Lead Opinion
(having stated the case, delivered the opinion of the court):
The respondent insists that the order appointing the receiver is not a final judgment, within the meaning of section 9, art. 8, of the constitution of this state. That section declares that “from all final judgments of the district court there shall be a right of appeal to the supreme court.” The Bear River Irrigation & Ogden WaterWorks Company had been in the actual possession of the water system, and the business transferred to the receiver by the order, more than seven years before the order appointing the receiver and depriving it of its possession of the property and the control of the business was made. The order determined finally the rights of the parties to the possession of the property in dispute, and the control of the business, during the pendency of the suit; and the right to collect all demands due, and to pay all liabilities incurred, was also given to the receiver during that time. When the court shall finally determine the rights of the parties with respect to the property and business, and order them turned over to the one adjudged to be entitled, the order appointing the receiver will be recognized as binding. It will not be modified, added to, or changed. Before that time the receiver may collect and add to the fund, pay out a portion of it, and he will then deliver and transmit whatever remains to the person found to be entitled. The order, when made, was final as to the appointment of the receiver. No further action of the court was contemplated with respect to it. Errors, if any, in the order, can only be reviewed on an appeal from it. It would be idle to review such errors after the
The appellants insist that the order appointing the receiver, appealed from, is erroneous; that the court was not authorized, under the pleadings and the evidence, to make the order. They rely upon the contract of August 6, 1889, between the city of Ogden and John R. Both well, and the transfers by which it came to the Bear River Irrigation & Ogden Water-Works Company, and the resolutions of the city council, of October 4, 1890, purporting to turn over and transfer to the Bear Lake & River WaterWorks Company the Ogden City water-works system. They insist that thereby the latter company obtained the title to the Ogden City water-works system, and the right to furnish water to the city and its inhabitants, and the use of its streets for water pipes, and a lease for the full time that Bothwell or his assigns should furnish water
As to the first proposition in the order we will consider them, was the city of Ogden authorized to enter into a contract transferring its rights to the waters and system in question to the defendants, or either of them? Ogden City was a public corporation, and its authority was limited to such powers as were expressly granted by statute, and such as might be necessary to those expressly given. Undoubtedly, water distributed to a city and its inhabitants is devoted to a public use, and the entire system, whether consisting of reservoirs, conduits, pipes, or other means used to accomplish the delivery, is also
It appears from the pleadings in the record that about seven years intervened after the corporate defendants took actual possession under the void grant and lease, before this suit was instituted, and that nearly all of the £ipes and other parts of the water system delivered to the corporate defendants by the plaintiff had been replaced, and that the distributive system had been greatly added to and extended; that the Bear Biver Irrigation & Ogden Water-Works Company had expended more than $269,925.80 in replacing the old system, and in adding to and extending it; that the replacement of such new .system at this time would cost that amount. While we are of the opinion that the attempted transfer of the old water-works system by the plaintiff, and the leasing of its water right, were invalid, and the city of Ogden must be held to be the owner and entitled to the possession and control of the remaining portion, the possession of which it transferred to the corporate defendants, and that it is the owner and entitled to the possession and control
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the judgment of reversal, directing the property to be returned to the defendant company.
Concurrence Opinion
(concurring in part):
I concur in the opinion of the Chief Justice, in so far as it directs a reversal of the order appointing a receiver. This being an appeal from an order appointing a receiver, the questions as to the validity of the writing and contract between the city of Ogden and the Bear Lake & Kiver Water-Works Company, and of the resolution of the city council purporting to turn over to the Bear Lake & River Water-Works Company the water-works system of the city of Ogden, are not properly before this court, upon this appeal, for determination. Upon the final hearing many questions not heretofore presented to, or passed upon by, the trial court, may arise; and until that time, in my opinion, a decision upon questions not necessary for the determination of the question at issue, or upon the merits of the case, should be withheld. At the time this court denied the application made in this case for a writ of certiorari, and permitted, without argument, an appeal to be taken from the order appointing a receiver, the case of U. S. v. Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, decided by the territorial supreme court, and reported in 5 Utah, 394, holding that an appeal would not lie from an order appointing a receiver, had not been called to the attention of this court. So far as the present case is concerned, the determination of that question is the law of this case. But whether an appeal will lie from an order appointing a receiver in all cases is a question upon which I have serious doubts, under the decisions of this court, and the authorities cited. I expressly refrain from assenting to the doctrine laid down in the opinion of the Chief Justice upon this subject.