Piute Reservoir & Irrigation Co. v. West Panguitch Irrigation & Reservoir Co.

364 P.2d 113, 12 Utah 2d 168, 1961 Utah LEXIS 210
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 28, 1961
Docket9411
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 364 P.2d 113 (Piute Reservoir & Irrigation Co. v. West Panguitch Irrigation & Reservoir 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
Piute Reservoir & Irrigation Co. v. West Panguitch Irrigation & Reservoir Co., 364 P.2d 113, 12 Utah 2d 168, 1961 Utah LEXIS 210 (Utah 1961).

Opinion

WADE, Chief Justice.

On March 17, 1957, West Panguitch Irrigation & Reservoir Company filed an application with the State Engineer for a permit to change a part of their established winter direct flow water rights to a right to store this winter water in a reservoir not yet constructed. Hereinafter we will sometimes refer to the West Panguitch Irrigation & Reservoir Company as applicant, or West Panguitch Company, it being one of the respondents and a defendant in this action. The applicant proposes to construct a dam near the mouth of Panguitch Canyon above the city of Panguitch and about 16 miles below Panguitch Lake. Panguitch Lake is also used by applicant West Pan-guitch Company as a water storage facility. The proposed dam and reservoir-site is above the place where applicant diverts the water of Panguitch Creek into two irrigation canals for use for irrigation and culinary purposes in the surrounding territory.

Applicant proposes to store 700 acre-feet of winter waters of Panguitch Creek and use it in the dry summer months to supplement their irrigation streams. It also contends that such a storage reservoir would be of great benefit in preventing floods and disposing of silt and in other ways. Most of the water in question has for years been diverted into applicant’s canals and used for winter flooding, stock watering and domestic purposes. The diversion into applicant’s canals is by tight dam. Panguitch Canyon Creek is a tributary of, and when the water is not diverted, merges with the Sevier River. There is no direct above- *170 ground return flow of the waters diverted from the creek either into the creek or the Sevier River, and only occasionally when there is unusual precipitation does the water from the creek, since the tight diverting dam was constructed, flow directly into that river.

By the Cox Decree applicant was awarded all of the flow of the Panguitch Creek for the entire year with a storage right in the Panguitch Lake. Applicant does not propose to irrigate any new land by reason of this application, but seeks only to supplement during the dry season the irrigation of land already under cultivation and now irrigated from this stream. The State Engineer approved this application with several limitations thereon. Among such limitations were that the change could be made and placed in operation if this could be effected without impairing existing rights to the use of the waters in question by lower users, that no new lands be brought under cultivation by reason of this storage reservoir, that plans and specifications be submitted to and approved by the State Engineer before construction is commenced, and that measuring devices be installed by applicant as required by the State Engineer. The District Court expressly included the same limitations in its judgment approving the application as was contained in the approval by the State Engineer.

In some respects this case is similar to East Bench Irrigation Co. v. Deseret Irrigation Co., 1 which deals with an application to construct for storage of about 13,650 acre feet of the waters of the South Fork of the Sevier River. Here the applicant West Panguitch Irrigation Company seeks to store the winter waters from Panguitch Creek, a tributary of the Sevier River, in a reservoir to be built near the mouth of Panguitch Canyon for use to supplement its irrigation water during dry summer seasons. This same problem was presented in the East Bench case. Both cases involve the head waters of the Sevier River above Piute Reservoir, and in both cases the lower water users objected, claiming that such change will deprive them of their established rights to use the water which will be stored for use in the lower irrigation system from that river. The cases are different in that in the East Bench case the appellants proposed not only to supplement the irrigation waters during the dry summer season, but proposed to bring under cultivation and irrigation new lands, and to save water by draining swampy areas and lowering the water table under the ground already under irrigation.

It is not of controlling importance that applicant West Panguitch Irrigation Company intends to irrigate only lands which have long been under irrigation from the *171 water of the Panguitch Canyon Creek. The determining question is whether the storage of this winter water in the proposed reservoir will interfere with the established or vested rights of the protesting lower water users of the Sevier River System. No doubt the proposed dam can be constructed and the reservoir used to store water to prevent floods and dispose of silt and other purposes for short periods of time, then released for domestic, stock watering, land flooding, and other purposes as it is now used without impairing vested rights to use such water by the lower water users. But it is doubtful that applicants would expend the money to make the change if their right of storage were thus limited. So the real problem presented is, does the evidence show reason to believe that the winter water now used for land flooding, domestic and stock watering purposes can be stored in the proposed reservoir until the dry irrigation season, and then used to supplement the irrigation of the presently irrigated lands of applicants without impairing vested rights of lower water users on the Sevier River system? 2

There is a dispute in the evidence on a controlling issue of fact of whether the waters used by the applicants in the winter for domestic, stock watering, and land flooding purposes ever reached the Sevier River system. Concededly, only occasionally does water from Panguitch Canyon Creek flow directly above ground into the Sevier River, either from the creek or by drainage from the adjoining lands which are flooded in winter, so this question creates no serious problem for allowance can easily be made on an estimate of the amount of such occasional flow in the future.

The evidence of protestants, who are the lower water users, indicates that a substantial portion of the winter water used by applicant thereafter reaches the Sevier River through seepage, percolation and underground water flow. The river flows near the flooded grounds for a considerable distance on one side thereof, with a general slope from the flooded grounds toward the river. There is considerable increase in the amount of the flow of the water of the river where it enters the flooded grounds and where the flooded grounds end. Especially is this true during the spring runoff period, which is shortly after the winter floodings. The land on the opposite side of the river is also irrigated and flooded during the winter. Applicants have made no measurements and kept no records of the amount of the increase of the flow of the water in the river as it passes *172 near the flooded area.

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Bluebook (online)
364 P.2d 113, 12 Utah 2d 168, 1961 Utah LEXIS 210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/piute-reservoir-irrigation-co-v-west-panguitch-irrigation-reservoir-utah-1961.