Whitmore v. Welch

201 P.2d 954, 114 Utah 578, 1949 Utah LEXIS 196
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1949
DocketNo. 7063.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 201 P.2d 954 (Whitmore v. Welch) 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
Whitmore v. Welch, 201 P.2d 954, 114 Utah 578, 1949 Utah LEXIS 196 (Utah 1949).

Opinion

McDonough, justice.

Plaintiffs appeal from a judgment of the district court whereby the application of defendant, C. J. Welch, to appropriate water for power purposes, which plaintiffs protested, was approved with a conditional modification of the point of return to avoid a present conflict with protes-tante prior filing. On a trial de novo, the district court rendered substantially the same decision as that made by the state engineer.

The facts pertaining to this controversy may be summarized as follows: In 1920, Utah Granite and Marble Company made a filing on Little Cottonwood Canyon creek for power purposes. This filing was acquired by plaintiff *581 executor’s testator in 1928. We shall refer thereto hereafter as the Whitmore filing. In 1940, defendant C. J. Welch, then mayor of Midvale, together with a group of other citizens, investigated the possibilities for a municipal power plant. The municipal corporation had no engineer, and no funds for such an investigation, and therefore took no officiál action. Welch however, acting on the advice of the city attorney and with the acquiescence of other municipal officials, financed the investigation, engineer’s reports, and water filings. The filings he made were in his own name as an individual and at his own expense. He intended to transfer the same to Midvale Municipal Corporation as soon as acceptable to such corporation.

The Welch application filed on October 16, 1948, was for the appropriation of 22 second feet of water for power purposes. It is the application in controversy here. Like the prior Whitmore filing, it was to appropriate water for a non-consumptive use — for power purposes. The point of diversion of the Welch application is more than 2 miles upstream from the point of diversion of the Whitmore filing. It is the described point of return of the Welch application which gives rise to the alleged conflict with the Whitmore filing. Said point, described in linear measurements from the section corner, is some 2000 feet down-stream from the Whitmore point of diversion.

This application with such conflict was duly advertised, and when the Whitmores discovered the apparent conflict between the proposed point of return and their point of diversion, on July 13, 1944, they filed protest on each of the following grounds: (a) That said application conflicts with the Whitmore filing; (b) that the proposed power development would exceed $200,000 and would therefore not be economically feasible; and (c) that said C. J. Welch made said application for purposes of speculation and monopoly. On the same date, to wit, July 13, 1944, plaintiff Rich Whitmore filed an application to appropriate 15 second feet of water for power purposes, which application *582 would conflict with the Welch application. During the previous month, and, hence subsequent in time to the Welch application, plaintiff executor filed an application to change the point of diversion of the prior Whitmore filing.

In the meantime, C. J. Welch found that the municipality of which he was mayor, would not accept the filing he had made with a view of having the city build a power plant. Whereupon, he, with the knowledge and approval of other municipal officials, transferred and assigned the application he had filed in 1943 to the defendant Murray City Corporation for the sum of $400, being approximately the aggregate of his actual costs and expenses incurred in connection therewith. He stated that he had made the application for the purpose of a municipal power plant, and while he intended that his own municipality should have the benefit of the application, when he found out that his own city would not accept it, he transferred it to Murray City. He testified that he did not at any time intend to realize any profit to himself, and there is no evidence that he made any profit. After the assignment to Murray City Corporation, Welch ceased to have any further interest in the application.

After hearing on the protest filed by plaintiffs, the state engineer approved the Welch application subject to qualifications with respect to the point of return. Inasmuch as the decree of the district court follows substantially the pattern of the decision of the state engineer, we quote the pertinent provisions of the decree:

“It is * * * ordered, adjudged and decreed that said application should be and it is hereby approved subject, however, to prior existing rights, and subject to the condition that unless and until it is determined by a competent tribunal that the rights of the plaintiff, Rich Whitmore, as trustee of Application No. 8662, Certificate No. 2107 (corrected) have been lost by reason of nonuse, Murray City, under said Application No. 15552, must return the water at the present point of intake under said Application No. 8662 and Certificate No. 2107, (corrected).” (Italics added.)

*583 In the decision of the state engineer the point of intake for the Whitmore diversion was incorrectly described. Said error was eliminated by the judgment of the district court.

On this appeal the plaintiffs make the following contentions: (1) That the Welch application should have been denied on the ground that it was speculative and monopolistic. (2) That the authority of the state engineer is limited to either approval or rejection of an application, and that the Welch application was required to be denied by reason of conflict in the point of return with the prior Whitmore point of diversion. (8) That before approval of the Welch application with a change with respect to the point of return, the state engineer had a duty to require the filing of a change application and to republish such application as modified, to establish the priority date as of the filing of the change application. (4) The proviso in the decree (italicized hereinabove) was unauthorized in that it would operate to allow the assignee of the Welch application to acquire a water right in the event of loss of such right by nonuse, when a lost right results in a reversion to the public and necessitates a new filing to apply the water to beneficial use.

The first contention requires only brief discussion. The Welch application was not designed to monopolize water of the stream either for power purposes or for any other use. The filing covered a relatively small segment of the stream, and there is no evidence that the application was for substantially more water than essential to the capacity of the contemplated power plant. Nor can it be said that the application was made for speculative purposes. Welch testified without contradiction that he intended no profit to himself, and that he made the filing for a municipal power plant; and while he intended Midvale to be the beneficiary of the application, when his own municipality declined to proceed with the project, he transferred the application to Murray City Corporation with the approval of the other Midvale officials, *584 because Murray desired to erect such a power plant. He sold his rights for practically what he spent. Apparently, he charged nothing for his own efforts and time.

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

Related

Western Water, LLC v. Olds
2008 UT 18 (Utah Supreme Court, 2008)
Provo Bench Canal and Irrigation Co. v. Linke
296 P.2d 723 (Utah Supreme Court, 1956)
Little Cottonwood Water Co. v. Sandy City
258 P.2d 440 (Utah Supreme Court, 1953)
American Fork Irr. Co. v. Linke
239 P.2d 188 (Utah Supreme Court, 1951)
Riordan v. Westwood
203 P.2d 922 (Utah Supreme Court, 1949)
Lehi Irr. Co. v. Jones
202 P.2d 892 (Utah Supreme Court, 1949)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
201 P.2d 954, 114 Utah 578, 1949 Utah LEXIS 196, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/whitmore-v-welch-utah-1949.