Provo River Water Users Ass'n v. Lambert

642 P.2d 1219, 1982 Utah LEXIS 889
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 10, 1982
Docket16724
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 642 P.2d 1219 (Provo River Water Users Ass'n v. Lambert) 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
Provo River Water Users Ass'n v. Lambert, 642 P.2d 1219, 1982 Utah LEXIS 889 (Utah 1982).

Opinions

HENRIOD, Retired Justice:

This is a ease involving the ownership of the right to use 2.52 cubic feet per second of the waters of Provo River, a tributary of Utah Lake in central Utah. It has a protracted and somewhat litigious history in more than one sense and some of the facts about which it is concerned predate the statutory interdiction that turned the method of appropriation from a diligence use only to one conditioned on filing an application with the Utah State Engineer as provided by statute,1 followed by opinions such as Wellsville v. Lindsay2 to the effect that the state was the sole purveyor of practically all of the waters of the state.

[1220]*1220The water claimed in this case initially was appropriated before the statute mentioned and was the subject of adjudication long, long ago in the “Chidester” decree.3

The water rights involved here, along with that of other claimants were laid to rest on May 21, 1921, in the “Provo River” or “Morse Decree.”4 It is sort of a Bible controlling the waters of a good portion of the Provo River, that meander to another sort of scriptural Dead Sea, via Utah Lake, and another similar landmark, the Jordan River to the Great Salt Lake. Some of the Chapters of the Decree are the Genesis of this litigation. Pertinent language is written in Paragraphs 28 and 124, reproduced and italicized for emphasis as follows:

JOHN D. DIXON. From January 1st to December 31st.
As successor in interest to J. H. Snyder, Joshua J. Mecham, John W. Hoover, and Hyrum Heiselt to 2.80 second feet of water which was appropriated upon lands in Provo Canyon, the place of use and the point of diversion having been changed and the said water is now being used upon lands below the mouth of Provo Canyon, and the point of diversion from Provo River is now at and near the mouth of Provo Canyon, Utah County, Utah, and said use may be continued and the quantity to which the said defendant is entitled at his said point of diversion, at and near the mouth of Provo Canyon, is 2.52 second feet; the same being of the transferred water rights referred to in subdivision (a) paragraph 33, hereof.
That ail rights declared and decreed herein, for domestic and municipal uses and for the generation of power, are continuous throughout the year without limitation to time or season.
And that all the rights declared and decreed herein, for irrigation purposes, include the right to divert and use water for irrigation, culinary, domestic and agricultural purposes connected therewith. And such rights of diversion and use for culinary, and domestic purposes are continuous throughout the year, and are limited to the quantity reasonably necessary for said uses. And such rights of diversion and use for irrigation purposes is confined to the irrigation season of each year, and none of said parties shall divert or use any of said waters, (except for culinary and domestic purposes as herein-before provided), during the non-irrigating season — after the necessity for such use for irrigation purposes has ceased in the Autumn of each year and until it is necessary to use the same for irrigation purposes in the Spring of the year following.

The language reflects a right to a year-round, January 1st to December 31st, use by John D. Dixon, in fact and presumptively, for present and future use of 2.52 cubic feet per second of Provo River water for culinary and domestic purposes during the irrigation and non-irrigation seasons, specifically defining the irrigation season as only from spring to autumn, which therefore defines non-irrigation as the remaining or winter months.

Since some of the Points on Appeal are mooted by our decision, the following observations and conclusions may be catalogued to expedite, and avoid confusion:

1. Provo City, having acquired the rights of any conflicting claims of others, for the purposes of this case, has whatever rights in the subject water, that were awarded to John D. Dixon in the Morse Decree.

2. We differ from the trial court’s “finding” that Provo City had the burden of proving its own right to the water, concluding that such burden is on the plaintiffs [1221]*1221attacking it, — the Provo River Water Users Association, et al., who alleged that defendants had never exercised such rights. Plaintiffs’ assertion that because the inter-veners, Hamblin, had questioned Provo City’s right and Provo City resisted the claim, and reasserted its own, that somehow this circumstance would shift the burden of proof. Since Provo need not have had to prove its claim against plaintiffs, we cannot see how plaintiffs could avoid their primary obligation to take over the laboring oar.

3. Our conclusion above is not the primary ratio decidendi here, and therefore, a remand for a new trial is not necessary or ordered for that reason.

Addressing ourselves to the “burden of proof” issue that seriously was debated below, we refer to some of our own pronouncements to the effect that generally he who asserts something has the burden to prove it.

In Tanner v. Humphreys,5 a forerunner of this case, we said that:

In an application for a change of diversion, it is not necessary for a party so applying each time to make a showing that it has beneficially used its water right. If it has not, then the protestants may so show....
... It may be that the plaintiff should put in general proof that the change will not injure or disturb vested rights, but if so, it is rather in homage to the general rule that he is required to offer proof in support of all his allegations, and .. . the burden rests upon the plaintiff to establish the necessary facts to make out a prima facie case.... We must assume that the rights which the decree No. 2888 Civil gave to Dixon still belong to the plaintiff.

Later, we said as much in Wellsville v. Lindsay:6

The burden is on the person asserting abandonment to prove it. Here there is no evidence to show an intent to abandon. In fact, the evidence almost conclusively shows just the contrary. We must conclude that the plaintiffs did not abandon their rights to this water and this defense must fall.

That case had to do with an abandonment, which is not pleaded in the instant case, — the plaintiffs here simply alleging that there was no right in esse at any time that could be abandoned, but we opine that the same rule as to burden of proof and the policy of reason behind it are equally apropos here.

Irrespective of the above, or any other rule as to the burden of proof, the plaintiffs offered none, but Provo City did present cogent evidence attesting to its right to use the water by putting in evidence the Morse Decree, and the deposition of an experienced water man and an eyewitness before, at, and after the Morse Decree was penned and entered on May 21, 1921.

4. The issues here, stated in plaintiffs’ brief, are:

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
642 P.2d 1219, 1982 Utah LEXIS 889, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provo-river-water-users-assn-v-lambert-utah-1982.