Alexander v. Central Oregon Irrigation District

528 P.2d 582, 19 Or. App. 452, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 778
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedNovember 18, 1974
Docket9173
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 528 P.2d 582 (Alexander v. Central Oregon Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alexander v. Central Oregon Irrigation District, 528 P.2d 582, 19 Or. App. 452, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 778 (Or. Ct. App. 1974).

Opinion

FORT, J.

Plaintiffs, owners of lands within the boundaries of defendant Central Oregon Irrigation District, brought a declaratory judgment suit seeking to have certain water rights acquired by defendant district in 1958 impressed with a constructive trust in plaintiffs’ favor. The circuit court impressed such constructive trust and ordered the district to transfer the water rights to plaintiffs on payment of a specified amount per acre. Defendant appeals. We review de novo. ORS 19.125 (3).

The relevant history of this matter is long and detailed, but much of it is essential to an understanding of the unique situation at bar.

In 1877, Congress enacted a statute popularly known as. the Carey Act to promote the reclamation of public desert lands. The Act, as amended in 1891 and 1894, authorized the Secretary of the Interior to contract with each state and donate thereto such public desert lands as the state should cause to be irrigated, reclaimed and occupied. The Act further allowed a contracting state to enter into all necessary contracts to cause the lands to be reclaimed, settled, and cultivated. U.S. Comp. Stats., § 4685 (1916). See Central *455 Or. Irr. Co. v. Public Service Com., 101 Or 442, 444, 196 P 832 (1921). Also, see generally, 94 CJS 255-57, Waters § 316.

Pursuant to the Carey Act, the state of Oregon made arrangements to have certain central Oregon lands withdrawn from the public domain and reclaimed, and thereafter transferred to the state or its assigns. Following this, the legislature enacted a law whereby Oregon accepted the conditions and benefits afforded under the Carey Act. Oregon Laws 1901, p 378, General Laws, today found as amended at ORS 555.010. The 1901 Act empowered the State Land Board to fix by contract with the developer the compensation to be paid for the reclamation and in such amount to create a lien or liens on the land in his favor.

Thereafter, the State Land Board contracted with two private developers, Pilot Butte Development Company and Oregon Irrigation Company, for the irrigation of certain of the aforementioned Carey Act lands. Lands currently belonging to the plaintiffs herein were included.

In 1904, both Pilot Butte Development Company and Oregon Irrigation Company assigned their rights to Deschutes Irrigation and Power Company, another private developer. On June 17, 1907, Deschutes Irrigation and Power Company and the State Land Board entered into a supplemental agreement with respect to 44,116.49 acres of the reclamation lands.

The supplemental contract provided for the lien on the lands in favor of the company to be apportioned to each 40-acre tract. Each such lien was to be removed, and appropriate water rights transferred, upon payment by a contracting settler to the company of *456 the reclamation lien amount attached to the land he claimed. Such payment, together with his agreement to pay annual water user maintenance fees, entitled the settler to a deed of the land from the state without further host. The company was empowered to convey one water right “for each acre of arable land susceptible of irrigation by gravity flow,” with the total number of water rights sold not to exceed the total number of such irrigable acres. The reclamation lien amount for irrigable land was fixed at $40 per acre. For lands determined to be non-irrigable, the price was $2.50 per acre.

The contract also provided that, ten years from the date thereof, Deschutes Irrigation and Power Company was to surrender all interest in the irrigation works to “a corporation of water users.”

Yet another private irrigation concern, Central Oregon Irrigation Company, succeeded to all rights and contracts of Deschutes Irrigation and Power Company in 1910.

In 1917, defendant Central Oregon Irrigation District, appellant herein and hereinafter referred to as COID, was organized as a quasi-municipal corporation in lieu of the water users’ association contemplated in the 1907 contract.

By a 1921 decree of the Deschutes County Circuit Court, hereinafter referred to as the Dietrich Decree, COID succeeded to all right, title, and interest in Central Oregon Irrigation Company’s Deschutes River irrigation system. In addition, COID was authorized to sell 2,500 acres of water rights to landowners who had irrigated acreage in excess of their allotted contractual rights. All such “excess acres” *457 or rights were eventually sold to either COID or landowners therein.

By contract in 1927, COID was granted permission by the State Reclamation Commission to reclaim certain additional Carey Act lands. Such lands were to be turned over to settlers under terms substantially similar to those incorporated in the 1907 contract. Again, the per acre reclamation lien amount for this irrigable land was. set at $40.

By virtue of the Oregon Water Code of 1909, now ORS ch 536, this state adopted, subject to existing rights, an appropriation system of distributing and recognizing water rights. Under the code, actual application of water to a beneficial use is the basis for recognized rights therein. As between two beneficial users, the prior appropriator has the senior right to water. ORS 537.120, ORS 539.010. See also: Fitzstephens v. Watson, 218 Or 185, 196, 344 P2d 221 (1959); Hutchins, The Common-Law Riparian Doctrine in Oregon: Legislative and Judicial Modification, 36 Or L Rev 193 (1957).

Appropriations initiated prior to the effective date of the 1909 Act were recognized, provided that progress on works for the application of such water to a beneficial use had thereafter been made “diligently and continuously.” ORS 539.010 (4). Furthermore, the state engineer was directed to prescribe, upon request, a cutoff date at which time any part of the initial appropriation not being put to beneficial use would be lost. ORS 539.010 (5).

During the 1920’s, an adjudication to determine relative water rights in the Deschutes River was commenced pursuant to the 1909 Code. ORS 539.010 (7), *458 OES 539.020 et seq. In 1928, a decree was entered in the Deschutes County Circuit Court by Judge T. J. Duffy modifying the order and determination of the state engineer as to the state of such rights.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
528 P.2d 582, 19 Or. App. 452, 1974 Ore. App. LEXIS 778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alexander-v-central-oregon-irrigation-district-orctapp-1974.