Adamson v. Black Rock Power & Irrigation Co.

297 F. 905, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2917
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedApril 21, 1924
DocketNo. 4017
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 297 F. 905 (Adamson v. Black Rock Power & Irrigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Adamson v. Black Rock Power & Irrigation Co., 297 F. 905, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2917 (9th Cir. 1924).

Opinion

BOURQUIN, District Judge.

Defendants below, 357 in number, appeal from an adverse decree in a suit wherein both parties sought to quiet title. The evidence is that the Hanford Irrigation & Power Company, a Washington corporation, in that state initiated an irrigated lands enterprise by a bond issue secured by a trust deed of all its property, present and future. This deed directed that each bond be indorsed as follows:

“The trust deed executed to secure payment of this bond conveys the income from the gale of all water rights, lands and town lots owned or hereinafter to be acquired by the said Hanford Irrigation & Power Company, in excess of such sum of money derived from such sales as may be required for the company’s operating expenses, the deferred payments on its lands, and the cost of construction and maintenance of its irrigation system, upon the express condition that all of the property rights and franchises of the said irrigating company, including the property mortgaged to secure the payment of this bond, is deemed to be pledged perpetually to all and each of the several owners of land and vendees of the obligor of land and those to become" its vendee of land, their heirs, successors, ‘hnd assigns, for the due performance [907]*907on the part of the obligor, its successors and assigns, of each and every contract to supply water for the irrigation of land hereintofore executed and which may be hereinafter executed by the obligor, and that each and every such contract shall be deemed appurtenant to the property included in said mortgage, and that in case of the foreclosure of said mortgage and sale of said property the purchaser shall be the successor of the obligor and obligated to perform said contracts and entitled and authorized to collect, receive, and give acquittances for the unpaid portions of the payments which may be due and to become due to the obligor for water rights and all annual charges for maintenance of the works constituting the means necessary to continue the supply and distribution of water for irrigating said lands.”

The same also appears in the habendum: “Being expressly stipulated as a condition of this contract.” Thereafter the corporation constructed a hydroelectric generating plant, an electric pumping plant, a 16-mile transmission line from plant to plant, a continuation of the line to and a substation, and a ditch or canal system from the pumping plant to convey water to the lands. The suit involves all the said instrumentalities, save the canal system, and the lands on which located.

■ Likewise subsequent to the trust deed the corporation, in pamphlets, advertised for sale the lands, “including a perpetual water supply,” with reference therein to. and photos of the power plant and canal and to the function of the plant to supply water to the irrigation system, and it sold to the appellants, severally, lands and appurtenant water rights for single considerations of $70 to $300 per acre. Without water the lands have little value. The deeds to appellants in the granting clause are of land, “together with the perpetual right to the use of water from the main canal” limited in amount and season. Characterizing this as a “water right,” the deeds further provide that the vendees in their ditches will receive delivery of the water at the corporation’s ditch, and only such water as can be supplied by the pumping plant; that the vendor may shut off ¡water to repair instrumentalities; that the water right is not personal property, but appurtenant to and inseparable from the land; that the vendees shall pay to the vendor an annual maintenance charge of $1.50 per acre until 1913, and thereafter in reasonable amount, fixed by the vendor, to cover cost of maintenance and operation of the “canals,” in part of the deeds, and of the “instrumentalities,” in the others'; that, if the vendees fail to pay the charge, the vendor may shut off the water until paid, and the charge is a lien on land and water right and may be foreclosed; that all covenants run with and perpetually bind the land, and all terms of the deeds bind and inure to the parties, their heirs, representatives, successors, and assigns.

Thereafter, in a suit to which appellants were parties, the trust deed was foreclosed. The decree only of that suit is in evidence, and of it the record contains only the following:

“It is further ordered, adjudged, and decreed, that all of the property rights and assets, franchises, and rights in and to property of every kind and description in which said company has any interest, shall be sold free and clear of every demand and claim whatsoever of said defendants, or any of them, and all persons claiming or to claim by, through or under them, or any / of them, save and except that the property and franchises described in subdivisions (1), (2), (3), (3V2), (9), and (10) of paragraph 4 of this decree shall [908]*908be sold subject to all the existing rights of the owners of the hereinafter described premises, their heirs, executors, administrators, and assigns under either their contracts or deeds from the Hanford Irrigation & Power Company, or its receiver, but in accordance with and subject to the terms and conditions of said contracts or deeds; it being the intention that said property, after the sale hereunder shall be subject to said rights to the extent that and as said rights may now exist in or against said property in the hands of the Hanford Irrigation & Power Company.”

The subdivisions therein mentioned embrace the instrumentalities and lands of the instant suit. A receiver’s sale followed, one Lyons purchased all the property, and he transferred it to three corporations, viz.: The instrumentalities and the lands on which located to ap-

pellee, the'ditch or canal system to a ditch company, and the lands and land contracts to a land company. They, with common offices and manager, are operating collectively as did the Hanford Company singly.

In 1915 the ditch company raised the annual charge from $1.50 to $7 per acre, and filed a schedule thereof with the Public Service Commission of the state, but without waiving objections to jurisdiction. ' Later in that year some of appellants to the commission complained that the rates were unreasonable. A hearing was had, wherein the three corporation transferees were parties and objected to jurisdiction. The commission fixed a lower rate, which in 1919, in a suit by the ditch company and by a consent decree, was held confiscatory and unreasonable. Thereupon the ditch company again fixed the annual maintenance charge at $7 per acre, and in 1920 .filed a schedule thereof with the commission. It appears that some of defendants have taken no water from the system, and some have taken none since the system was acquired by the ditch company; that some have paid no charges for 10 years prior to suit, and some have paid none since the system was acquired by the ditch company; that some have taken water in excess of the amount stipulated in contracts and deeds, and have paid the charges fixed by the ditch company. For irrigation the lands require from 48 to 96 acre inches of water per season.

The transmission lines are connected with like lines, at times either delivers current to the other, and since 1910 from these involved have been sold and delivered some current for lighting purposes. . The present capacity of the generating plant exceeds the requirements of the pumping plant, but perhaps not, if all the lands of the enterprise were sold and irrigated.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
297 F. 905, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2917, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/adamson-v-black-rock-power-irrigation-co-ca9-1924.