Ophir Creek Water Co. v. Ophir Hill Consol. Mining Co.

216 P. 490, 61 Utah 551, 1923 Utah LEXIS 44
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 25, 1923
DocketNo. 3927
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 216 P. 490 (Ophir Creek Water Co. v. Ophir Hill Consol. Mining 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
Ophir Creek Water Co. v. Ophir Hill Consol. Mining Co., 216 P. 490, 61 Utah 551, 1923 Utah LEXIS 44 (Utah 1923).

Opinion

THURMAN, J.

The district court of Tooele county entered judgment against the defendant, Ophir Hill Consolidated Mining Company, in a contempt proceeding for the alleged violation of a certain decree of said court theretofore entered in an action to quiet title to the waters of Ophir creek, situated in Tooele county. The defendant appeals from the judgment, and assigns as error the rejection of certain evidence over defendant’s objection, and an alleged erroneous interpretation of the decree by the court whereby it found the defendant had violated certain provisions of the decree.

Before entering upon a consideration of the questions arising upon the contempt proceeding a brief reference to the water litigation which terminated in the decree referred to will be instructive, ■■

[553]*553The Ophir Creek Water Company, a corporation, successor in interest to the rights of numerous farmers and watorusers of the community, claiming to be the first appropriators of all the waters of the creek, instituted an action in said court in 1917 against all other persons claiming an interest in the water, for the purpose of quieting plaintiff’s title thereto. Plaintiff also prayed for injunctive relief. Among the defendants so sued by plaintiff was the defendant Ophir Hill Consolidated Mining Company, hereinafter called appellant, engaged in operating a power plant by the use of said water, and also engaged in the business of mining. The lands irrigated by plaintiff’s stockholders are situated some distance below appellant’s power house, so that the waters of the creek, after supplying appellant with water for power purposes, are again returned to the channel of the creek, and then down to the lands of plaintiff’s stockholders, where the same are used for irrigation and other beneficial purposes. Prior to the establishment of appellant’s business the waters of the creek now owned by plaintiff flowed down to the lands in question through the natural channel of the creek, and considerable quantities thereof were lost by seepage and evaporation. After the mining operations began some arrangement was entered into between plaintiff’s predecessors in interest and the predecessors in interest of appellant, which resulted in the construction of a pipe line by the mining company, several miles in length, by means of which the water was diverted from the natural channel of the creek, and thence conveyed parallel therewith through said pipe line to the power house, where it was used for power purposes. It was then returned to the channel of the creek for the use of the farmers below. This contrivance resulted in saving a substantial quantity of water, by reason of which appellant’s predecessors in interest acquired certain rights in addition to its rights for power purposes. However, the additional rights acquired by appellant are not involved in this appeal.

A decree was entered in the water case by stipulation of the parties. Only such portions of the decree will be quoted here as appear to have some bearing upon the questions in[554]*554volved. We have italicized such provisions as appear to be of special significance.

Paragraph 3, in part, reads as follows:

“That the said pipe line of the said defendant, Ophir Hill Consolidated Mining Company shall he by it at all times kept in a reasonably practical state of repairs for the carrying of water for the uses aforesaid and for the use of said defendant company for the development of power at its said power house, and for the delivery of water therefrom to the natural stream channel of said Ophir creek below said power house for the use of plaintiff herein. That whenever, and so long as, there is an overflow at the head or intake of said pipe line, that is to say, whenever the entire flow of Ophir creek at the said head or intake of said defendant’s pipe line is not being taken into said pipe line, then, in the operation of its said power house, said defendant shall use for the delivery of water from said pipe line upon its water wheel at said power house, a nozzle with a discharge opening of 8% inches in diameter, and shall at all times while such overflow continues permit at least 7.5 cubic feet per second to flow out of said pipe line into the natural channel of the creek below. That whenever, and so long as, there is no overflow at the said head or intake of said defendant’s pipe line, that is to say, whenever the entire flow of Ophir creek at the said head or intake of said defendant’s pipe line is being taken into said pipe line, then, in the operation of its said power house, the defendant shall in no wise be restricted as to the size of the nozzle it may use for the discharge of water upon its said water wheel.”

After defining the rights of the various defendants, with certain limitations, the decree then determines the rights of plaintiff in the following language:

“That the plaintiff is the owner of the right to the use of all of the rest and residue of the flowing waters of said Ophir creek, not hereinbefore specifically awarded and decreed, for the purpose of irrigating the lands of its stockholders, comprising more than 600 acres situate below the mouth of said Ophir canyon, and which said lands in their natural condition are desert and barren, but which when artificially irrigated are fruitful and productive and of great value, and all of the said rest and residue of the said waters of said Ophir creek are necessarily required, with prudent and economical use, to properly irrigate and maintain fruitful and productive, the said lands of plaintiff’s stockholders, and all of the said rest and residue of said waters, whatever the quantity thereof may have been during the fluctuation of the flow of the said creek in the respective seasons, have been so used for many years last past by plaintiff’s stockholders and their predecessors in interest, [555]*555and during the nonirrigation season of each year plaintiff is the owner of all the said rest and residue of the waters of said creek for the culinary and domestic use of its stockholders and the watering of their live stock, and said waters haye keen used for said purposes by plaintiff’s stockholders and their predecessors in interest for many years last past.”

This brings ns to the principal question submitted for our decision. The plaintiff’s contention is that appellant, in the operation of its power plant, at times when all the waters of the creek are not being taken in at the head of the pipe, and there is an overflow at the intake, so manipulated its appliances used for controlling the water that 7.5 cubic feet per second were not permitted to flow through its pipe line and thence down to plaintiff, as provided in the decree. On the other hand, defendant contends that at all times it used a 2%-inch nozzle for the discharge of the water, just as the decree provides, and that that was the measure of its duty-under the decree.

It appears from the evidence in the contempt proceedings that in addition to the nozzle there was also an auxiliary attachment called a needle valve used in supplying water on the wheel. The needle valve was used by a screw and wheel. When the needle valve is screwed down it increases the pressure but decreases the flow of water upon the wheel, and likewise the quantity returned to the channel of the stream. When the needle valve is loosened the pressure is reduced, but the quantity flowing upon the wheel and thence into the channel is substantially increased.

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Bluebook (online)
216 P. 490, 61 Utah 551, 1923 Utah LEXIS 44, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ophir-creek-water-co-v-ophir-hill-consol-mining-co-utah-1923.