United States v. Rio Grande Dam & Irrigation Co.

10 N.M. 617
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 24, 1900
Docket879
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 10 N.M. 617 (United States v. Rio Grande Dam & Irrigation Co.) 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
United States v. Rio Grande Dam & Irrigation Co., 10 N.M. 617 (N.M. 1900).

Opinion

MILLS, C. J.

The bill of complaint in this suit was originally filed on May 24, 1897, on .behalf of the United States, by their attorney-general, in the district court of the Third Judicial District of New Mexico, against the Rio Grande Dam and Irrigation Company, the purpose of which was to restrain the defendant from constructing a dam across the Rio Grande, in the Territory of New Mexico, and appropriating the waters of that stream for the purpose of irrigation. The cause was tried before the judge of said court, and a decree entered dismissing the bill. The United States appealed to this court, where the judgment of the district court was affirmed (9th N. M. p. 392). Thereupon the United States appealed to the Supreme Court of the United States, where the decree of this court was reversed and the cause remanded with instructions to set aside the decree of dismissal and to order an inquiry into the question whether the intended acts of defendants in the construction of a dam and appropriating the waters of the Rio Grande would substantially diminish the navigability of that stream within the limits of present navigability, and if so to enter a decree restraining those acts to the extent that they will so diminish. (U. S. v. Rio Grande Dam & Irrigation Co., 174 U. S. p. 690.)

In accordance with the judgment and mandate of the Supreme Court of the United States the cause was remanded to the district court of the Third Judicial District of the Territory and beginning on December 12, 1899, the cause was heard before the judge of said court. At the conclusion of said hearing, on the first day of January, A. D. 1900, the judge of said court made his findings of fact and ordered that a decree be prepared and entered dismissing the bill of complaint. Thereafter a motion for rehearing was filed and overruled, and on the ninth day of January, A. D. 1900, a final decree was made and entered dismissing the bill. Thereupon the appellant prayed an appeal to this court, which was granted.

The appellant filed the following assignments of error:

1. The court erred in its seventh finding of fact to the effect that between San Marcial and El Paso, a distance of three hundred miles measured by the sinuosities of the river, the percentage of loss is about one-third of the entire volume of such water, and at various other points in New Mexico such losses, more or less, equal in percentage, are also shown to occur. The evidence in this case failed to show that any such loss occurred between San Marcial and El Paso in any year, except that of 1897, and there being no evidence upon which to predicate the general conclusion drawn by the court by its said finding.

2. The court erred in its eighth finding of fact, there being no evidence upon which to base the general and particular conclusions contained therein.

3. The court erred in its ninth finding of fact, there being no evidence upon which to base the general and particular conclusions contained therein.

4. The court erred in its tenth finding of fact to the effect that the Rio Conchos is a perennial stream and at all times contributes a considerable quantity of water to the Rio Grande, such finding not being sustained by any evidence in the case, and the rest of the finding being a mere statement of a probative and not an ultimate fact.

5. The court erred in its eleventh finding of fact to the effect that the evidence fails to show that at the period mentioned therein, the waters flowing by the mouth of the Conchos affected the height of the river at Laredo, Texas, to a considerable extent; said conclusion being uncertain, ambiguous, and misleading, incomplete, and contrary to the evidence in the case, and is wholly immaterial, and because the particular facts found do not justify the general conclusion stated therein.

6. The court erred in its seventeenth finding of fact, the same is not based upon any evidence in the case, and is misleading, ambiguous, and the mere expression of opinion. If the conclusion reached by said finding is based upon any evidence at all, it is upon the absence of evidence, and while affirmative in form, it is a negative conclusion, and furnishes neither in whole nor in part any basis for the decree and finding dismissing the bill in said cause.

7. The court erred in its twenty-eighth finding of fact:

(a) The first paragraph of said finding is based upon the measurement of one flood flow in the year 1897, and that, only between San Marcial and El Paso, and, therefore, is not a reasonable deduction from the evidence in the case.

(b) Because the second paragraph of said finding of fact, twenty-eight, is not a finding of fact drawn from the evidence in the case, but is purely the result of speculation, and not a fair deduction from the evidence.

(c) Because the third paragraph of said finding of fact 28, is not a finding of fact drawn from the evidence in the case, but is purely the result of speculation and not a fair deduction from the evidence.

(d) Because in the fourth paragraph of said finding of fact 28 the court is not justified in assuming an arbitrary percentage of loss by evaporation and seepage between Presidio del Norte and Rio Grande City, Texas, but such assumption must be based upon evidence in the case, and there is no evidence in the case from which such arbitrary percentage of loss can be determined.

(e) Because the assumptions and presumptions contained in paragraphs 1 to 6 of said finding 28, are not based upon or sustained by any evidence in the case.

(f) Because the table (page 13J4 of said findings of fact) made a part of said finding 28 is based upon the assumptions, presumptions and speculative conclusions contained in the preceding six paragraphs of said finding 28, and said assumptions can not be made the basis of a conclusion by the court nor said table, said assumptions being wholly unwarranted by any evidence in the case.

(g) The appellant assigns as error the remainder of said finding of fact 28, explanatory of said statement, as being merely a theoretical and speculative discussion of the conditions of the river, and probable results which might flow from given conditions, not based on any evidence in the case, and because said finding is not properly a finding of fact but a mere speculative opinion or theory.

8. The court erred in its thirtieth finding of fact, becáuse it is based upon statements of fact not sustained by the evidence, and, second, the court erred in said statement of fact, in this, that the statement of facts contained in said finding does not justify the court in finding as a matter of fact and concluding therefrom that the amount of water proposed to be appropriated and empounded at Elephant Butte by the defendant, will not substantially diminish the navigable capacity of the Rk> Grande within the present limits of navigability.

9. The court erred in finding as a matter of law that the plaintiff’s bill should be dismissed.

10. The court erred in this, that none of the facts found by the court are sustained by the evidence in the case.

11.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
10 N.M. 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-rio-grande-dam-irrigation-co-nm-1900.