Court Opinion

ID: 6474136
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-06-26 22:33:29.906932+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T15:53:54.638933
License: Public Domain

ROSS, J.
The defendants in error were the plaintiffs in the trial court, and, in addition to the above-named plaintiffs in error, J. EL Root, Phil C. Merrill, Sheriff S. Marshall, Glen Root, David W. Cluff, Alfred M. Cluff, David Johnson, Kate Martin, John D. Goodman, William A. Clark, H. W. Heinan, William Williams, Joseph H. Lines, George W. Williams, Jr., and Nancy Cluff were defendants in the trial court. The complaint asked the court to adjudicate the respective rights and priorities of the plaintiffs and defendants as against one another to the use of the waters of Ash creek, situate in Graham county, for irrigation and for domestic and stock uses *46and to enjoin the defendants from interfering with plaintiff’s nse of such waters. Sheriff S. Marshall, David Johnson, Kate Martin, H. W. Heinan, William Williams, Joseph H. Lines and Geo. W. Williams made no appearance, and judgment was taken against them hy default. The other defendants answered setting forth their claims to. certain of the waters of said creek for irrigation, domestic and stock purposes. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and on June 18, 1912, judgment was entered adjudicating the respective priorities and rights of the plaintiffs and the defendants who filed answers.
Within the time allowed by law a motion for a new trial, was made. No formal ruling was had on this motion; but, by operation of law, it was denied twenty days after it was filed, the hearing thereon not having been continued by order of the court or by stipulation of the parties (section 591, Civil Code 1913) on or before July 8, 1912.
By the provisions of subdivision 3, section 15, chapter 74, Laws of 1907, carried forward so far as material into the Civil Code of 1913 as section 609, the transcript of the reporter’s notes may be incorporated into the record by filing it with the clerk of the court and serving notice thereof upon the opposite party or his attorney within sixty days after the entry of judgment or order denying a motion for new trial, or order granting or denying a motion in arrest of or to set aside a judgment, or within such additional or less time as may be stipulated between the parties or within such additional time as may be allowed by the court or judge by an order in the case.
There was no stipulation extending the time to file transcript. On September 3, 1913, an order was entered extending the time until October 1, 1913. This was more than a year from the time judgment was entered and motion for new trial denied. In Southern Pacific Co. v. Pender, 14 Ariz. 573, 134 Pac. 289, it was said that such an order “must be held for naught, because it was not made within the period of time allowed by law to file the statement of facts or reporter’s transcript.” If the transcript of the reporter’s notes is rejected, there is no evidence in the record that may be considered. Among the files of the case are a number of papers marked as exhibits, and plaintiffs in error insist that *47they are properly a part of the record on appeal; hut, if that be granted, still they are only a small part of the evidence used on the trial. The court should have before it all the evidence, and not fragments of it—if it is to decide the case on its merits. Wooster v. Scorse, ante, p. 11, 140 Pac. 819, just decided. The record, then, before us for consideration, consists of the complaint, the answers and cross-complaints and the judgment.
It has been repeatedly held by the predecessor of this court and by this court that, if the pleadings and the judgment disclose no fundamental error, they constituting the record on appeal, there is nothing to do but affirm the judgment. Only one of the defendants filed a general demurrer to the complaint. It is argued that the demurrer should have been sustained for the reason that the. complaint failed to allege that plaintiffs were “inhabitants” of the state, and section 5346, Civil Code of 1913, is cited as decisive of that point. Without entering into a discussion of the meaning to be given the word “inhabitant,” as therein used, it is sufficient to say that it does not appear from the complaint that plaintiffs were not inhabitants of this state. If it is essential to a valid appropriation of water in Arizona that .the appropriator be an inhabitant therein, and the plaintiffs, or any of them, lacked that qualification, we conclude that it could not be reached by general demurrer. No fundamental error appearing in the record of the case, no reason exists for disturbing the judgment of the trial court.
But had the evidence been properly preserved in the record, we suggest, without deciding, that it is very doubtful if the writ of error proceeding could be entertained for the reason that only a part of the parties to the judgment are made' parties here. There were some six or seven parties whose rights and priorities were adjudicated and settled in the judgment who are not made parties here. The judgment adjudicates some eighteen different rights to the waters of Ash creek with reference to priority and quantity. The facts in this case would seem to distinguish it from Egan v. Estrada, 6 Ariz. 248, 56 Pac. 721, for, as said in that case, “the judgment sought in this ease to be corrected is a judgment between plaintiffs and the defendant Estrada alone, as to the priority of right to the use of water.” In other words, all the parties *48interested in the judgment as rendered were made parties to the proceedings in the appellate court. In the present case that is not so, for the respective priorities of some six or seven defendants below were adjudicated and they are not made parties here.
Judgment affirmed.
FRANKLIN, C. J., concurs.