Santa Cruz Reservoir Co. v. Rameriz

141 P. 120 | Ariz. | 1914

CUNNINGHAM, J.

The appellant summarizes the issues as follows: ‘ ‘ The real issues were: . . . How much water are appellees entitled to the use of, and when are they entitled to its use.”

One fact is settled beyond dispute, and that fact is that the appellees are entitled as a right to the amount of flood waters needed for the irrigation of their lands, measured by the capacity of their ditch or canal to deliver to the lands for that purpose, and has delivered prior to and up to the date of appellant’s appropriation. Appellant concedes this right exists, and the right is otherwise clear. The difficulty lies, not in determining appellees’ rights, but in determining the extent of the right and the manner in which the form of a decree by which that right shall be protected to them. Appellant’s right to appropriate all of the flood waters not otherwise appropriated by plaintiffs is equally clear. Its right extends to the appropriation of all the flood waters that would not reach appellees’ lands by their normal flow, and all the surplus Avaters not needed or appropriated by appellees, although such surplus waters may by their normal flow reach appellees’ lands, for the reason appellees have not appropriated either of such Aoavs of water. Again, the difficulty does not lie in determining appellant’s rights, but in determining the extent of such rights and devising a plan by which such rights can be preserved.

The local conditions entering into the matter cause the difficulties to arise. The plan or system adopted by the trial court was to determine the carrying capacity of appellees’ *68ditch at the point of diversion, and determine the length of time required to irrigate appellees ’ entire area of. lands from the capacity flow of the eanal. The court determined that the carrying capacity of the appellees’ canal is 168 second-feet of water, and the time required to irrigate appellees’ lands is 17 hours of a continuous flow of the canal at its full capacity. The trial court then found, in effect, that any obstruction of the channel of the river 10 miles above, by means of a dam such as appellants had constructed, has the effect to diminish the flow of water in appellees’ canal. Appellees’ rights extend only to the water that reaches their lands for distribution. Appellees can have no vested right to employ means to deliver water to their lands that in their nature are wasteful means. In water applied to a useful and beneficial purpose an appropriator acquires a vested right. To so handle water as to cause it to become lost any length of time would not create any rights in the person so causing its loss to continue such extravagant means. Appellees’ rights in the flood waters extend to no other of the flood waters than would reach the border of their lands by means employed to conduct it there, and at such point the measurements of the quantities of water to which they are entitled must be made under the peculiar circumstances of this case. When known, appellees are entitled to have this right enforced.

In arriving at the amount of the flood waters appropriated by appellees, it is pertinent to inquire and determine the area of lands to which the water has been beneficially applied, the frequency with which the floods occur, the waters from which reached the lands of appellees, and any other facts that would bear upon the question of the quantity of water actually appropriated by appellees to a beneficial use. All such matters existing may be presumed to have been inquired into.

The court finds that the entire area of appellees’ lands requires 168 second-feet running continuously for 17 hours. This must be construed as finding that appellees have applied the waters in question to irrigate all their lands, aggregating from the evidence 1,120 acres. The evidence of the amount of the entire area of land owned by appellees is that Manuel S. Rameriz owns 320 acres. He had 160 acres in cultivation *69up to 1908. The most this party ever had planted in the summer months was 80 to 90 acres. The 160 acres in pasture has been irrigated when water was not needed for the other lands. Henry J. Rameriz cultivated 150 acres of land. He owned 160 acres. P. A. Salazar testified that the Salazar family had in cultivation about 250 acres. They are alleged to own 480 acres. Angulo once owned 160 acres, and cultivated 30 acres; he has sold his lands to defendant. The plaintiffs’ evidence is that they cultivated 590 acres by use of the water and at times applied surplus water to 160 acres of pasture used for feed, making a total of 750 acres to which any claim supported by evidence is made that the water in question has ever been applied. The finding of the court is that the entire lands of plaintiffs require 168 second-feet to irrigate them. Such finding was without the issue, and not in accordance with the evidence. Taking plaintiffs’ evidence as true, the question to be determined was the quantity of water required and used to irrigate 750 acres of ground. The witnesses testifying as experts estimated the area of land in cultivation at from 250 to 600 acres, and, upon a basis of land in cultivation, they estimated the quantity of water necessary to irrigate that estimated area in 12 to 14 hours. Plaintiffs’ witness Seiboth gave as his expert opinion that 168 second-feet would spread over 550 to 600 acres in from 12 to 14 hours, running continuously. Witness Manning, for defendant, estimated that 250 acres were cultivated, and that 50 second-feet would be sufficient to irrigate that area of ground. Witness Woolf, for defendant, estimated that 300 to 350 acres are cultivated, and it would take 50 second-feet to irrigate 200 acres in 12 hours, or 50 second-feet would irrigate 6% acres an hour. The plaintiffs offered no testimony tending to show with exactness the length of time required to irrigate their lands from the full flow of the ditch, other than the testimony of Seiboth, and that had reference to the cultivated lands alone. He estimated the largest acreage, and estimated that 168 second-feet would irrigate from 550 to 600 acres running continuously for from 12 to 14 hours. That quantity of water running continuously for 17 hours would irrigate a much larger tract, and hence to that extent the finding is without support in the testimony.

