Quinn v. John Whitaker Ranch Co.

92 P.2d 568, 54 Wyo. 367, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 21
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 11, 1939
Docket2106
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 92 P.2d 568 (Quinn v. John Whitaker Ranch Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wyoming Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quinn v. John Whitaker Ranch Co., 92 P.2d 568, 54 Wyo. 367, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 21 (Wyo. 1939).

Opinion

*373 Kimball, Justice.

This is a proceeding in error for review of a declaration of rights in an action under the Uniform Declaratory Judgments Act, §§ 89-2401 to 89-2415, R. S. 1931. The question is whether a state statute prescribing the minimum duty of water appropriated for irrigation has the effect of limiting the quantity of water under rights initiated under Territorial laws and adjudicated by decree of the Territorial courts.

Plaintiffs are users of water for irrigation under rights adjudicated,by decree made in July, 1889, by the Territorial District Court which at that time had exclusive original jurisdiction of the statutory proceeding to determine priorities of appropriations of water. (Sec. 1339, R. S. 1887.) The court was authorized to determine, among other things, “the amount of water which shall be held to have been appropriated (by the construction of the irrigation works) describing such amount by cubic feet per second of time * * * if the evidence shall show sufficient data to ascertain such cubic feet * * Sec. 1345, R. S. 1887. A law of 1888 provided that the decree should be recorded in the office of the Territorial Engineer who was required to send to the Water Commissioner a statement showing, among other things, “the quantity of water per second of time to which said ditch is declared by such decree to be entitled, to be expressed in cubic feet per second of time,” and that “thereafter, in the supervision of the distribution of the waters of such stream by said ditches so adjudicated upon, it shall be the duty of said *374 water commissioner to be guided by such statement.” Sec. 9, eh. 55, Sess. Laws, 1888.

Our attention has not been called to any statute that placed a limitation on the amount of water to be allotted to an appropriator by the court in the Territorial proceeding to determine priorities, except section 14, ch. 55, Laws of 1888 which provided: “The priority of right to the use of such water shall be limited and restricted to so much thereof as may be necessarily used and appropriated for irrigation or other beneficial purposes as aforesaid, irrespective of the carrying capacity of the ditch, and all the balance of the water not so appropriated shall be allowed to run in the natural stream from which such ditch draws its supply of water, and shall not be considered as having been appropriated thereby.” This provision with slight changes is still a part of the irrigation law. Sec. 122-421, R. S. 1931.

The decree of July, 1889, was made in an action entitled “In the Matter of an Application for the Adjudication of the Priorities of Rights to Use of Water for Beneficial Purposes in Water District No. 1 on Horse Creek.” The determination of the quantity of water appropriated by each of plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest was shown by provisions that differ only in names, amounts, dates and priorities. The following is an abbreviated sample: That M. & M. are entitled to sufficient water to irrigate 100 acres of land, on account of M. ditch No. 6, not exceeding in amount 2.61 cubic feet per second of time, said appropriation dating from May 31, 1874, and that the right of said M. & M. to the use of water from said Horse Creek through said M. ditch No. 6, for the purpose aforesaid is prior and superior to any other right to the use of water from said creek. It was adjudged that M. & M. do have the use. of water from said Horse Creek for the irrigation of 100 acres of land on account of said M. ditch No. 6 *375 and for said purpose said M. & M. do have water from said Horse Creek to the amount of 2.61 cubic feet of water per second of time, and that the right of said M. & M. to the use of water to the amount and for the purpose aforesaid is prior and superior to any other right to the use of water for beneficial purposes from said creek.

The stated amount of water, in each instance, exceeded one' cubic foot per second of time for 70 acres of land.

The Territory became a State in July, 1890, and thereafter, in December, 1890, the first State Legislature passed a rather comprehensive water law (ch. 8, Sess. Laws, 1890-1891) to carry out constitutional provisions which, among other things, declared that a board of control should have supervision of the appropriation, distribution and diversion of the waters belonging to the state. The legislative act established the Board of Control with authority to determine priorities of appropriations. It was provided that after the Board had decided which streams should be first adjudicated, stream measurements should be made and evidence taken, and (by section 25) that:

“At the first regular meeting of the board of control, after the completion of such measurement by the state engineer, and the return of said evidence by said division superintendent, it shall be the duty of the board of control to make, and cause to be entered of record in its office, an order determining and establishing the several priorities of right to the use of waters of said stream, and the amount of appropriations of the several persons claiming water from such stream, and the character and kind of use from which said appropriation shall be found to have been made. Each appropriation shall be determined in its priority and amount, by the time by which it shall have been made, and the amount of water which shall have been applied for beneficial purposes. Provided, That such appropriate shall at no time be entitled to the use of more water *376 than he can make a beneficial application of on the lands, for the benefit of which the appropriation may have been secured, and the amount of any appropriation made by reason of an enlargement of distributing works, shall be determined in like manner. Provided, That no allottment shall exceed one cubic foot per second for each seventy acres of land for which said appropriation shall be made.”

The last proviso is the part that is important in this case. The whole section has continued in force (now sec. 122-117, R. S. 1931, as amended by ch. 105, Sess. Laws of 1935) with amendments not material in this case. The last proviso as contained in the act of 1890 has not been changed except by an amendment which limits its application to allotments “for the direct use of the natural unstored flow of any stream.”

Apparently, until 1937, the state administrative officers had never asserted that water rights adjudicated under Territorial laws were affected by the statute limiting the quantity of water that could be alloted by the Board of Control under the act of the state legislature of 1890. There was testimony that each plaintiff had at some time during each year used the full maximum amount of water adjudicated to him by the decree of 1889. In the summer of 1937, however, the Water Commissioner, under instructions given by the State Engineer, notified plaintiffs that they would not be permitted to take water in amount in excess of one cubic foot per second for each seventy acres of land irrigated. Plaintiffs then brought this action for a declaratory judgment and for injunction, naming as defendants the State Engineer, Division Superintendent and Water Commissioner.

The pleadings and evidence raised no question of abandonment of plaintiffs’ water rights (see Parshall v. Cowper, 22 Wyo. 385, 396, 143 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
92 P.2d 568, 54 Wyo. 367, 1939 Wyo. LEXIS 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quinn-v-john-whitaker-ranch-co-wyo-1939.