166 P. 309 | Utah | 1917
This is an action by plaintiff to quiet its title to certain dams and ditches, water and water rights, of which it claims to be the owner, in Box Elder County, and for damages for the alleged wrongful interference therewith.
The complaint alleges the ownership and right of possession of said property, and states that the water was used on certain described lands for the propagation and growing of grasses, tules, rushes, and other vegetation suitable for feeding wild water fowl, and declares the same to be a beneficial use. The complaint then alleges the interference complained of, which consisted of placing obstructions in plaintiff’s canal, diverting the waters thereof, and maintaining the same, to plaintiff’s injury. Plaintiff prays for damages, and that its title to the water and water ditches be quieted, and for injunctive relief. The answer of the defendants admits the corporate existence of the plaintiff and defendant corporations, and denies the other allegations of the complaint. It further alleges, in substance, that the individual defendants and numerous other persons named therein are now, and for a long time have been, the owners of several parcels of land, particularly describing
The court found in favor of defendants. In finding No. 2 it finds that the plaintiff, on'the 25th day of September, 1915, made an application in the office of the state engineer for a right to the use of unappropriated waters for irrigation purposes from September 1st to December 31st of each and every year of First Salt creek in Box Elder County, to be applied through a ditch on unsurveyed land comprising parts of sections 5, 7, and 8, in township 7 north, range 2 west, and sections 11 and 12, township 7 north, range 3 west, Salt Lake meridian, United States survey, aggregating 800 acres, said water to be applied for the purpose of propagating grasses, tules, rushes, and other vegetation suitable for feed for wild water fowl. Finding No. 2 further states, in substance, that notice of the application was published, and, no protest being made, the application was approved by the state engineer, and returned to plaintiff April 19, 1916.
Finding 3, in substance, states that at the time of making said application the plaintiff was not, never has been, and is not now, the owner of any part of said sections 6, 7, and 8, in township 7 north, range 2 west, or sections 11 and 12, in township 7 north, range 3 west, of the Salt Lake meridian. The court then finds the construction of a canal by plaintiff leading to the lands above described in 1915 and 1916, and the placing of a dam therein by the defendants by which the water was diverted and causéd to flow down a natural water
Finding 4 states, in substance, that during the time mentioned in the complaint, and prior to the diversion of the water by the defendants, all the waters of Salt creek flowing down to plaintiff’s point of diversion were flowing to and upon said sections 6 and 7, which were unsurveyed lands, arid in character, but the water spread out tended to produce natural grasses, tules, rushes, and other vegetation suitable for wild water fowl; that said lands were and still are uninclosed public domain, no part of which has ever been tilled.
The other findings of the court relate solely to the diversion and use of the water by the defendants, the necessity therefor; and the conclusion of the court that the defendants rightfully committed the acts complained of; that the plaintiff was not damaged, and was not entitled to the water.
As the defendants seek only a dismissal of the action, with no prayer for equitable relief, we deem the foregoing statement sufficient, especially as the only question to be determined is, what, if any, relief is the plaintiff entitled to in view of the pleadings and facts disclosed by the record.
Respondents, in their brief, assail the validity of the alleged appropriation relied on by plaintiff on the grounds that the lands to be irrigated are unsurveyed government domain, un-inclosed, unoccupied, and uncultivated, and that the propagation of wild fowl thereon is not a beneficial use subject to private ownership. If this contention is right, every other question involved becomes wholly immaterial.
It will be noted that the only purpose of this appropriation is the production of food for wild water fowl on unsurveyed lands of the public domain. The court found, as we have seen, that the lands were not only public and unsurveyed, but un-inclosed and untilled. It also found that the plaintiff did not own them, nor any part of them, from all of which, if the court’s findings are justified by the evidence, we may draw the legitimate conclusion that plaintiff did not, and does not, own even a possessory right to any of the lands except the small spot occupied by its clubhouse which, for the purposes of this case, is wholly immaterial. These findings of the court as to the nature, character, and condition of the land upon which the water was to be used are not seriously questioned. If they are questioned at all, we are satisfied that they are sustained by a decided preponderance of the evidence.
“Any person, corporation, or association, to hereafter acquire the right to the use of any public water in the state of Utah shall, ’1 etc.
Then the successive steps are stated down to and including the issuing of the final certificate of ownership as provided in section 1288x16, as amended in 1915 (Laws 1915, c. 83). The latter part of that section declares:
“The certificate so issued and filed shall be prima facie evidence of the appropriator’s right to the use of the water in the quantity, for the purpose and during the time mentioned therein, and shall be evidence of such right.”
It certainly must be conceded that the purpose of the law is to endow the appropriator of the water with all the insignia of private ownership. The certificate is his deed; his evidence of title, good, at least against the state, for all it purports to be, and good as against every one else who cannot show a superior right.
It is manifest in this case that the plaintiff has no possessory right whatever to the lands upon which the water' is to be applied. It is therefore impossible for it to acquire the exclusive enjoyment of the use to which the water is applied. It is not alone the fact that the lands are public domain, un-surveyed, uninelosed, unoccupied and untilled, but the fowl to be fed on the land are wild water fowl — ferae naturae, as distinguished from domestic fowl which might possibly be the subject of private ownership even though propagated on the public domain.
"We have searched in vain for any authority in support of appellant’s claim of a valid appropriation of the water in controversy. The beneficial use stated in the application is not in question. We are not disposed to hold that any use of water tending to supply man or domestic animals with food is not beneficial. But for the purpose of effecting a valid appropriation of water under the statutes of this state we are decidedly • of the opinion that the beneficial use contemplated in maldng the appropriation must be one that inures to the exclusive benefit of the appropriator and subject to his complete dominion and control. As the use in this case is not of that character, we are forced to the conclusion that plaintiff’s attempted appropriation is invalid, and that defendants committed no legal wrong in the acts complained of in plaintiff’s complaint.
As these views are decisive of all the assignments of error the judgment of the trial court is affirmed, with costs.