225 P. 337 | Utah | 1924
It is alleged in the complaint that the respondent, plaintiff below, owned certain property described located in Carbon county, Utah; that the respondent and his predecessors in interest, for more than 30 years preceding the date of the filing of the complaint, had taken from a mountain stream known as Grassy Trail creek water and had diverted the same by means of headgates and ditches upon said real estate and applied it to a beneficial use in the irrigation of crops growing on the land; that on or about June 1, 1920, and at diverse subsequent times and prior thereto, the defendant wrongfully and unlawfully cut the headgates and destroyed the banks of the ditches through which the water was flowing and deprived the plaintiff of the use and benefit of said water for irrigation and other purposes. Damages to respondent’s crops by reason of appellants interference with his right to the use of the water were also alleged. The prayer of the complaint is for damages, for a decree quieting respondent’s title and right to the use of the water, and for a permanent injunction restraining appellant from in any way interfering with the use of the water or any part thereof by respondent. The appellant denied respondent’s right to the use of the water, and in an affirmative defense claimed ownership and right to use the water upon lands owned by him. The court entered judgment for $150 damages in favor of respondent and a perpetual injunction restraining appellant from interfering with respondent’s use of or right to use the water in controversy. From that judgment this appeal is taken.
The order granting permission to file a reply is clearly within the discretion of the trial court, as also is the motion for a continuance. In the absence of any showing that the court abused its discretion, this court is not authorized to disturb those orders or to reverse the judgment by reason of the same. The affirmative matter denied by the reply in no way related to the claim or right of the respondent to the use of the water. It was an affirmative allegation alleging ownership and right to the use of the water in appellant. No showing was made to the court as to what witnesses were required to meet the issue raised by the reply; nor was anything stated as to what such witnesses would testify if present. There is nothing to show that the court abused its discretion either in permitting the reply to be filed or in denying the motion for continuance.
By the third assigned error it is claimed that the trial court erred in permitting the introduction in evidence of a certain decree, in the case of J. R. Sharp v. George C. Whitmore and Others, for the reason that the decree has no relation to and is in no way connected with the issues of the present 'action. That decree is not found in the record. Whether it was considered by the court in arriving at its judgment does not appear. There is ample evidence in the record to support the court’s findings and decree independent of and regardless of the decree in the Whitmore Case. If that decree was not admissible as evidence in this case, in the absence of a contrary showing it must be presumed by this court that the trial court did not consider that decree in arriving at its judgment.
Under the fourth assigned error it is strenuously insisted that the court erred in entering judgment for damages
We find no reversible error in tbe record.
Tbe judgment of tbe district court is therefore affirmed, with costs.