Spanish Fork West Field Irr. Co. v. District Court of Salt Lake County

104 P.2d 353, 99 Utah 527, 1940 Utah LEXIS 80
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1940
DocketNo. 6164.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 104 P.2d 353 (Spanish Fork West Field Irr. Co. v. District Court of Salt Lake County) 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
Spanish Fork West Field Irr. Co. v. District Court of Salt Lake County, 104 P.2d 353, 99 Utah 527, 1940 Utah LEXIS 80 (Utah 1940).

Opinions

TRUEMAN, District Judge.

This original suit, for writ of prohibition, brought to determine the construction of Sec. 100-4-3, R. S. U. 1933, as amended by Chapter 112, Laws of Utah, 1939, raises two principal questions:

*528 (1) Whether the District Court of Salt Lake County, Utah, has jurisdiction in an action in equity to adjudicate a general determination of all of the water rights in the drainage area of the Utah Lake and Jordan River.

(2) Whether Chapter 112, Laws of Utah, 1939, amending Section 100-4-3, R. S. U. 1933, created a “new, restro-spective, remedy.”

The statute designated as Sec. 100-4-3, R. S. U. 1933, was taken by the Code Commission from Sec. 22 of Chap. 67, Laws of Utah 1919, and brought forward in the 1933 compilation in an edited and revised form.

None of the language used in the edited statute had any tendency to modify or change the legislative intent of the original statute except with respect to the duties of the State Engineer.

From an examination of the original 1919 statute it is plain that upon the filing of any action or suit in the district court for the determination of water rights the clerk of the said court shall notify the state engineer who shall' as expeditiously as possible perform the duties and exercise the discretions imposed upon that office by law. The duties imposed upon the state engineer and defined in Sec. 22 of Chap. 67, Laws of Utah 1919, are mandatory. The code commissioners in compiling the 1933 Revised Statutes edited and modified the said statutes so as to indicate the state engineer should perform his duties only “* * * if so ordered by the court * *

This language appears in the fifth line of Sec. 100-4-3, R. S. U. 1933.

This was the state of the law on May 28, 1936, when the defendants Salt Lake City, a municipal corporation, et al., filed a suit in equity in the District Court of Salt Lake County, Utah, against more than two thousand defendants, among whom were included the plaintiffs in this action, for the purpose of securing a general adjudication of the water rights of all claimants to the use of water which, if not interfered with, flows into Utah Lake, and the said *529 action seeks also to secure an adjudication of the rights of the various claimants to the use of the water in the Jordan River.

The act of 1939 amended Sec. 100-4-3, R. S. U. 1933, in several particulars not in controversy in this case.

One amendment deleted the phrase “if so ordered by the court,” and restored the statute to its use and purpose intended by the 1919 legislature.

Another amendment added the following provisions at the end of the amendatory statute:

“* * * And the court shall proceed to determine the water rights involved in the manner provided by this chapter and not otherwise. * * *”

This language added nothing to the 1919 statute but was indicative of the legislative intent both in 1919 and in 1939. The intent of the 1939 legislature was present in the 1919 statute without the use of this language.

So we start with this hypothesis that it was the intention of both the 1919 and 1939 legislatures to require the state engineer to perform the statutory duties imposed upon him and exercise the discretions with which his office is invested by law.

Sec. 100-4-3, R. S. U. 1933, was amended by Chap. 112, Laws of Utah 1939, in the following particulars:

After the word “shall” in the fifth line of the said statute as set forth in the 1933 R. S. U., as Sec. 100-4-3, delete the words: “if so ordered by the court,” and, after the word “ditches,” in the twenty-sixth line of the said statute, add the words: “canals, wells, tunnels or other works,” and, after the word “filed” in the thirty-fourth line of the said statute, add the words: “prior to the enactment hereof,” and, after the last line add the following provision: “and the court shall proceed to determine the water rights involved in the manner provided by this chapter and not otherwise.”

*530 So that the 1939 amendatory act is identical with the amended statute except for the one deletion “if so ordered by the court,” and the additions as stated above.

The 1939 amendatory statute is given in full below. The italicized words are the additions covered by the 1939 amendment. The term “if so ordered by the court” was deleted by the 1939 amendment.

“100-4-3. Determination by Action — Notice to Claimants — Duties of Engineer. Upon the filing of any action for the determination of water rights the clerk of the district court shall notify the state engineer that such has been filed. Whereupon the state engineer shall, as expeditiously as possible prepare and file with the court a statement giving the names and addresses of all the claimants to the use of water from the river system or water source involved in such action, so far as the said claimants are known; and to this end the clerk of the court shall publish, once a week for two consecutive weeks in a newspaper designated by the court as most likely to give notice to such claimants, a notice setting forth that such an action has been filed, naming or describing the river system or water source involved and requiring claimants to the use of water therefrom to notify the state engineer of their names and addresses for the purposes hereinafter set forth. When such statement shall have been filed or when the clerk of the court shall have ascertained as nearly as may be the names of all claimants, he shall within fifteen days prepare a notice setting forth the date when the state engineer will begin the survey of the system or water source and the ditches, canals, wells, tunnels or other works diverting water therefrom, or the fact that such survey has already been completed, as the case may be, and shall give notice that such claimants must within sixty days after the service of such notice file a written statement with the clerk of the court, setting forth their respective claims to the use of such water. Where such a suit shall have been filed prior to the enactment hereof, it shall be the duty of the state engineer upon receiving notice thereof to examine the records of his office with respect to the water system or water source involved, and if they are incomplete, to make such field investigations and surveys as may be necessary for the preparation of the report required by section 100-4-11, and the court shall proceed to• determine the water rights involved in the manner provided by this chapter and not otherwise.”

In order to clarify the matters as much as possible we quote below Sec. 22 of Chap. 67, Laws of Utah 1919:

*531 “Statement as to water users — -publication of notice — date as to survey — claims—field investigations. Upon the filing of any suit for the determination of water rights, the clerk of the district court shall notify the State Engineer that such suit has been filed.

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Bluebook (online)
104 P.2d 353, 99 Utah 527, 1940 Utah LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/spanish-fork-west-field-irr-co-v-district-court-of-salt-lake-county-utah-1940.