Stern v. Metropolitan Water District of Salt Lake & Sandy

2012 UT 16, 274 P.3d 935, 730 Utah Adv. Rep. 79, 2012 WL 925712, 2012 Utah LEXIS 35
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 2012
Docket20100339
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2012 UT 16 (Stern v. Metropolitan Water District of Salt Lake & Sandy) 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
Stern v. Metropolitan Water District of Salt Lake & Sandy, 2012 UT 16, 274 P.3d 935, 730 Utah Adv. Rep. 79, 2012 WL 925712, 2012 Utah LEXIS 35 (Utah 2012).

Opinion

Justice LEE,

opinion of the Court:

{ 1 The Point of the Mountain Aqueduct is a sixty-inch diameter pipeline that runs along the historic Draper Canal and transports culinary water to Salt Lake City and other cities in the Salt Lake Valley. Plaintiffs in this case are homeowners who asserted claims challenging Metropolitan Water District's construction of the aqueduct as exceeding the scope of its real property rights along the canal route. The district court granted summary judgment for the Water District. We affirm that decision in most respects, but reverse and remand for further proceedings on one issue.

I

12 Appellants are four private property owners in Draper, Utah whose land abuts the Point of the Mountain Aqueduct. Metropolitan Water District of Salt Lake & Sandy is a water district organized under the Metropolitan Water District Act. See Utax Cope §§ 17B-2a-601 to -608. The District constructed the aqueduct on real property it acquired through its codefendants, Draper City and Draper Irrigation Company. 1 The District placed the aqueduct along the Draper Canal, which was originally constructed sometime between 1915 and 1921 by the District's predecessor in interest, Utah Lake Irrigation Company (ULIC).

*939 T3 In the following paragraphs, we (a) first recount ULIC's original acquisition of property rights for its construction of the Draper Canal; (b) then explain the canal's usage from 1921 through the 2005 construetion of the Point of the Mountain Aqueduct; and (c) conclude with a discussion of the procedural history of this case.

A

T4 In 1914, ULIC sought to develop an irrigation canal on the southeast benches of the Salt Lake Valley and began obtaining the necessary property rights. At the time, appellants' predecessors in interest owned four parcels of land in the proposed path of the canal. ULIC used three different methods to obtain rights in these parcels: (1) voluntary transfers, (2) a stipulated condemnation judgment, and (8) a contested condemnation judgment. ULIC constructed the Draper Canal after successfully obtaining property rights in a fifty-foot strip of land traversing appellants' predecessors' parcels. The company identified the lengths of the canal corresponding to the boundaries of each parcel as "reaches." Reaches 16-19 are at issue in this case.

15 ULIC obtained Reaches 16 and 17 by warranty «deed from Bayard and Matilda Crosgrove in 1914 (Crosgrove Deeds I and II, respectively). The relevant language in the Crosgrove Deeds is identical, stating that the grantors "hereby convey and warrant to Utah Lake Irrigation Company" a "described tract of land in Salt Lake County." Both Deeds further state that the "strip of land [is] to be used for canal purposes only." Appellants Anthony Costanza and DeVonna Costanza are the Crosgroves' successors in interest as current owners of the property abutting Reach 16. Appellants Eric Stern, Michaela Stern, Leland Richins, and Linda Riching are also the Crosgroves' successors in interest as current owners of the property abutting Reach 17.

T6 ULIC obtained Reach 18 through a stipulated Judgment in Condemnation against the Susannah Crane family, entered August 22, 1914 (the Crane Judgment). 2 Prior to the Judgment, the Cranes had agreed that "a decree of condemnation may be entered herein, condemning in fee to plaintiff the property hereinafter described for the purpose of constructing and maintaining a canal." Pursuant to this stipulation, the Judgment stated that the "action was commenced to condemn the property ... for the purpose of constructing and maintaining a canal," and ordered "that plaintiff take and acquire and have [the property] for its use in fee." Appellant Loraine Berolatti is the Cranes' successor in interest as current owner of the property abutting Reach 18.

