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Salisbury v. Rockport Irrigation Co.

Supreme Court of Utah
Jan 25, 1932
7 P.2d 291 (Utah 1932)

Summary

upholding a grant of a prescriptive easement in an adjacent landowner's natural stream for a landowner to discharge excess or flood waters from the landowner's canal and transport this extra water to the Weber River

Summary of this case from Lowry Irrevocable Trust v. G L Enterprises, LLC

Opinion

No. 4547.

Decided January 25, 1932. Rehearing denied July 23, 1932.

1. APPEAL AND ERROR. Where court denied plaintiff's action for damages, which was basis of claim for injunction, defendant cannot complain of failure to formally deny injunction. 2. WATERS AND WATER COURESE. Where easement by prescription was limited to use of creek to natural capacity, decree establishing such easement properly defined limitations on use. 3. COSTS. Court's failure to award costs in action for damages and injunction held not abuse of discretion (Comp. Laws 1917, § 7038).

Smith v. Gilbert, 49 Utah 410, 164 P. 1026.

Appeal from District Court, Third District, Summit County; Geo. P. Parker, Judge.

Action by Elizabeth Salisbury against the Rockport Irrigation Company. From judgment rendered, defendant appeals.

AFFIRMED.

P.H. Neeley, of Coalville, and Badger, Rich Rich, of Salt Lake City, for appellant.

P.C. Evans and E.A. Walton, both of Salt Lake City, for respondent.


The plaintiff brought this action against defendant to recover damages alleged to have been suffered on account of water being cast upon her land from an irrigation canal belonging to defendant and for an injunction against future injuries. The defendant denied the alleged wrongs complained of by plaintiff, and by counterclaim asserted an easement through the channel of Three Mile creek, a natural stream running across plaintiff's lands for the purpose of conducting flood and surplus waters from its canal to the Weber river, and prayed for a decree establishing its ownership of the easement and an injunction against interference therewith by the plaintiff.

A trial by the court resulted in a judgment dismissing the plaintiff's cause of action for damages, and the entry of a decree to the effect that the defendant had the right to discharge excess or flood waters into the creek running across plaintiff's lands, "at such times as there shall be sufficient space therein to carry such excess or flood waters without flooding or trespassing upon the lands of the plaintiff." No order was made concerning costs.

The defendant, being dissatisfied with the relief granted, has appealed, contending that the judgment is erroneous because (1) the court failed to render a judgment upon plaintiff's cause of action for an injunction, (2) because of limitations imposed upon the defendant's right to discharge flood waters into the channel of Three Mile creek, and (3) because no order was made allowing costs to defendant.

The first assignment is without merit. The failure of the court to formally deny an injunction to the plaintiff results in no prejudice to defendant. The denial of the 1 plaintiff's cause of action for damages, which was the basis for the injunction prayed for, was in substance and effect a denial of the injunction. At any rate, no injunction was granted.

With respect to the limitations imposed upon the 2 easement decreed to defendant, there is no ground for complaint by defendant.

Three Mile creek arises in the mountains west of plaintiff's lands, and flows in a general easterly direction across the plaintiff's lands to the Weber river. The defendant's canal is constructed along the foothills west of plaintiff's lands, and extends from south to north, crossing Three Mile creek at a point west of and opposite plaintiff's lands. The right pleaded by defendant was to discharge excess or flood waters from its canal into Three Mile creek through the channel of which the same would flow across plaintiff's lands to the Weber river. It asserted no claim to flood the plaintiff's lands, and in its proof was particular to show that it never had flooded them. Its claim was based upon many years' use of the creek for the purposes mentioned, and its proof was that such use was always limited to the capacity of the creek channel. An easement acquired by prescription is always limited by the use made during the prescriptive period. Under the pleadings and the evidence in the case, the court was bound to limit the defendant's right to the capacity of the creek channel, and this of necessity meant, as provided in the decree, that additional capacity to carry water over and above the water naturally flowing in the creek. In so limiting the defendant's right the trial court committed no error.

Neither has the appellant any just complaint because no order was made for costs. Under the holding of this court in Smith v. Gilbert, 49 Utah 410, 164 P. 1026, costs in cases of this nature are discretionary as provided in Comp. Laws 3 1907, § 3341 (Comp. Laws 1917, § 7038). In this case nothing appears from which it can be said that sound discretion was not exercised in declining to award costs to either party.

The judgment is affirmed.

STRAUP, ELIAS HANSEN, FOLLAND, and EPHRAIM HANSON, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Salisbury v. Rockport Irrigation Co.

Supreme Court of Utah
Jan 25, 1932
7 P.2d 291 (Utah 1932)

upholding a grant of a prescriptive easement in an adjacent landowner's natural stream for a landowner to discharge excess or flood waters from the landowner's canal and transport this extra water to the Weber River

Summary of this case from Lowry Irrevocable Trust v. G L Enterprises, LLC
Case details for

Salisbury v. Rockport Irrigation Co.

Case Details

Full title:SALISBURY v. ROCKPORT IRR. CO

Court:Supreme Court of Utah

Date published: Jan 25, 1932

Citations

7 P.2d 291 (Utah 1932)
7 P.2d 291

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