently the water users in the North Salt Lake area became concerned about the availability of water and the ability of the water company to meet the requirements of its users and so complaints and protests against the further extensions were filed with the Public Service Commission. On the 2nd day of May, 1946, the water company filed a new tariff and a new set of rules and regulations providing for new, and in some instances, increased rates. A formal hearing was held before the Public Service Commission on May 22, 1946, at which time testimony was given by officials of the water company, persons, who had been denied service by the water company, and other interested individuals. The findings of fact, made and the order.entered *607 in that case were admitted in evidence in this matter. The findings of fact established that the commission found there was insufficient water to take care of needs of connected customers and those who had applied for connections; that Lauren W. Gibbs and his brother, Charles W. Gibbs, had purchased 50 per cent of the stock of the water company; that Lauren W. Gibbs had entered into negotiations with the company to have it furnish water to some sixty homes in the subdivision to be created by him; that five individuals whose homes were under construction were entitled to be furnished water and that six homes then being built by Lauren W. Gibbs should be furnished with water service.

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Bluebook (online)
223 P.2d 577, 118 Utah 600, 1950 Utah LEXIS 201, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-salt-lake-v-st-joseph-water-and-irr-co-utah-1950.