Alpha Corp. v. Denver-Greeley Valley Irrigation District

132 P.2d 448, 110 Colo. 179
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 7, 1942
DocketNo. 15,077.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 132 P.2d 448 (Alpha Corp. v. Denver-Greeley Valley Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alpha Corp. v. Denver-Greeley Valley Irrigation District, 132 P.2d 448, 110 Colo. 179 (Colo. 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Knous

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a review of a decree of the district court of Weld county purporting to dissolve the Denver-Greeley Valley Irrigation District. The questions presented are purely ones of law as related to established uncontroverted facts. The district was created March 8, 1909 under chapter 113, S.L. 1905. Included in the district are 31,107 acres of land lying in Weld and Adams counties. April 5, 1909, the district authorized the issuance of $2,000,000 of bonds maturing in the years 1920 to 1929 inclusive, and bearing interest at the rate of six per cent per annum evidenced by semi-annual interest coupons. All these bonds were actually issued and outstanding prior to January 1, 1915. Tax assessments or levies in an amount in excess of the total face amount of all the bonds and interest coupons have been made on the lands included in the district. The levies for the bond interest coupons which matured in the years 1913 to 1919 inclusive, were made in the year 1936 in connection with a proceeding in the federal court. With such exception, all levies for bonds and interest were made during the years preceding the respective maturities of the bonds and coupons. Notwithstanding that all of such levies were so made in full, due to delinquencies in the payment of the tax, there are still outstanding and unpáid bonds of the district in the aggregate amount of $123,583.51; interest coupons aggregating $176,436.88 in face amount, and warrants totalling in excess of $38,000. Levies for the full face amount of these warrants also have been made in due course.

The district never has constructed an irrigation system but owns 3,480 shares of the stock of the Farmers Reservoir and Irrigation Company, one of the plaintiffs in error, which provides the source of the district water supply. The Farmers company maintains the facilities *182 for the delivery of the water evidenced by such stock to the landowners in the district, who, through assessment by the district, pay an annual operation and maintenance charge to the Farmers company for such delivery. The district also owns, or has an interest in, tax sale certificates issued to the counties of Weld and Adams or to the district, based upon delinquent taxes heretofore levied for the payment of bonds, interest and operation and maintenance assessments.

With affairs in this condition, a petition proposing the dissolution of the district, based upon sections 533 to 544 inclusive, chapter 90, ’35 C.S.A., as amended by chapter 162, S.L. 1941 (§§535, 541 and 542, chapter 90, 1941 Cum. Supp. to ’35 C.S.A.), signed by a majority of the electors and the owners of a majority of the acreage within the district, was filed with the district directors, May 1, 1941. In pursuance thereof the directors thereupon gave notice of an election in which was set forth the plan for dissolution determined upon by the directors. Of the 160 qualified persons in the district, 131 voted, the result being: 130 votes for, and 1 against, dissolution. Following the election, upon the petition of the defendants in error, Behrens, Blinn and Loloff, the district court of Weld county, strictly adhering to the procedural requirements of the statutes hereinabove cited and after a trial, entered the decree of dissolution here under review.

As the basis for permitting the dissolution, the district court, considering the statutes and decisions hereinafter to be mentioned, found that the proceeds from levies and assessments upon the real property within the district, constituted the sole fund out of which the bonds and bond interest might be paid and concluded that since all levies and assessments necessary to meet these obligations had been made, the payment of all the district indebtedness thereby legally had been secured and the debt contract of the district satisfied and executed, notwithstanding, as has been mentioned, because of de *183 linquencies in the payment of the taxes assessed, a considerable number of bonds, bond interest coupons and warrants remained outstanding.

Consistently, the decree provided for the assignment by the county treasurers of Weld and Adams counties of tax sale certificates to the holders of outstanding bonds, bond coupons and warrants, and specified that the dissolution decree should not affect the validity of outstanding certificates or subsequent deeds issued thereunder. It was further decreed that the 3,480 shares of stock of the Farmers company owned by the district, and all of its other property except tax sale redemption money which was to be held in trust for the bond and warrant holders, should be the property of the landowners of the district and distributed to them ratably on an acreage basis as appurtenances to their land. The court nominated a Special Master to administer the decree and, in addition, upon the pleadings and prayer of a petition of intervention filed by defendants in error The Denver Joint Stock Land Bank of Denver, Opdyke, Born, Peterson .and Pfief, landowners of the district, adjudged that all obligations of the district which had matured more than six years prior to the commencement of the dissolution proceedings, were subject to the bar of the statute of limitations (chapter 102, §1, ’35 C.S.A.). The district court further found that the continued existence of the district would result in the imposition of unwarranted operating expense upon the landowners therein.

Of the parties as yet unidentified herein, plaintiff in error The Alpha Corporation is the owner of a large acreage in the district and also holds a considerable block of outstanding district bonds and interest coupons. Plaintiff in error Chesnut is the owner of certain outstanding interest coupons.

The questions with which we are here confronted were raised by appropriate pleadings and objections of the two plaintiffs in error last named and the Farmers com *184 pany which, in addition to being subjected to the hazards of the validity of the decree by being required to transfer district water stock to the individual landowners, is also the owner of the greater part of the operation and maintenance warrants outstanding. All other parties, as well as amicus curiae, argue for the affirmance of the decree. For a proper understanding of the objections of plaintiffs in error, we deem it essential that the legislative enactments on the subject under consideration be reviewed.

The 1905 act, under which the bonds were issued, provided for the dissolution of irrigation districts by a vote of a majority of the resident freeholders, representing a majority of the number of acres of the irrigable land in the district, at a special election called by the board of directors, upon a petition of the landowners setting forth, “that all bills and claims of every nature whatsoever have been fully satisfied and paid.” Before calling such an election the statute provides that the board “shall be satisfied that all claims and bills have been fully satisfied.” If an election so held favored a dissolution, such was culminated by the board certifying the result to the county clerk of the respective counties in which the district was situate. S.L. 1905, c. 113, §§48, 49.

In 1915 a new statute, covering the procedure for dissolution of irrigation districts (S.L. 1915, c. 107, being sections 533 to 545 inclusive, chapter 90, ’35 C.S.A.), was adopted.

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Bluebook (online)
132 P.2d 448, 110 Colo. 179, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alpha-corp-v-denver-greeley-valley-irrigation-district-colo-1942.