Sharp v. Whitmore

168 P. 273, 51 Utah 14, 1917 Utah LEXIS 3
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 7, 1917
DocketNo. 3028
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 168 P. 273 (Sharp v. Whitmore) 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
Sharp v. Whitmore, 168 P. 273, 51 Utah 14, 1917 Utah LEXIS 3 (Utah 1917).

Opinions

McCARTY, J.

(after stating the facts as above).

Two questions are presented by this appeal, namely: (1) Did the trial court err in refusing to accept the Elliot decree as res adjudicata to all of the issues in the case at bar in so far as they involve the rights of Whitmore in and to the waters of Grassy Trail creek? And (2) did the court err in determining the duty of water on the lands described in the pleadings and in adjudging that the amount of water necessary, and to which Whitmore is entitled, under the evidence, to divert from Grassy Trail creek for the irrigation of his land and for culinary and domestic purposes, is four cubic feet per second?

One of the essentials of a valid judgment is that the judgment be definite and certain respecting the relief granted. In judgments defining and determining 1,2 conflicting claims, rights, and interests in and to the use of water in this arid region, the application of the foregoing rule is indispensable. The rule, the soundness of which is self-evident, is so well established that it would be a work of supererogation to cite authorities illustrating and supporting it. Does the Elliot decree meet this indispensable requirement? We are clearly of the opinion that it does not. Whit-more, by the decree, was awarded sufficient water to fill a ditch “eighteen inches wide on the bottom, two feet wide on [20]*20the top, and eighteen inches deep.” Neither the grade — fall of the ditch — nor the velocity of the water flowing therein is given. For aught that "appears in the decree the carrying capacity of his ditch may be less than one cubic foot and it may exceed six cubic feet of water per second. The amount of land irrigated, which is often an important factor in determining the extent of a claimant’s right to divert water from a stream or other common source of supply for irrigation purposes, is not given or referred to in the decree.

Looking to the decree the amount of water awarded to Whitmore is a matter of vague conjecture only. The trial court, therefore, did not err in holding that the decree is void for uncertainty, and hence is no defense to plaintiff’s cause of action. In Kinney on Irrigation, vol. 3, p. 2815, the author says:

"A decree so indefinite and uncertain that it is impossible to determine the quantity or proportion of water attempted to be awarded is fatally defective.’’

Discussing the doctrine of res adjudicata, in cases of this character he says at page 2830:

"But it cannot be regarded as adjudicating rights by implication, unless they were necessarily included in the subject-matter actually decided. So, where the court found that the defendant had acquired a right to divert sufficient water to fill a ditch without specifying the number of feet which might be diverted or the capacity of the ditch, it was held that this was not an adjudication." Smith v. Phillips, 6 Utah 376, 23 Pac. 932; Nephi Irrigation Co. v. Jenkins, 8 Utah 369, 31 Pac. 986; Nephi Irrigation Co. v. Vickers, 15 Utah 374, 49 Pac. 301; Riverside Water Co. v. Sargent, 112 Cal. 230, 44 Pac. 560; Lillis V. Emigrant Ditch Co., 95 Cal. 553, 30 Pac. 1108; Elliot v. Whitmore, 8 Utah 254, 30 Pac. 984; 1 Wiel, Water Rights, p. 702.

The evidence, without conflict, shows that from the time Whitmore first located on his ranch in the year 1878, until the bringing of this action, he has, during the low-water season of each and every year, continuously 3 diverted and used all of the waters of Grassy Trail creek for irrigating his lands and for culinary purposes, and that the entire stream during the normal flow thereof was necessary for [21]*21such uses. In fact, as pointed out in the foregoing statement of the case, the court found that “the stream becomes entirely dry in the majority of years”; and the evidence shows that on such occasions the occupants of the Whitmore ranch were compelled to haul water for their culinary and domestic uses. The important question, therefore, relates to the amount of high and flood waters of the creek heretofore necessarily used by Whitmore on his ranch for the purposes mentioned.

The evidence shows that the irrigated land (125 acres) of the Whitmore ranch extends along and on either side of Grassy Trail creek a distance of about one and one-half miles, and is divided into five fields. The slope or fall of the land is toward the creek channel. About nine acres of the land is covered with an orchard and the balance is devoted to the raising of garden truck, corn, potatoes, and alfalfa. It is conceded that “Grassy Trail creek is a natural stream of water varying widely in the volume of its flow one year to another and at different times during the same season. ’ ’ During what is known as the high-water season, when the stream is augmented by the melting snows and spring rains, there is generally an abundance of water. The high-water season generally begins about the middle of April and ends about the last of May or the first part of June. Occasionally high water continues until about the first of July. The amount of water in the creek during the irrigation season depends largely upon the amount of precipitation of snow the preceding fall and winter within the watershed drained by the canyon through which Grassy Trail creek flows. When the precipitation is heavy the water in the creek the following spring is correspondingly high, and when the precipitation is light there is but little, if any, high water. When the flow of high water ceases in years when the precipitation is normal, the flow of the stream is about one and one-half cubic feet per second. In the latter part of July and during the months of August and September, the stream is generally very low and the entire flow is used by Whitmore to irrigate a garden of a few acres. Sometimes during the months of August and September, in what is known as “dry” seasons, the entire stream [22]*22sinks and evaporates before it reaches the Whitmore ranch, and the people living on the ranch are compelled to haul water for culinary and domestic purposes. The waters of the creek are conveyed to the irrigated lands through two ditches, one of which is referred to in the record as the “upper,” and the other as the “lower,” ditch. The intakes of these ditches are about three-fourths of a mile apart. The evidence, without conflict, shows that the soil of the irrigated portions of the Whitmore ranch is a sandy loam underlaid with sand and gravel and “is of a character that requires considerable water for proper irrigation. ’ ’ The evidence further shows that the waste water and some seepage water from the irrigated lands flows into the creek channel. Joseph R. Sharp, respondent, testified on this point, in part, as follows:

“More or less of the water that is used upon the Whitmore ranch during the high-water season and during the irrigation season finds its way back into the channel of the stream by drainage and seepage and comes into the channel before it reaches my place. * * * There is no other place for it to go. # * * The Big Springs ranch (plaintiff’s ranch) is about six miles below the Whitmore ranch.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 P. 273, 51 Utah 14, 1917 Utah LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-whitmore-utah-1917.