Weber Basin Water Conservancy District v. Gailey

328 P.2d 175, 8 Utah 2d 55, 1958 Utah LEXIS 180
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1958
Docket8478
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 328 P.2d 175 (Weber Basin Water Conservancy District v. Gailey) 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
Weber Basin Water Conservancy District v. Gailey, 328 P.2d 175, 8 Utah 2d 55, 1958 Utah LEXIS 180 (Utah 1958).

Opinions

CROCKETT, Justice.

A rehearing was granted in this case to give further consideration to this important question with respect to water diversion: Does an owner of land adjacent to a stream have the right to insist that the stream continue to flow in its natural channel undiminished for the purpose of maintaining lateral support to keep percolating waters within the soil of his land?

We refer to this case as heretofore reported,1 and in addition thereto, state briefly the facts essential to our further discussion of the problem involved.

Plaintiff, Weber Basin Conservancy District, is engaged in an extensive water conservation program by constructing a series of storage reservoirs along the Weber River. This river is part of the westward drainage of the Uintah Mountains, where there is heavy snow and rainfall; it courses westward through mountain valleys and [57]*57through the Wasatch Range via Weber Canyon into the basin of Great Salt Lake. The purpose of the plaintiff’s reservoirs in the higher mountain valleys is to store the water of the river and to transport it in canals and aqueducts to be used for irrigation, culinary and industrial uses in Morgan, Weber, and Davis Counties, principally, west of the west face of the Wasatch Mountains where there is greater concentration of population and industry.

Defendant owns a tract of about 28 acres ■of land in Morgan County lying just west of the Weber River about 35 miles downstream from plaintiff’s Wanship reservoir. Its Gateway Canal, carrying water from the river, traverses the west portion of the defendant’s land. He has received compensation for the part of his land actually taken for that purpose, and there is no disagreement about his right to it. The controversy here devolves upon the defendant’s claim that he is entitled to recover for damages to his remaining land by reason of the diminished flow of the river because of impounding it in the reservoir. His appeal challenges the trial court’s rejection of his claims for such damages.

On the initial hearing before this court the order was to remand with directions for the district court to retain jurisdiction until such time as the canal was completed to determine the defendant’s damages, if any. Because of the possible misinterpretation which might be placed upon that order by assuming that damages may be recovered under such circumstances, and the possible far-reaching effect which the ruling upon the issue here involved may have upon the development and use of the water resources of this state, we concluded to grant this rehearing to further examine the question.

The physical situation upon which the defendant postulates his contention for damages is thus: As the Weber River flows along the east side of his land, the waters spread out through his subsoil, and the river itself acts as a “buffer” to prevent drainage, so that the water table in his subsoil rises and falls with the rise and fall of the water level in the river; in fact there is a large unseen volume of subsurface water coursing slowly down the river valley underneath and alongside the running stream; if the water of the river is impounded in the reservoir above, it will dimmish and at times entirely remove the water from the river; this will naturally have its effect upon the subsurface waters below; and further, the depleted riverbed itself, being lower than the surface of defendant’s land, will then in effect act as a drain to its subsurface waters. Defendant also avers that the river presently affords his land the benefit of some direct irrigation in the spring by overflowing and flooding his land.

Defendant maintains that the subsurface waters in his soil are part of the land itself . and therefore his private property, [58]*58and that'any diversion of the river which would lower the water table removes moisture from his land is a “taking of and a damage to” his property.

The controversy here brings two principles into direct conflict:

The one, urged by the defendant: that the sovereign power of eminent domain cannot be used to take or to damage property without just compensation; 2 wherefore he avers that he is entitled to be compensated in damages.

The other, by the plaintiff: that having established its right to use waters of the river in accordance with law, it should have the uncontrolled right to use them.

Just how this conflict is to be resolved depends upon basic policy considerations in regard to rights to the use of water. For the' purpose of exploring the question it is appropriate that we briefly look at the historical development of the use of water and the rules of law applicable thereto in our state. Prior to settlement by the Mormon pioneers in 1847, it was regarded as a dry and arid desert region with only sparse vegetation.3 The development of the economy of the state has, from the beginning, depended entirely upon the ingenious and determined efforts of our people to conserve and make the best possible use of all water resources. We deem it not amiss to observe that in doing so they have achieved some claim to leadership in the field of irrigation and take justifiable pride in having their achievements referred to as causing the once unpromising desert wilderness to “blossom as a rose.”

Even before the arrival of the main body of Mormon pioneers in Salt Lake Valley July 24, 1847, a group of eight horsemen led by Orson Pratt rode into the valley, and seeing the desert soil crying for moisture, diverted the stream of City Creek over the dry valley floor to condition it for the planting of crops.4 This set the pattern which has been followed ever since because water has always been the principal limiting factor to our growth and development. It is an indispensable resource which cannot be replaced nor substituted for, and there is no way, presently at least, of augmenting it; whereas population is always increasing. For that reason the conservation and efficient use of water has become increasingly more important, not only to agriculture, but to our growing industry, and in fact, to every phase of life. Most of the streams and natural water sources of the state have [59]*59now been appropriated, and the likelihood is that all will be before long. Consistent with the necessity of meeting the exigencies resulting from the short supply and the increasing demands for water it has always been the fundamental policy of our water law to encourage the putting of water to the highest beneficial use and to keep it so employed.

A concomitant of the considerations just stated and the policy emanating therefrom is that Utah, in common with most of our western states, found it necessary and desirable at an early date to repudiate the common law doctrine of riparian rights,5 which originated in England and is still extant in eastern states. It gives recognition to certain rights of property owners along the banks of the stream in the waters there flowing. The aspect of that doctrine of interest here is that the owner of land contiguous to a stream is entitled to its continuous flow by or through his property, undiminished in quantity and quality.6

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Weber Basin Water Conservancy District v. Gailey
328 P.2d 175 (Utah Supreme Court, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
328 P.2d 175, 8 Utah 2d 55, 1958 Utah LEXIS 180, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weber-basin-water-conservancy-district-v-gailey-utah-1958.