8 Utah 78 | Utah | 1892
The plaintiff alleged in his complaint that, in 1851, John G. Holman, the father of the plaintiff, appropriated from American Fork river sufficient water to irrigate fifty acres of land, and in 18G9 enough more to irrigate ten acres; that in 1874 plaintiff acquired the land and the water right in question from his father; and that in 1888 and 1889 the defendant’s watermaster denied him the use of it. The defendant, in its answer, denied the appropriation of the water by John G. Holman, and the acquisition of it by the plaintiff. At the conclusion of plaintiff’s evidence the defendant moved the court to nonsuit the plaintiff on the ground of a variance between the allegations and proofs. The court overruled the motion, and the defendant excepted, and he now assigns that ruling as error.
As to when the water was first used to irrigate plaintiff’s land, and whether at first by him or his father, or by both, the evidence is conflicting. The court found that in 1869 the plaintiff and his father, for the use of the former, first made the appropriation; and from the evidence this appears to be the most reasonable conclusion. The irrigation of plaintiff’s land from the waters of the American Fork river was the substance of the allegation, and the date of the first appropriation, as alleged, was not descriptive of the plaintiff’s right. An averment that a written instrument was made on a certain day does not make the date descriptive of the instrument, but an allegation that the instrument bears a certain date makes the date descriptive of the paper; and so as to an act raising a legal right, or that amounts to a legal wrong or imposes a
It appears from the record that the plaintiff’s land is situated within tbe limits of Pleasant Grove City, and that the municipality, without objection on tbe part of tbe appropriators, assumed the right to control and distribute