241 P. 307 | Ariz. | 1925
The facts are related in the former opinion in
That part of the former opinion holding that appellant at one time did have a right to construct the dam, that this right was created by a compliance with the statutes of the territory relating to the appropriation of water and the actual construction of the first dam, and that the appellant, as a matter of law, has not abandoned such right, is adhered to for the reasons therein stated. However, we believe that in two respects the former opinion is erroneous. While we adhere to the rules of law concerning the abandonment as declared in the former opinion, yet there is another question which was not considered at all; that is, the question of forfeiture. There is a plain, fundamental distinction between an abandonment and a forfeiture. While to create an abandonment there must necessarily be an intention to abandon, yet such an intention is not an essential element of forfeiture in that there can be a forfeiture against and contrary to the intention of the party alleged to have forfeited.
This case was tried and submitted to the jury on the theory of abandonment, whereas the facts, as presented in both the pleadings and the proof, created the issue of a forfeiture, and this court in the former opinion failed to recognize the distinction. As to whether there has been a forfeiture, there is no question of intention involved. It is merely a question whether, as provided by paragraph 5338, Civil Code of 1913, the appellant since the destruction of the original dam has used due diligence under all the circumstances of the case to reconstruct and maintain the same. That is a question of fact for the jury.
Some contention is made that paragraph 5338 provides only for a forfeiture of the water rights and not the reservoir rights, but the reservoir rights are dependent upon the water rights, and the forfeiture *307 of the latter incidentally works a forfeiture of the former.
The other error which we deem to exist in the former opinion of this court is that portion of the decision which holds that as a matter of law the effect of the judgment in the Gila BendReservoir Irrigation Co. v. Gila Water Co. case, supra, was to establish such right to build the dam on the date of the rendition of the decision. It appears from a reading of this case that at some time prior to the year 1893 the Gila Bend Reservoir Irrigation Company had an interest in the property involved and brought suit against the Peoria Canal Company and the Arizona Construction Company, asking for the appointment of a receiver. A receiver was appointed and issued receiver's certificates. Subsequently one Linn brought a suit against the Gila Bend Reservoir Irrigation Company and others, asking that its assets be marshaled and the property sold. The receiver was directed by the court to sell and did sell the property to a predecessor in interest of the Gila Water Company. The only apparent issue tried in that suit was the validity of the sale. The view formerly taken was that, being a suit to quiet title wherein the immediate source of the title of both plaintiff and the defendant was the government and the plaintiff in this case had no interest in the land at the time of the filing of the suit nor at the time of the rendition of the decision, the judgment closed the question of the title. This view is entirely wrong, for the reason that the elementary rule of law applicable to such a judgment as this is that it is res adjudicata only on questions actually litigated, or which could have been litigated. The issue involved in the suit at bar is that of forfeiture. This question not only was not litigated, but could not have been litigated in the case of theGila Bend Reservoir *308 Irrigation Co. v. Gila Water Co., above mentioned. If either plaintiff or defendant in that case had raised such an issue, he would have defeated his own contention. They must both necessarily have stood upon the proposition that there was no forfeiture. To hold that appellee cannot now raise the question of forfeiture prior to March 15, 1909, would be to deprive appellee of his day in court on that question, which of course cannot be done.
When the original dam was built, it became the duty of appellant from that time on to use due diligence in maintaining the same. The judgment in the Gila Bend Reservoir IrrigationCo. v. Gila Water Co. case did not close the question of diligence, and the appellee should have the right at this time to question the same.
Counsel for appellee now makes a contention that the original notice of appropriation was defective, and that appellant never did appropriate any water. This question was not raised in the court below, and cannot be raised at this late hour.
The court formerly found, as an undisputed fact, that the first dam actually created a reservoir which flooded the identical land now claimed to be flooded. Counsel seem to disagree as to whether this fact was established. Of course it is essential that this fact exist in order for the appellant to have any of its right in the land. However, since the case is to be remanded for another trial, it is not necessary to further discuss this point.
It is therefore ordered that the former judgment of this court be vacated, and that, for the reasons stated herein and in the former opinion, the case be reversed and remanded for a new trial.
McALISTER, C.J., and ROSS, J., concur. *309