Scott v. Swartz

522 P.2d 151
CourtWyoming Supreme Court
DecidedMay 16, 1974
DocketNo. 4271
StatusPublished

This text of 522 P.2d 151 (Scott v. Swartz) 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
Scott v. Swartz, 522 P.2d 151 (Wyo. 1974).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice PARKER

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs, senior appropriators of Wild Cat Creek, an intermittent stream, filed suit against Harold Scott, a junior upstream applicant for permit; Floyd A. Bishop, State Engineer, William Long, Superintendent of Water Division No. 2; and John Throne, water commissioner responsible for field administration of Wild Cat Creek. Trial was had to the district court, which ordered that all defendants except Scott be dismissed and that Scott should remove from the channel of Wild Cat Creek on and through his premises the spreader system constructed by him under Permit No. 23369 and should restore and rebuild the natural channel of Wild Cat Creek through his premises so that it would carry a minimum 40 cubic feet of water per second of time.1 Scott (hereinafter referred to by name or as defendant) was also enjoined from constructing in the future any dike, dam, or spreader system upon the natural channel of Wild Cat Creek which would diminish, lessen, or reduce the natural flow of the creek below 40 cubic feet of water per second of time until all prior downstream water rights were satisfied.

Defendant has appealed (the action as to the water officials was dismissed but the State Engineer applied for and received permission to appear in this court as ami-cus curiae), arguing:

1. It was error to consider any evidence from the first trial, to assign the same docket number to the second trial, and to make the record in the first trial part of the record on appeal.

2. There was insufficient evidence to support the judgment.

3. The trial court’s requirement for a 40 c. f. s. bypass channel is a non sequitur.

4. The trial court’s result was inequitable and unconstitutional and that court exceeded its authority in cancelling Scott’s legally perfected water right.

We find no occasion to discuss at any length the first assertion, which while denominated “procedural error” seems to contend principally that evidence of the first trial was not admissible in the second trial. If, as suggested, there was impropriety in the institution of the 1971 action or in assigning the same docket number to [153]*153the case as in 1966, this was waived by defendant’s answer, appearance, and participation in the cause without raising the point until the time of trial when he questioned the admission of evidence therefrom.

The judgment in the earlier case, as amended by two nunc pro tunc orders, was not appealed and is valid. Matters relating thereto are settled and res judicata. Accordingly, there cannot be justification for going behind that judgment. The judgment itself was admitted by Scott’s answer and, of course, was proper and relevant evidence. It is in fact vital to the litigation and certain of its significant provisions will here be noted. There were factual findings of the ownership of certain lands in the area, including those of plaintiffs’, and adjudicated water rights from Wild Cat Creek, showing that each of plaintiffs’ water rights antedated the time of the action; that Scott had constructed a storage reservoir and spreader dams on Wild Cat Creek without a permit from the State Engineer and had altered the natural channel of the creek below his storage reservoir ; that plaintiffs had requested a regulation of Scott’s dam, reservoir, and spreader system by the State but no regulation had been undertaken which assured that waters in the course of Wild Cat Creek would flow through defendant’s lands and be available for the adjudicated rights of plaintiffs; and that the plaintiffs had suffered damage, nominal amounts being allowed by the judgment. On the basis of the findings of fact and conclusions of law that plaintiffs’ water rights were valid, Wild Cat Creek was a natural watercourse with its waters the property of the State, defendant had no permit or legal right for the dams and irrigation system, and plaintiffs had no adequate remedy at law, the court ordered that Scott be enjoined and restrained from continuing the use and operation of the storage dam, reservoir, and the spreader dams on Wild Cat Creek in their then condition and that he restore the natural channel and watercourse of Wild Cat Creek below the storage dam and through his premises so that it would carry and accommodate the same flow and volume of water as the natural flow of the same stream above his reservoir, this to be done in a manner approved by the State Engineer so that he would be satisfied that the natural channel and watercourse would carry and accommodate such natural flow. The court further adjudged and decreed that Scott might make an application and secure a permit to secure unto himself the storage, diversion, and beneficial use of any such water from Wild Cat Creek above and beyond that amount required to serve the prior appropriations, provided however, that such storage, diversion, and beneficial use be so accomplished that the plaintiffs, as prior appropriators, be in no manner damaged or their prior rights to the use of the water be interfered with, lessened, or diminished.

The second ground of appeal — that there was insufficient evidence to support the judgment — is a matter deserving careful scrutiny and consideration. Many of the allegations of the complaint were admitted and are not at issue in the appeal, the only two which were controverted and therefore material here are that:

Defendant Scott had rebuilt his irrigation system to the same plans, specifications, and design existent at the time the previous action was instituted.
The irrigation system as reconstructed by Scott deprived and would continue to deprive the plaintiffs of water rights and violated and controverted the judgment theretofore entered, constituting a contempt of the court.

A review of the record discloses no substantiation for the first mentioned allegation — that the rebuilding of the Scott irrigation system was to the same specifications and design existent during the time of the previous litigation. Not only was there no evidence to that effect but the testimony adduced was to the contrary. Scott testified that he tore out the spreader system in 1968, breaching all dikes so that the water would run through them and [154]*154that he reconstructed the system with a state-engineer authorized bypass. State Engineer Bishop said that the present system was not the same as existed at the time of the former judgment, partly because of the bypass, which he approved as capable of carrying sufficient water to satisfy downstream prior rights on Wild Cat Creek.2 No witness testified that Scott’s irrigation system was the same on September 5, 1967, the date of the first judgment, and the time of the trial in April 1973.

Turning to the second controverted allegation, we find no substantial evidence that defendant’s reconstructed system would continue to deprive plaintiffs of their water rights. The testimony of plaintiffs themselves did not purport to deal in facts regarding this or even estimates; and they introduced no witness, expert or otherwise, on the subject. There were some desultory references by them to amounts of precipitation in the area and the resultant flow of water at different points, but there was no attempt to coordinate these or to show that plaintiffs had been or likely would be deprived of rightfully appropriated water by defendant’s rebuilt installations.

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Related

Gorrell v. City of Casper
371 P.2d 835 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1962)

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Bluebook (online)
522 P.2d 151, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/scott-v-swartz-wyo-1974.