RICHLANDS IRR. CO. v. WESTVIEW IRR. CO. Et Al.

80 P.2d 458, 96 Utah 403, 1938 Utah LEXIS 99
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJune 21, 1938
DocketNo. 5954.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 80 P.2d 458 (RICHLANDS IRR. CO. v. WESTVIEW IRR. CO. Et Al.) 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
RICHLANDS IRR. CO. v. WESTVIEW IRR. CO. Et Al., 80 P.2d 458, 96 Utah 403, 1938 Utah LEXIS 99 (Utah 1938).

Opinions

HANSON, Justice.

This is a proceeding for an adjudication of water rights in the Sevier River pursuant to Chap. 67 of Laws of Utah 1919. The State Engineer reported a proposed determination, to which certain claimants filed written objections. *408 Thereafter and on February 21, 1931, the various claimants filed in court a written agreement settling and determining the rights of each and stipulating that a decree might be entered accordingly. On August 1, 1934, the District Court entered an order directing the State Engineer to distribute the river water in accordance with said proposed determination as modified by said stipulation pending final decision of the case. On January 4, 1936, the State Engineer filed his petition in the court alleging that differences had arisen as to the proper interpretation of the stipulation and agreement in respect to the rights of the Vermillion Irrigation Company (hereinafter called “Vermillion”), and praying a judicial interpretation thereof in aid of his official functions in distributing the water. The Vermillion and those claiming adversely to it appeared and submitted their opposing contentions. The case was tried and the court’s findings and decree were, in substance, embodied in the court’s general decree determining rights in the river, which was entered shortly thereafter. The Vermillion by timely objections and motion for a new trial, asserted error in the court’s findings, conclusions and decree unfavorable to its contentions, and upon appeal to this court have assigned error in the same particulars. An outline follows of so much of the record facts as will serve to present the questions on which the parties divide.

The Sevier River has its source in the highlands of western Garfield County, in southern Utah, and flows in a northerly course through Piute, Sevier and Sanpete into Juab County, thence southwestwardly discharging into Sevier Lake in Millard County. It is the longest river in the State. The lands along its upper courses were earliest settled and a number of large canals were constructed for the irrigation thereof. Those with which we are here concerned are in Sevier County.

The Vermillion’s canal diverts water from the river at a point on its west bank near Richfield and extends north-wardly 25 or 30 miles to a point north of Redmond. The *409 canal of the Annabella Irrigation Company (hereinafter called “Annabella”) has its intake on the east bank of the river about six miles south of the Vermillion intake. Tight dams are maintained just below each intake to facilitate diversion of the water into the canals. Between an eighth and a quarter of a mile above the Annabella dam is the intake of a short diversion ditch or channel called the millrace of the Sevier Valley Roller Mills (formerly Elsinore Roller Mills), by which water is diverted from the river for power purposes to operate the mills. This is a nonconsumptive use and the water is discharged immediately back into the river above the Annabella dam, and becomes available for irrigation. Further south, and upstream from the Annabella dam, spaced at various intervals along the river, are the intakes of the canals of the following named irrigation or canal companies, viz.: Richfield, Elsinore, Brooklyn, Monroe, Wells, Joseph, Elsinore Bench, Sevier Valley, and others which, with the Annabella and the Vermillion, are classed in the agreement settling rights and in the court’s decree as Series A Primary water rights.

These Series A rights appear to have been early settled and adjudicated by court decrees, the first of which (termed the Jacob Johnson decree) was entered near the turn of the century. The other and later decree (termed the Morse decree), was entered May 16, 1906, and reduced somewhat the awards in the earlier decree, or some of them. The Morse decree awarded to said Series A Primary water rights as follows, so far as we need particularize:

(All year round consumptive basis) Sec. Ft.
Annabella Canal. 80.40
Vermillion Canal. 37.80
All other canals, save one, a total of. 176.76
(Part time consumptive basis)
Sevier Valley Canal. 178.00
Total consumptive basis (Nonconsumptive basis) 422.96

*410 Elsinore Roller Mills Co. (now Sevier Valley Roller Mills Company) : All the waters decreed to the Annabella and the Vermillion during the whole of each year, and from Nov. 1st to March 15 of each year, 32 sec. feet of water additional.

By the record and briefs it appears that subsequently to the Morse decree certain irrigation and canal companies interested in reclaiming large bodies of land along the lower courses of the river, finding insufficient unappropriated water by direct flow in the river available for their purposes, constructed at large cost and expense a dam in the river at a point in Sanpete County which backed the water up into an artificial lake or reservoir many miles in length, called the Sevier Bridge Reservoir, for storage and summer irrigation. Likewise, the Utah State Land Board constructed another dam, the Piute Reservoir, in the upper river channel in Piute County. Water filings were made for these reservoirs and other works in the State Engineer’s office for all the available water not required to supply the earlier rights. Much additional lands came thus into actual or potential reclamation. The canal companies named as objectors and respondents in the caption appear to be interested in the water stored by one or both of these reservoirs, and are contesting the irrigation rights by direct flow claimed by the Vermillion.

These lower river canal companies.became at once interested in acquiring and utilizing all of the unappropriated water of the river, and also in curtailing within the narrowest possible legal limits the water withdrawable from the river under the earlier appropriations, especially the primary rights under Series A of the Morse decree. They entered into negotiations with the officers and agents of the Series A canals to that end. After extended bargaining they finally reached an agreement with most of the Series A canals, defining and restricting their rights in the winter flow or winter diversion of the water into the canals, under the Morse decree. In return for rights surrendered by the latter in the nonirrigation season, they were given certain *411 storage rights in the Piute Reservoir for water deliverable on a call basis chiefly during the irrigation season. Not all the Series A users thus traded with the reservoir people. The Vermillion refused to do so, or to sign any agreement until a mutually satisfactory formula was evolved, adequate to protect their diversion rights from the river both during and beyond the irrigation or growing season of each year. A number of tentative forms or clauses were proposed and rejected until at length the following was accepted by both sides and embodied in the agreement or stipulation settling the rights before mentioned, viz.:

“Vermillion Canal Company:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 458, 96 Utah 403, 1938 Utah LEXIS 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richlands-irr-co-v-westview-irr-co-et-al-utah-1938.