T7 ULIC obtained Reach 19 through a condemnation decree (the Smith Decree), entered July 21, 1915, after a jury trial against Elida H. Smith. The Smith Decree granted ULIC a "right of way for its canal and for the construction, operation and perpetual maintenance" of the canal. Appellants Lloyd Cummings 'and Lorraine Cummings are Smith's successors in interest as owners of the property abutting Reach 19.

B

[8 In 1921, after acquiring the necessary property rights and building the Canal, ULIC transferred ownership of the canal to Draper Irrigation Company. Draper Irrigation used the canal for the next seventy years to transport irrigation water from the Jordan River to farmland in southeastern Salt Lake County.

19 Over the years, the canal began to receive increased flows of urban and storm water runoff, and in 1975, Draper Irrigation granted Salt Lake County the right to use the canal as part of its storm drain and flood control system. Then in 1998, Salt Lake County transferred control over the storm drain and flood control uses of the south portion of the canal (including Reaches 16-19) to Draper City, which continued using the canal for storm drainage.

T 10 Meanwhile, in 1998-94, Draper Irrigation installed underground irrigation-water *940 pipelines across most of the canal, but not across Reaches 16-19, which remained open. Draper Irrigation ceased cleaning and maintaining the open portions of the Canal in 1998, and then ceased transporting open irrigation water sometime between 1993 and 1995. 3

{11 In 1998, Draper City began negotiating with Draper Irrigation to acquire the canal for use as a public trail and for storm drainage purposes. Draper Irrigation eventually conveyed its interest in the canal to Draper City in 2001.

12 Soon afterward, in 2002, Metropolitan Water District of Salt Lake & Sandy negotiated with Draper City to build the Point of the Mountain Aqueduct through the City. The proposed aqueduct would carry culinary water from the District's Point of the Mountain Water Treatment Plant to other treatment plants in the area. Following these negotiations, Draper City executed a "NonExclusive Pipeline Right of Way and Easement Agreement," granting the District use of the canal for its Aqueduct.

[ 13 The Water District began construction in 2005, and during the course of this litigation it has completed the buried aqueduct and graded the surface of the old Draper Canal. In connection with laying the sixty-inch pipeline, the District constructed cement air-valve structures that rise a number of feet above ground, 4 and installed a fiber-optic control cable that operates the valves. According to appellants, "one of the concrete blocks is directly in front of the Sterns' front door." Draper City has also constructed a public bicycle path along the graded surface of the old Canal, traversing Reaches 16-18 abutting appellants' property. 5

C

4 14 Appellants brought this action in the district court at the outset of the Water District's construction of the aqueduct. The court denied appellants' initial request for a preliminary injunction, and the parties cross-moved for summary judgment while the construction proceeded.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

C-B-K Ranch v. Thomas
2023 UT App 110 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2023)
Walker v. Zeus Land Holdings
2021 UT App 9 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2021)
LD III v. Mapleton City
2020 UT App 41 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2020)
Allen Family Trust v. Holt
2019 UT App 197 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2019)
Baker v. Carlson
2018 UT 59 (Utah Supreme Court, 2018)
Clearwater Farms LLC v. Giles
2016 UT App 126 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2016)
Keith v. Mountain Resorts Development, L.L.C.
2014 UT 32 (Utah Supreme Court, 2014)
Toscano v. United States
107 Fed. Cl. 179 (Federal Claims, 2012)
Torian v. Craig
2012 UT 63 (Utah Supreme Court, 2012)
Wilberg v. Hyatt
2012 UT App 233 (Court of Appeals of Utah, 2012)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2012 UT 16, 274 P.3d 935, 730 Utah Adv. Rep. 79, 2012 WL 925712, 2012 Utah LEXIS 35, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stern-v-metropolitan-water-district-of-salt-lake-sandy-utah-2012.