Rasmussen v. Moroni Irr. Co.

189 P. 572, 56 Utah 140, 1920 Utah LEXIS 33
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1920
DocketNo. 3392
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 189 P. 572 (Rasmussen v. Moroni Irr. 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
Rasmussen v. Moroni Irr. Co., 189 P. 572, 56 Utah 140, 1920 Utah LEXIS 33 (Utah 1920).

Opinions

FRICK, J.

The plaintiff, hereinafter called appellant, brought this action against the defendants, hereinafter styled respondents, to quiet title to certain water hereinafter more particularly referred to and to enjoin them from interfering with his use thereof for irrigation purposes. Appellant’s claims to the water in question are fully and explicitly stated in the complaint.

After alleging that he is the owner of ten acres of land and the lessee of perhaps more than that amount in Sanpete county, describing the same, it is in substance alleged that the said lands in their natural state were arid, and, without water to irrigate them, were nonproductive; that since the year 1906 said lands “by reason of extensive irrigation of lands situated north, east, and south and above said lands causing water to filtrate and percolate through the same under the surface of the said lands in undefined and unknown channels,” said lands “have become wet, boggy, and marshy and unfit for cultivation or production of agricultural crops.” Appellant then alleges that in order to reclaim said lands from the condition just stated, and for the purpose of collecting the waters therein and to apply the same to a useful and beneficial purpose, namely, to irrigate other arid land, he constructed a certain drain ditch and placed earthen pipes therein to facilitate the drainage of said lands and by means thereof to collect .the water aforesaid; that by means of said ditch and pipes appellant collected “one cubic foot of water per second from seepage and under[142]*142ground sources upon said lands that had not theretofore found its way to the surface of the earth,” etc.; that appellant applied said water collected as aforesaid for the irrigation of other lands. The appellant further alleges that respondents are wrongfully interfering with the water aforesaid and are wrongfully diverting and using the same contrary to plaintiff’s rights, and that they prevent appellant from using said water as before stated. Appellant prays that the title to said water be quieted in him and that the respondents be enjoined from interfering therewith and from asserting any right thereto.

Some of the defendants answered the complaint, while others defaulted. The respondents here answered in two separate answers in which, after making certain admissions and denials, they set forth their claims to the water in question in detail and affirmatively alleged that they are the owners of the right to the use of the water by reason of prior appropriation and use for beneficial purposes and by virtue of a certain decree which is fully set forth. They prayed for affirmative relief. In view that the claims of respondents are' sufficiently reflected in the findings of the court, we shall refrain from stating them further. ■

After a trial to the district court of Sanpete county, said court found the issues in favor of the respondents, and adjudicated and decreed that they aré the owners of the water , here in question and enjoined plaintiff from interfering therewith. In view of the great length of the findings of fact, we are compelled to abridge them.

Omitting all matters of inducement, such as the findings relating to the incorporation of the several cities and irrigation companies and the appropriation of the waters of Sanpitch river, none of which matters are in dispute, the court in substance found: That the Sanpitch river is a natural stream having its source in the mountains north of the city of Fairview, and that it flows southwesterly through Sanpete county for a distance of over fifty miles; that the waters of said river are diverted therefrom for irrigation purposes at divers points along the [143]*143stream; that for more than fifty years prior to the commencement of this action respondents, their predecessors in interest and grantors, have .been and now are the owners “of all the waters of said Sanpitch river north” of a certain dam, to which we shall refer hereinafter, “as adjudicated and determined by a certain decree made and entered on the 17th day of July, A. D. 1901,” by the district eonrt of Sanpete county in a certain action then pending in said court; that appellant for more than nine years prior to the commencement of this action was and now is the owner of certain land hereinafter referred to, which is described; that said land at one time was arid and required irrigation to make it productive, but since the year 1898 said land “has become wet and boggy by reason of the irrigation of lands above it;” that for the purpose of improving said wet land, and “especially for the purpose of claiming the water to be intercepted by his drain,” the appellant, in the year 1906, commenced the construction of a ditch or drain along the west side of his land and has thereby intercepted and' collected “one-fourth of one second foot of water” up to and including the year 1915, which waters so collected and intercepted “were all tributary to the San-pitch river and decreed to the” respondents; that in the year 1916 the appellant placed earthen pipes in said drain ditch and thereby collected a large amount of water amounting to “one cubic foot per second during the irrigation season of 1916, all of which waters so caught [collected] and intercepted were tributary to the Sanpitch river and had long prior thereto been decreed to the” respondents; that the waters collected and intercepted by appellant were by him caused to flow into Spring creek, a tributary of the San-pitch river, and thence into said river, from which river (at a point lower down the stream than appellant’s land) the respondents diverted the water and used the same each and every year for irrigation, culinary, and domestic purposes ; that respondents have always claimed the water which was intercepted and collected by appellant as aforesaid; “that all of the waters in plaintiff’s [appellant’s] com[144]*144plaint claimed as developed water, including all waters flowing from the drain, * * * are in truth and in fact percolating and return waters tributary to the waters of San-pitch river, and that said waters were long since appropriated by the defendants [respondents] herein, and that all said waters were decreed to the defendants [respondents] herein by a certain decree made and entered on the 17th day of July, 1901,” by the district court of Sanpete county in a certain action then pending in said court; that appellant’s said drain ditch intercepts a part of the waters tributary to the Sanpitch river, and all the water intercepted and collected in said drain ditch is “decreed water, decreed and awarded to the defendants [respondents] by the terms” of said decree; that ever since the entry of said decree the respondents have used said water each irrigation season for irrigation, culinary, and domestic purposes; that the lands owned by respondents and irrigated by them are arid and would be sterile without water to irrigate them; that prior to the construction of appellant’s drain ditch as aforesaid his said land was wet, boggy, and saturated with water which percolated into and was tributary to Sanpitch river, and was, during all of the time herein mentioned, used by the respondents upon their lands for irrigation purposes.

Upon substantially the foregoing findings, the court found as conclusions of law: (1) That the appellant is not entitled to any relief; (2) that respondents are entitled to the use of all the water intercepted and collected by and flowing through and from appellant’s drain ditch; (3) that respondents are entitled to a permanent injunction against the appellant, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
189 P. 572, 56 Utah 140, 1920 Utah LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rasmussen-v-moroni-irr-co-utah-1920.