Salt Lake City v. Anderson

148 P.2d 346, 106 Utah 350, 1944 Utah LEXIS 29
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMay 1, 1944
DocketNos. 6522, 6499.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 148 P.2d 346 (Salt Lake City v. Anderson) 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
Salt Lake City v. Anderson, 148 P.2d 346, 106 Utah 350, 1944 Utah LEXIS 29 (Utah 1944).

Opinion

ADAMS, District Judge.

In May, 1936, Salt Lake City et al. brought an action in the district court of Salt Lake County against approximately 2,430 defendants who claim rights to the use of water from the streams and springs which would normally flow into Utah Lake. The prayer of the complaint in this action sought, among other things:

“(d) that the rights and title of each plaintiff herein to the use of water from Utah Lake and its tributaries be determined and quieted and that said rights and title be adjudged and decreed to be prior and superior to any right or rights of any defendant herein to the use of said water initiated subsequent to the date when the rights of such plaintiff were initiated.
“(e) that the right or rights of each defendant herein to divert or use water from Utah Lake or its tributaries be adjudged and determined.
“ (f) that all orders and injunctions necessary to a full exercise and enjoyment by each party to this suit of every right herein decreed to such party be made and entered herein.
“(c) that an order be forthwith made and entered herein requiring each defendant to appear before this court at a date therein to be specified and show cause * * *
*353 “(c) (2) why a restraining order should not be issued enjoining him from engaging in the practice of winter flooding his land. * * *”

The plaintiffs have consistently maintained:

“ * * * it is the position of the plaintiffs, and has been throughout the litigation, that this is a private suit, a suit invoking the equity powers of this court, and is in no sense a suit under the statute.”

The district court issued an order directed to the defendants, requiring them to appear before the court on a day certain, to show cause why the court should not assume control over the waters of Utah Lake and its tributaries, appoint a person for the purpose of supervising the diversion and distribution of said waters, and to carry out such orders and directions as might be issued by the court pending a formal determination, and, further, why the defendants should not be enjoined from engaging in the practice of winter-flooding land; why the water impounded by the defendants should not be held and diverted during the irrigation season in such manner as the court may later order, and for other relief.

No hearing was had on the day set, but thereafter the district court set a date of hearing on the order to show cause above referred to for September 14, 1939. Prior to that day the defendants filed a petition for a writ of prohibition. An alternative writ of prohibition issued from this court, in the following language:

“Now, therefore, it is ordered, that you, the above-named Defendants District Court and Allen G. Thurman, one of the judges thereof, and each of you, are hereby prohibited until further order of this court from further proceeding to hear and determine the order to show cause heretofore on June 17, 1936, issued by the Defendant District Court in that certain action filed in the Defendant District Court on May 28, 1936, wherein the corporate defendants herein are named as plaintiffs and the plaintiffs herein, among others, are defendants.
“It is further ordered, that you, the above-named Defendant Third District Court of Salt Lake County, Utah, and Allen G. Thurman, one of the judges thereof, and each of you, show cause, if any you have, before this court on or before the 20th day of July, 1939, why you, and each of you, should not be permanently prohibited from further *354 proceeding in said cause so filed on May 28,1936, except in the manner provided by Chapter 4, Title 100, Revised Statutes of Utah, 1933, and the amendments thereof.
“Nothing in this writ shall prohibit said Defendant District Court, or any of the judges thereof, from making any interlocutory or other order in said cause not inconsistent with the procedure prescribed by Chapter 4, Title 100, Revised Statutes of Utah, 1933, and the amendments thereof.”

On July 10, 1940, this court, by a majority opinion, ordered and directed that:

“Let [a] peremptory writ of prohibition issue in accordance with this opinion. Plaintiffs recover their costs. And, such is the order of this court.” Spanish Fork West Field Irrigation Company v. District Court, 99 Utah 627, 104 P. 2d 353, 362.

Thereafter the defendants filed a petition for a rehearing. Briefs were filed in support of and in opposition to the granting of a rehearing, and on February 14, 1941, a “resume” was written and a rehearing denied. Spanish Fork West Field Irrigation Company v. District Court, 99 Utah 558, 110 P. 2d 844.

After the rehearing was denied, some of the defendants herein made a motion in the District Court requesting that such court make and enter an order directing that all proceedings thereafter taken in such case be had in conformity with Chapter 4, Title 100, R. S. U. 1938, and amendments thereto. These motions were all denied. The defendants then filed a petition in the District Court whereby they prayed that the State Engineer be directed to make a proposed determination of the water rights involved in the litigation, and that the hearing and determination of the cause proceed as provided for by Chapter 4, Title 100, R. S. U. 1933, as amended.

A hearing was had on these petitions for a general determination, after which the court denied the petitions, stating two reasons:

“By referring the matter to the State Engineer’s Office the plaintiffs in this case would be deprived of the right to have a restraining *355 order issued, temporary restraining- order during the pendency of the action.
“The other reason is that the court can only take the evidence as it is presented at this time, or at the other hearings, and cannot speculate on the future, and by that I mean that the State Engineer’s Office does not at this time have sufficient funds to proceed.”

The matter comes to this court in two-fold, fashion: Upon a petition for a writ of certiorari whereby the defendants seek to have reviewed certain orders or judgments wherein the Honorable Bryan P. Leverich, one of the judges of the District Court, denied motions requesting that court to enter an order directing that all proceedings thereafter be had in conformity with Chapter 4, Title 100, R. S. U. 1933, and amendments thereto. Also by appeal from the judgment made and entered by the Honorable Bryan P. Leverich, wherein was denied a petition of various of the defendants, by which petitions it was sought to have the trial court call in the state engineer to make a proposed determination and to proceed to hear and determine said action in the manner provided by Chapter 4, Title 100, R. S. U. 1933, and the amendments thereto.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
148 P.2d 346, 106 Utah 350, 1944 Utah LEXIS 29, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salt-lake-city-v-anderson-utah-1944.