Taylor v. Tempe Irrigating Canal Co.

193 P. 12, 21 Ariz. 574, 1920 Ariz. LEXIS 155
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 3, 1920
DocketCivil No. 1727
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 193 P. 12 (Taylor v. Tempe Irrigating Canal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Taylor v. Tempe Irrigating Canal Co., 193 P. 12, 21 Ariz. 574, 1920 Ariz. LEXIS 155 (Ark. 1920).

Opinions

ROSS, J.

We designate the parties as plaintiffs and defendants because they occupy the same position here in relation to the issues as in the trial court. The plaintiffs, as husband and wife, are the owners of a half section of farming land located under the canal of the Tempe Irrigating Canal Company, an unincorporated association, a defendant, the other defendants being the board of directors of said company, vested with complete power to manage its affairs.

By the suit plaintiffs seek to mandamus the defendants, as public carriers of water, to deliver to them forty-eight inches of water, constant flow or its equivalent, for each one-quarter section, or ninety-six inches for the half section, for the purpose of irrigating the 1917 crops growing on their land, contending that in what is known as the Kent decree they were awarded that quantity of water, and thereunder it is made [576]*576the legal duty of the defendants to give that quantity of water to the plaintiffs.

The defendants’ answer sets forth several defenses. The trial court disposed of the case upon the construction of the Kent decree, holding that said decree “does not impose upon defendants the duty to distributé water in any particular method or according to the priority claimed by the plaintiffs.”

In that connection the court construed the Kent decree as going “no further than to provide for a distribution as between canals.”

The court, after a trial of the issues, also sustained the defendants’ defense that plaintiffs were estopped by permitting and acquiescing in a system of distributing the waters of the Tempe canal according to shares of stock owned in the canal company and not according to priority, thus waiving their priority.

The plaintiffs appeal, contending the views adopted by -the court were erroneous.

We have come to the conclusion, after much reflection, that plaintiffs cannot be permitted to pursue the remedy of mandamus, because the Kent decree itself has pointed out for them and others in like situation another, better, speedier and more .adequate remedy, by formal application in the case in which that decree was entered. We quote from the decree the following excerpts:

“The court retains jurisdiction of the cause and of the issues embraced herein, and, upon good cause shown, may from time to time modify, enlarge, or abrogate any portion or feature of this decree, or of the decision and tables filed herewith as a part hereof, by order or supplemental judgment or decree to be entered at the foot hereof. . ’. .
“At any time any party to this suit, or any canal company acting as the carrier of the water distributed, may apply to the court or the judge thereof for an interpretation, modification, enlargement, or annulment of any order, direction, or action of the commis[577]*577sioner in the carrying ont of the provisions of the decree. . . .
“The decision and decree in this case, from the nature thereof, is of necessity a continuing one. The court retains jurisdiction of the case and of the issues embraced therein. From time to time, as conditions may require, an enlargement or modification of the decision and decree, application for such modification or enlargement may be made to the court, and, if granted, the same shall be entered at the foot of the decree herein.”

A few words concerning the circumstances that gave cause for the Kent decree we think not amiss. It was entered in the district court of Maricopa county March 1, 1910, in the case of P. T. Hurley v. Chas. F. Abbott and 4,800 Other Persons, the United States being an intervener. The United States had theretofore acquired title to the Roosevelt dam and reservoir site, and to most of the irrigating systems of the Salt River Valley, and was also interested, as guardian, in certain Indians who had settled in the Salt River Valley and were consumers of waters of the Salt and Verde Rivers. The other parties to the suit were or had been owners of land and appropriators of some of said waters. It was thought necessary, before the project was complete and ready to serve patrons, that those entitled to service should be ascertained. It was also necessary to ascertain the amount of water that had been theretofore appropriated for beneficial purposes in order to determine the water subject to storage. These things could be accomplished only by one big suit in the form of an action to quiet title of all the users and appropriators of the waters of said rivers; hence the Hurley-Abbott suit. This suit was pending and in course of trial for more than three years before the learned trial judge entered what is known as the Kent decree; “the testimony,” as the court says, “being taken intermittently during a period of two and one-half years. ’ ’

[578]*578At the time of the entry of the decree the dam was not completed. The data before the court as to the service of water was based upon an insufficient supply during the irrigating season every year theretofore. The court was without any guide to inform him what effect an ample supply, which was expected from the reservoir for every year, would have upon the duty of water, but doubtless entertained the idea that it would be much increased. He also knew that the amount, extent, duration and priority of the use of water by the different parties to the suit, as found, was based largely upon the ex parte testimony of each of said parties. Moreover, the impounding, diversion and distribution of the waters to the various canals were made a function of the officers of the United States under the supervision of the court.

Thus a different system was to be inaugurated than theretofore prevailing with every reason to expect radically different results. This new system had not been tried out, and its effect, when applied, was problematical. The court therefore retained jurisdiction of the United States and its officers and all the other parties to the suit and the subject matter of the suit, with the power to interpret, modify, enlarge or annul “any order, direction or action of the commissioner in carrying out all the provisions of the decree,” and also upon “good cause shown from time to time to modify, enlarge or abrogate any portion or feature of the decree or of this decision and tables filed herewith as a part hereof by order or supplemental judgment of decree to be entered at the foot hereof.”

More than any other question, in a case bristling with intricate and vitally important questions, the question of the duty of-water was found by the distinguished trial judge the most difficult to solve. He' so stated, and also said the duty of water fixed by him was experimental. Listen to his words:

[579]*579“The amount of water necessary for proper and economical irrigation and cultivation of a given amount of land is perhaps the most difficult of satisfactory solution of all the various questions arising in the case.”

Again:

“Such a standard [forty-eight inches per quarter-section], while perhaps not permitting of a precise conformity with existing conditions, can for the present at least experimentally be tried, and hereafter changed as it may be found to be inadequate or too great. ...

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Related

Hurley v. Abbott
259 F. Supp. 669 (D. Arizona, 1966)
State ex rel. Corbin v. Superior Court
412 P.2d 45 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1966)
Sines v. Holden
360 P.2d 218 (Arizona Supreme Court, 1961)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
193 P. 12, 21 Ariz. 574, 1920 Ariz. LEXIS 155, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/taylor-v-tempe-irrigating-canal-co-ariz-1920.