After stating the facts,
delivered the opinion of the court.
The use of the -water in question for several years subsequent to 1879 is- not disclosed by the testimony or findings, and no negative findings appear, but that Eolfson actually used the water for at least three years. It appears by the resolutions and by-laws of the company that owners of water rights could only draw water for the land under cultivation, and that land not planted in season should not be allowed water. It does not appear from the findings that the water was not withheld on account of the provisions of these resolutions. It nowhere appears that the defendant or any co-tenant held adversely to Eolfson or his grantee. 'Whatever the truth may be, the findings
Neither was there any abandonment of the water by the plaintiff or his predecessor in interest. To be adverse, the abandonment must be accompanied by all the elements required to make out an adverse possession. Kin. Irr. § 413. The court properly held that Eolfson remained the owner of the water until he sold the land upon which it was used to the plaintiff in 1887. But the court also held that Eolfson abandoned his right by making an improper conveyance of it to the plaintiff. We cannot concur in this holding. Section 2783, Comp. Laws Utah 1888, provides that “ a continuous failure to use any right to water, for a period of seven years, at any time after the passage of this act, shall be held to be abandonment and forfeiture .of such right, and whenever hereafter a conveyance of any parcel of land is executed, and a right to the use of water has been continuously exercised from the time of’ its first appropriation in irrigating such land, such right shall
There is no express finding'by the court that the defendant had been in the quiet, peaceable, adverse, hostile as of right, continuous, open, and uninterrupted possession of the water in question for seven years previous to the commencement of this action. Nor does the court base its, decision upon the ground of adverse possession, but rather upon the fact that Eolfson, having failed to make a proper
It appears from the findings that the use of the water by the defendant was worth five dollars per acre for eacli of the four years it had used it. Under the facts found, we are of the opinion that the judgment and decree of the district court should be reversed, and a decree entered in favor of the plaintiff, quieting title in the 10 acres of water right referred to in the complaint in the plaintiff, together with a decree for $200 as damages for the use of