Seven Rivers Farm, Inc. v. Reynolds

508 P.2d 1276, 84 N.M. 789
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedApril 6, 1973
Docket9439
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 508 P.2d 1276 (Seven Rivers Farm, Inc. v. Reynolds) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Seven Rivers Farm, Inc. v. Reynolds, 508 P.2d 1276, 84 N.M. 789 (N.M. 1973).

Opinion

OPINION

STEPHENSON, Justice.

In a water adjudication suit relating to the Roswell Underground Water Basin in Chaves and Eddy Counties, a partial final judgment and decree was entered on January 10, 1966 which was confirmed and supplemented in certain respects by an order of May 18, 1970. Matters relative to those adjudications (“the decrees”) are pending before us on appeal. State ex rel. Reynolds, State Engineer, et al. v. Lewis et al., 84 N.M. 768, 508 P.2d 577. No claim is made in this case that the pendency of that appeal is material here.

The decrees adjudicated the amount of the shallow water rights with which we are here concerned and further, so far as is now material:

A. Required the owners of the rights to install suitable measuring devices, of a kind approved by the state engineer, to. measure accurately the amount of water diverted from the wells.
B. Provided for the appointment of a watermaster and prescribed his duties.
C. Permitted a diversion in excess of the adjudicated right to offset carriage losses for 1967 and later years.
D.Permitted the total annual duty of water to be exceeded in any one year, with a proviso that the total amount diverted during any period of five consecutive years must not exceed five times the annual duty of water.

Under the decrees, Respondent Seven Rivers Farms, Inc. (“Seven Rivers”) was-entitled to pump (divert) from the shallow wells 10,155.25 acre feet during the five-year period commencing January 1, 1967.

The watermaster moved for an order to-show cause against Seven Rivers and its officers alleging that during the five year period, by August 15, 1971 Seven Rivers, had diverted a total of 10,330.92 acre feet,, an excess of 175.67 acre feet. An adjudication of civil and criminal contempt was sought together with appropriate orders and sanctions.

Following a hearing, the court rendered its decision, and found Seven Rivers and its officers in civil contempt. Provision was made for offsetting the excess during the next five year period, and continued a previously entered injunction against excessive diversions. In a separate order, Seven Rivers was adjudged guilty of criminal contempt, although its officers were adjudged not guilty, and was fined $1,000.-00. Seven Rivers and its officers have appealed.

We will first deal with the civil contempt issues. Water meters on two shallow wells were inoperative for a time. The watermaster calculated the amount of water pumped from those wells during those periods based upon gas consumption and tests of the amount of gas required to pump a given amount of water. The amount of unmetered water is relatively small — about three percent of the total diversion. The court below found the total diversion to be as alleged by the watermaster. In reaching this result, the total metered diversion, plus an amount determined by gas consumption in the manner we have described, was taken into account.

Contemnors do not seem to claim that the court’s finding of the amount of total diversion is unsupported by substantial evidence. Rather they assert that having taken into account a portion of the diversion based upon gas consumption, the entire computation should have been predicated on gas consumption. Such a computation, -which they introduced, shows the permissible diversion was not exceeded. Alternatively, because of certain claimed inaccuracies in the waterrnaster’s tests regarding :gas consumption, they assert that evidence <of diversion predicated thereon should have been excluded, with the result that the excessive diversion would not have been proven.

In making their argument, contemnors point to evidence which would have sustained findings requested by them which were refused by the trial court, but which, if adopted, would have established the diversion to be within permissible bounds. But the fact that the evidence would have sustained findings of fact different than those made by the trial court, :and which, had they been made,' would 'have been favorable to an appellant, is not :grounds for reversal. Grants State Bank v. Pouges, 84 N.M. 340, 503 P.2d 320 (1972).

Appellants rely on Lehigh Valley R. Co. v. Mayor and Aldermen, 103 N.J.L. 574, 138 A. 467 (1927) and Tax Review Board v. Weiner, 186 Pa.Super. 47, 140 A.2d 372 (1958). In the former, the determination of water use was held to be arbitrary, inaccurate, uncertain and speculative, but the facts were readily distinguishable. In the latter a measurement of water less precise than that in this case was approved.

As to the contemnors first argument, we are cited to no precedent which indicates the trial court’s rulings on admitting evidence or the method of determining diversion was erroneous. We view the matter as being within the trial court’s discretion. Concededly, one trial judge might feel that use of gas consumption data throughout, having the virtue of consistency, was the more accurate measure. Another judge might consider the system used by the trial judge here to be better, since it relies on the best information available. The inquiry on appeal is whether the findings as to total diversion which were made are supported by substantial evidence properly admitted. They were.

Seven Rivers was the owner of wells and water rights other than the shallow wells and rights we have mentioned, which were called the “artesian” rights. Application was made to the State Engineer for leave to combine and comingle water from the artesian and shallow wells upon the land to which they were appurtenant, including in the application a statement that the “appropriation under this application will not exceed the amount adjudicated from either source.” On January 19, 1971 the State Engineer entered an order which provided in pertinent part:

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“2. The diversion of artesian water under this permit shall be limited to 2,073.0 acre feet per annum measured at the wells * *
“3. The diversion of shallow water under this permit shall be limited to 1.740.9 acre feet per annum measured at the wells * *
“4. The diversion of a combined total of artesian and shallow water under this permit shall be limited to 3.813.9 acre feet per annum measured at the wells * *

Contemnors assert that in April, 1971, they pointed out to the watermaster an error in his records; the error being that a shallow well was recorded as an artesian well; that the error was then corrected; that had it not been corrected, the shallow water diversion shown by the watermaster’s records would not exceed that permissible. They claim that the trial court erred in refusing to adopt tendered findings recounting this mistake and its correction.

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Bluebook (online)
508 P.2d 1276, 84 N.M. 789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seven-rivers-farm-inc-v-reynolds-nm-1973.