74 P. 652 | Utah | 1903
This is an action to quiet the plaintiff’s alleged title to a spring.
Among other allegations of the complaint it is alleged, in substance, that the plaintiff, in August, 1898, under an honest claim of right, appropriated the water of a certain spring situated on the land described in the complaint; that at that time water from the spring, did not flow therefrom, upon the surface, but seeped away through the ground; that afterwards plaintiff, by excavations and other means, increased the flow of the spring, and that thereafter the plaintiff, at considerable
The acts of the plaintiff respecting the spring and the uninterrupted use of its waters by the plaintiff, found by the court, are dearly sustained by the evidence, but there is a conflict of evidence respecting the acts of the defendant. Willis Knapp, the superintendent of the plaintiff, testified, in chief, that while hé, William Morris, Thomas Quinn, and other employees of the plaintiff, were, on or about' the 1st of August, 1898, engaged- at the -work of improving the spring, the
It is ordered that that portion of the decree quieting plaintiff’s title to the spring be affirmed, and that portion relating to the award of damages be set aside, and the case be remanded for further evidence on the question of damages, and that the parties pay their own costs of this appeal.