*70The subject matter of the action is the surplus water not required by plaintiffs to continue to irrigate their lands as has been their practice; such water as has been lost by reason of the means used by plaintiffs to convey the water to their lands and by reason of the amount of flood waters discharged being in excess of the requirements of the plaintiffs. Appellant does not, and cannot, claim any right to deprive plaintiffs of any part of the waters appropriated by them, but it does elaim a right to such of the flood waters as it may conserve, and save from running to waste—such water as plaintiffs have not appropriated to any useful or beneficial purpose. The fact is undisputed that large quantities of the flood waters are dissipated while passing in their natural flow from the dam to the lands of plaintiffs. Plaintiffs admit in their testimony, and it otherwise appears from the evidence, that at times great quantities of flood waters have passed over the lands in question to the injury of the crops growing thereon, and have covered a vast area of country beyond these lands. These facts establish a right in defendant to conserve, if it can, such waters, and apply them to a beneficial use. 'The decree enjoins it from diverting the waters or any part thereof which flow in the channel of the Santa Cruz river above the lands of plaintiffs, and between that certain point on the Santa Cruz river where the defendant’s dam is constructed and the point upon said river at which the plaintiffs divert the waters thereof upon -their lands. The effect of this part of the decree is to prevent defendant from conserving the waters shown by the undisputed evidence to be entirely lost by evaporation, absorption and other means that pass the dam, but never reach the point of plaintiffs’ diversion. In that respect the decree enforces a waste of the most valuable property. It gives nothing of value to plaintiffs, and, if defendant can save such water by means applied, it may apply such means for that purpose. The decree deprives it of the right to do so. Otherwise the decree recognized inferentially defendant’s right to retain the surplus flood waters after plaintiffs have received the amount appropriated to their entire area of lands. Plaintiffs cannot rightly insist upon the continuance of a means that causes a waste of the waters not used by them at any time. Their rights are fully protected when water has been delivered to their lands at *71the advantageous point now used for that purpose in quantities equal to the amount they have appropriated to a beneficial purpose. The defendant may, if it feels inclined, employ means at its own expense to deliver said quantity of water to plaintiffs’ boundary lines in its ditch there, and, if the means result in a saving of water that would otherwise be lost in the transportation by the means at present employed to deliver it to that point, such water so saved from loss would become as a right the property of the defendant. When plaintiffs have received their full share of the flood waters, defendant has a right to the surplus, and has the right to it in its dam. The evidence is not sufficient to support the decree rendered, in the particular that the quantities of lands to which the water has been beneficially applied by plaintiffs, as shown by the evidence, are not made the basis of the extent of the use of the water. The evidence is not otherwise sufficiently full upon which to base & proper decree protecting the equities of the parties, and such rights, to be protected, require further investigation and evidence of other facts. The decree appealed from is evidently erroneous in enjoining the defendant perpetually from diverting any of the waters from the Santa Cruz river between the dam and plaintiffs ’ point of diversion and until 168 second-feet has flowed 17 hours, or so much longer as is necessary to deliver to plaintiffs its equivalent. From the testimony of all the witnesses the quantity of water mentioned flowing 14 hours would serve plaintiffs’ purpose to irrigate the lands cultivated. How long the flow must continue to irrigate 160 acres of pasture is not the subject of any evidence.

Equity would dictate a modification of the decree whereby the defendant company should be restrained from diverting only the waters to which plaintiffs are entitled by reason of their prior appropriation, and such restraining order should not prevent the defendant from providing other means of transporting the water to which plaintiffs are entitled to their lands, and delivering the water in the proper quantities at a point where the same may be distributed'by plaintiffs to their lands; such point of delivery to be the point at or near the boundary of the plaintiffs’ lands on their canal from which plaintiffs have distributed the water for irrigation, or to some other point from which the water may be distributed with *72equal advantage to plaintiffs. Such decree must provide for the protection of plaintiffs’ rights, but give to the defendant the privilege of furnishing other and different means of transporting the water to plaintiffs’ lands, so that plaintiffs may use the water when delivered in all respects as if their canal delivered the water from the river unobstructed by defendant at any point.

If the defendant elects to exercise its privilege to furnish the means of transporting the water to the point indicated until such means are furnished and prove effective for the purpose, plaintiffs’ canal and the channel of the river should remain unobstructed, for the purpose of carrying the water to plaintiffs. 2 Kinney on Irrigation and Water Rights, sec. 801. The peculiar circumstances presented by this case require, however, that the lower court retain jurisdiction over the case until defendant has furnished and completed all means of carrying the water belonging to plaintiffs in the proper quantities as it may elect to undertake. The ordinary equity procedure in such cases is ample to accomplish the purpose, and the lower court is the proper tribunal to employ such procedure in effecting the object to be obtained, viz., the protection of the rights of all the parties to this litigation. Until all the essential facts and conditions are established and the court is convinced that all affirmative action hereafter permitted to be taken by the defendant has worked no injury to the plaintiffs’ rights, and the means employed are efficient for the purpose intended, no final decree should be entered so as to oust the lower court of jurisdiction to alter, modify or vacate any order made pending the adoption and installation of any means of transportation of the waters to plaintiffs’ lands.

The decree is modified to the extent of enjoining and restraining defendant from diverting such waters of the Santa Cruz river as plaintiffs have appropriated, and from obstructing the flow of the flood waters in the channel of said river until the further order of the court, and until the court has determined the amount of lands to which the flood waters in question have been beneficially applied, and the quantity of water applied to irrigate the said lands, and until defendant has elected to provide another or different means of deliving the water to plaintiffs’ lands, and has actually completed *73such means, and such means so furnished are sufficient and efficient to accomplish the purpose for which they are intended and employed. The cause is remanded, with instructions to the lower court to enter such temporary decree, and take such further proceedings as equity and justice demand.

FRANKLIN, C. J., and ROSS, J., concur.

NOTE.—On the question of the right of prior appropriator of water, see note in 30 L. R. A. 665.

Eor the correlative rights of upper and lower proprietors to use water for irrigation, see note in 41 L. B. A. 741.

As to the care necessary to avoid waste in diverting water from stream under right of appropriation, see note in 15 L. B. A. (N. S.) 238.

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