Posey v. Dove

257 P.2d 541, 57 N.M. 200
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1953
Docket5372
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 257 P.2d 541 (Posey v. Dove) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Posey v. Dove, 257 P.2d 541, 57 N.M. 200 (N.M. 1953).

Opinion

FOWLER, District Judge.

The plaintiffs (appellants) sued to enjoin the defendants (appellees) from maintaining a dam or obstruction across the Peñasco river which backed up and impounded the river waters and caused them to flood some two or three acres of the plaintiffs’ land during such times as the defendants were using the structure to raise the waters to a height sufficient to allow it to flow into the intake of the ditch then being used to convey the water for irrigation of the defendants’ lands. After trial, the court dissolved the restraining order previously issued and dismissed the suit. The plaintiffs appeal.

Upon a stipulation of facts augmented by brief testimony, the court made findings of fact and conclusions of law which depict the circumstances of the case so clearly that, at risk of prolixity, they are quoted in full:

"Findings of Fact
“1. The plaintiffs are the owners of the land described in the complaint, which lands are located on the Peñasco River. The defendant Dove is the owner of the lands on the river immediately below the land of the plaintiffs, and the defendant Smith is the owner of the land on the river immediately below the land of the defendant Dove.
“2. That, for many years prior to the year 1941, the defendants irrigated their land from a spring known as the Bell Spring, or the Bottomless Spring, which spring arose on the land of the plaintiffs, and the water from the spring was conducted by a ditch across the lands of the plaintiffs and onto the lands of the defendants.
"3. That in the year 1941 a big flood occurred on the Peñasco River, which filled up the ditch of the defendants.
“4. That in the year 1942 the Soil Conservation Service, acting with the consent of John L. Parker, the then owner of the lands now owned by the plaintiffs, entered upon said lands and changed the course of the Peñasco River so that the course of said river now occupies the land formerly occupied by the ditch of the defendants, and lowered the spring so that it is now in the bed of the river.
“5. That the highway, as presently constructed, is close to the river and it is not feasible to build and maintain a ditch from the spring between the river and the highway.
“6. That after the year 1942 the spring broke out on the upper side of the highway and the defendants constructed a ditch from it down along and under the highway to the lands of the defendant Dove, and the water was conducted from that spring onto the defendants’ land and used for irrigation.
“7. That the spring dried up and the defendants went farther up on the highway and conducted water down through said ditch, until in the year 1946 when it dried up.
“8. That in the year 1947 the defendants went in at a place between 400 feet and 500 feet below the spring on the lands of the plaintiffs and constructed a head-gate in the river for the purpose of raising the water in the bed of the stream.
“9. That the defendants started to irrigate by the use of said headgate and irrigated for about a day and a night, when they were stopped by the injunction issued in this cause.
“10. That the water rights of the defendant Dove and defendant Smith were initiated and the water applied to beneficial use of their lands prior to the year 1907.
“11. That the plaintiffs had knowledge of the ditch right of way on their land prior to the time they purchased said land from John L. Parker.
“12. That plaintiffs are the owners of the Si/2SW%, SW^SE^ Sec. 26; NEJ4 NWJ4 Sec. 35, all in Township 16 S., R. 14 E., N.M.P.M., in Otero County, New Mexico, and were the owners of said land at all times material to this action.
“13. The lands of the plaintiffs and the defendants are situated in the Peñasco Valley and this valley is drained by a perennial stream known as the Peñasco River which runs in a Southwesterly and Northeasterly direction through the lands of both the plaintiffs and the defendants.
“The lands of the defendant Dove adjoin the lands of the plaintiffs on the downstream side and the lands of the defendant Smith adjoin the lands of the defendant Dove likewise on the down-stream side. The defendant Dove has a water right for the irrigation of some 5 acres of land out of the waters of the Peñasco River and the defendant Smith a water right for some 3% acres out of said stream.
“14. Prior to 1941 the defendants for the irrigation of their said lands maintained a ditch from a spring near to and tributary of the Peñasco River located on the lands of the plaintiffs and about 500 or 600 feet upstream from the boundary line between plaintiffs and defendant Dove.
“15. That the public highway between Weed and Mayhill, runs Northwest of 'the ditch taking the water from said spring and parallel with' said ditch.

“About the year 1941 a very heavy flood in the Peñasco Valley washed debris, sediment, rocks etc., into said valley and to some extent if not entirely filled up the spring from which the defendants took their water supply and likewise filled up their ditch.

“16. Immediately after the 1941 flood a new spring broke out in or near the borrow pit on the opposite of the road from the old spring, and thereafter until 1946 the defendants used the water from such new spring for the irrigation of their land by carrying it down the borrow pit on the opposite side of the public road from their old ditch to a point opposite their land and from thence by culvert under the highway into a ditch from which their lands were irrigated.

“17. In 1942 the Soil Conservation Service, in reconstructing the area from the damage caused by the 1941 flood, straightened the channel of the Peñasco river through the lands of the plaintiffs and moved it a distance of 100 feet or more so that the channel thereafter and as now existing, passes over the old spring and coincides generally with the old ditch line used by the defendants prior to 1941; and in changing the .channel the Soil Conservation Service enlarged and deepened .the same by some 3 or 4 feet below what was formerly the bottom of the ditch of the defendants.

“18. In 1946 the new spring which had been flowing in the borrow pit of the highway dried up leaving the defendants without water for irrigation and in April 1947 they constructed a cement headgate or structure in the main channel of the Peñas-co River on the lands of the plaintiffs about 50 feet above the boundary line between the plaintiffs and the defendant Dove, and between 400 and 500 feet below their old point of diversion from the stream.

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Bluebook (online)
257 P.2d 541, 57 N.M. 200, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/posey-v-dove-nm-1953.