Richmond Irr. Co. v. Shaw

181 P. 162, 54 Utah 379, 1919 Utah LEXIS 57
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedApril 21, 1919
DocketNo. 3187
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 181 P. 162 (Richmond Irr. Co. v. Shaw) 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
Richmond Irr. Co. v. Shaw, 181 P. 162, 54 Utah 379, 1919 Utah LEXIS 57 (Utah 1919).

Opinion

WEBER, J.

The ownership of what is hereinafter called the North spring, Spring No. 3, or the Lars -Johnson spring, is the only question -involved on the appeal of the defendant Christian Steffensen from a decree in favor of plaintiffs. '

In 1860 a small community of people settled on the present site of Richmond, Cache county,' and erected a fort in which they lived. The settlers engaged in farming, and at .once commenced building ditches to supply themselves with water for culinary, stock-watering, and irrigation purposes. They first diverted the waters of Birch creek, a tributary of Cherry creek which flows down Cherry creek canyon westward into Cache valley. In this same canyon, towards its southerly side, is what is referred to in the record as “spring area,” sometimes as Birch creek springs, and sometimes as Lars Johnson springs. Birch creek springs constitute the headwaters of Birch creek, which flows from this source down into -the valley until it empties into Cherry, creek.' The spring area constitutes a swampy parcel of ground estimated'at six or seven rods across each way, and from that water issues in a flowing stream in three well-defined places referred to as Big spring, or Spring No. 1, Middle spring, or Spring No. 2, North spring, or Spring No. 3, the latter spring being also referred to in the record as the Lars Johnson spring. In addition there is some seepage from this whole área which finds its way into Birch creek channel.

More than 10,000 acres of land have been reclaimed and cultivated by the founders of Richmond city, this land being owned in severalty.

Among others the district court found the following facts: That at the time of the settlement, the founders of Richmond, the predecessors in interest of the plaintiffs, diverted all the waters.of Birch creek and applied the same to the irrigation of their lands, and other purposes; that thereafter they diverted all the waters of Cherry creek and its tributaries, and [381]*381applied said waters to beneficial uses, and have continued to so apply said waters; that tbe diversion, and applications of water were made and conducted as a community enterprise by voluntary association, and the distributions of water to the various appropriators have been made continuously from the time of the diversion by a recognized official called a water master who distributed the waters during the irrigation seasons to those entitled thereto; that thereafter the appropriators effected a de facto organization known as the Richmond irrigation district, which assumed and exercised further control over the diverting works and issued certificates to the diverters, designating the shares of water right owned by each, and this organization continued to distribute all the waters of Cherry creek and its tributaries, except such as were distributed and controlled by Richmond city, for a period of more than twenty years and until 1909, when the organization was dissolved, and all the holders of the so-called shares of the organization, who were the owners of right to the beneficial use of the waters that had been diverted, conveyed all their right to the diverting works and distribution system and to the uses of said waters to plaintiff Richmond Irrigation Company, a corporation, which issued to the owners and users of the water certificates of stock, one share for each share held by such persons in the Richmond irrigation district; that said corporation and Richmond city have continuously diverted, all the waters of Birch creek and of the Birch creek springs, and distributed the same to the stockholders of the Richmond Irrigation Company and to the inhabitants of Richmond city for irrigation, domestic, culinary, stock-watering, and municipal purposes.

The court further found that Birch creek issues from the spring area, commonly called Birch creek springs or the Lars Johnson springs, and this spring area is fed and supplied by an underground current, which has its source eastward about a mile in Cherry creek and flows in a well-defined underground channel' from its source to said spring area, from which the waters issue ip a running stream in three- well-defined places referred to in the findings as Springs, Nos. 1, 2, [382]*382and 3; that Spring No. 3 lies in and issues from the bed of the natural channel through which the waters - issuing from Spring No. 1 flowed continuously until the diversions and alterations by plaintiffs and their grantors and predecessors in interest; that in 1873 the predecessors in interest of plaintiffs diverted all the watprs of .Cherry creek, and commingled same with the waters issuing from said spring area, and thence forward until 1883 conducted all of said waters so diverted from Cherry creek, together with-all of the waters issuing from said spring and spring area, through the natural channel of Birch creek, and applied them to .the same uses to which they theretofore had devoted them; that in 1883 they constructed what was known as the “Upper Ditch”- and from such time until the present plaintiffs have diverted and used all of said waters, including the water from Spring No. 3.

The court also found that defendants and their predecessors in interest never used any of the waters of Lars Johnson springs except as the same constituted a part of the waters of Cherry creek, or otherwise than in their turns as prorated to them by the water masters under the authority of the voluntary association which preceded the Richmond Irrigation District and under the authority of said Richmond Irrigation District during the period of its existence, and that they never used any of said waters since the dissolution of the Richmond Irrigation District save as stockholders of the Richmond Irrigation Company, except that the defendants and their predecessors in interest have used, by taking from the stream supplied by Cherry creek and its tributaries where the same flowed past the dwelling houses of defendants, sufficient of the waters thereof for their domestic and culinary needs, and have used water so flowing for watering their stock, but that there is no evidence from which the court can find the amount or quantity of water so used by the defendants and their predecessors in interest; that in 1916 the defendant Steffensen wrongfully diverted the waters of said springs, and prevented them from flowing into the diverting works of plaintiffs; that in the month of December, 1916, Richmond city diverted the waters of Spring No, 3 into its [383]*383water pipes, which were interfered with by Christian Steffen-sen, who prevented plaintiff city from taking the waters from said spring into its pipe line and diverting the same, and thus deprived Richmond city of part of the water to which it was entitled; that the use of all of the waters of said Lars Johnson springs is necessary for the proper tilling of the lands of the stockholders of the plaintiff irrigation company, and for the supplying of the needs of the stockholders, and also of the inhabitants of Richmond city, for domestic, stock-watering, culinary, and municipal purposes during the whole of each year.

In our opinion the findings of fact made by the court are supported by substantial evidence though there are many sharp conflicts in the testimony. The plaintiff produced the water masters who had distributed water from 1888 until 1916, with the possible exception of one or two years. All of them testified that the defendants’ grantors had never used any water from the Lars Johnson spring, or Spring No. 3, or any of the Birch creek springs, except as shareowners of the voluntary organization and thereafter as stockholders of the Richmond Irrigation Company.

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Bluebook (online)
181 P. 162, 54 Utah 379, 1919 Utah LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richmond-irr-co-v-shaw-utah-1919.