Barker v. Sunnyside Valley Irrigation District

221 P.2d 827, 37 Wash. 2d 115, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 389
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1950
Docket31355
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 221 P.2d 827 (Barker v. Sunnyside Valley Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barker v. Sunnyside Valley Irrigation District, 221 P.2d 827, 37 Wash. 2d 115, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 389 (Wash. 1950).

Opinion

Mallery, J.

This representative action was instituted by appellants against respondents to procure a decree requiring delivery of water to their lands for irrigation purposes, in such a manner that the lands might be beneficially irrigated, and to declare certain rules, adopted by the Sun-nyside Valley Irrigation District for water deliveries, invalid. The court sustained the rules and dismissed the action.

The background of this case will be found in Caruthers v. Sunnyside Valley Irrigation District, 29 Wn. (2d) 530, 188 P. (2d) 136. In that case the history of the Sunnyside irrigation project and the contracts of water users is related in extenso. It may be summarized as follows:

The Washington Irrigation Company deeded its irrigation system to the United States on June 23, 1906. It was agreed in the contract that the United States would furnish water to certain lands retained by the company, or its successors, for an operation and maintenance charge of one dollar per acre per year. This right had been sustained by a court de *117 cree as of the time the Washington Irrigation Company acquired the system. After the United States took over the operation, it entered into supplemental water right contracts with other land owners, both prior and subsequent to August 13, 1914, the date of the reclamation extension act (43 U. S. C. A., 340, § 492). Thirty-five thousand acres of land were reclaimed during the tenure of the United States, and annual charges and assessments were made against these lands by issuance of public notice. For this reason these lands became known as “Public Notice” lands. The amount charged for operation and maintenance usually exceeded one dollar per acre per year. In 1945, the United States conveyed the system to the Sunny side Valley Irrigation District, and it agreed to fulfill the obligations that had been previously imposed upon the United States. In the fall of 1945 the district fixed an operation and maintenance charge against all of the lands in the district in excess of one dollar per acre per year, whereupon Caruthers brought a representative action seeking a determination that the district was contractually bound to furnish water according to the contracts, just as the United States had been.

This court affirmed the judgment of the trial court in that case, and held that the contracts taken over by the United States, and the supplemental contracts entered into by the United States, both prior and subsequent to the reclamation extension act of 1914, were valid and binding upon the Sunny side Valley Irrigation District, except for water requested and delivered in excess of that which was by the contracts included in the one dollar per acre rate. The decree did not determine the rate basis upon which the operation and maintenance charge should be made for the delivery of excess water.

The district then shifted items of expense of operation and maintenance to the general expense account, and made an operation and maintenance charge of two dollars per acre-foot of excess water delivered to such lands.

The plaintiffs in the Caruthers case, thereupon, filed a petition seeking enforcement of the decree and to have determined the items of expense chargeable as operation and *118 maintenance, and, also, to require the district to refund illegal assessments which it had collected. The court made findings of fact and entered a decree determining the items of expense constituting operation and maintenance, and required the district to base operation and maintenance charges for the delivery of excess water upon the formula prescribed by section 5 of the reclamation extension act, which charge, at that time, was eighty-nine cents per acre-foot.

The court found and decreed that the lands (excepting “Old Supplemental” lands having contracts prior to August 13, 1914) covered by the old contracts were entitled to have delivered to them 2.62 acre-feet of water for an operation and maintenance charge of one dollar per acre per year. The “Old Supplemental” landowners, having contracts prior to August 13, 1914, were entitled to have water delivered according to the “Johnston Determination” at an operation and maintenance charge of one dollar per acre per year. The court made no determination of the extent of the water rights appurtenant to the lands. This was not necessary as, in the cases of Lawrence v. Southard, 192 Wash. 287, 73 P. (2d) 722, 115 A. L. R. 1308, Ickes v. Fox, 300 U. S. 82, 81 L. Ed. 525, 57 S. Ct. 412, and Fox v. Ickes, 137 F. (2d) 30, it had been decided that the water rights appurtenant to the supplemental and public notice group lands gave to them a sufficient amount of water for their beneficial irrigation, regardless of any contractual amount of cost or method by which such amount would be calculated.

During the bureau of reclamation operation of the Sun-nyside canal (except short periods not now material), and the 1945 to 1947 operation by the district, water was delivered in sufficient quantities and at the times needed to beneficially irrigate the lands whenever there was an available supply therefor, and the flow of water was diminished or cut off whenever the water users so requested.

The record shows that the term “beneficial irrigation” has come to mean the amount of water needed for the successful growing of diversified crops. To this end, it is neces *119 sary that there be a delivery of varying amounts of water at different times, to satisfy particular requirements. This was recognized and provided for by the bureau of reclamation during the time it operated the Sunnyside canal. It was done by the district in the years 1945, 1946 and 1947, and is now being done for the public notice group of landowners. It appears that the same will be done for the supplemental contract landowners if they will abandon their contracts and enter into new ones with the district, the effect of which will be to put them on a public notice landowner basis.

On April 1, 1949, the district adopted a set of rules (instructions to ditchriders) for the delivery of water. The public notice group of landowners were to receive beneficial use, that is, a sufficient quantity of water delivered at such times as requested to beneficially irrigate their lands and crops. The old contract landowners having contracts prior to August 13, 1914, would be delivered water to the extent of the “Johnston Determination,” as it is explained in the Caruthers opinion (the amount receivable for one dollar per acre per year), but on a continuous flow, monthly schedule basis. Extra water might be purchased and paid for in advance, in which event delivery would be made as requested until it was used. There was, also, a rule that had been theretofore promulgated, and which does not appear to have been abrogated, to the effect that any supplemental landowner, who surrendered his contract and entered into a district supplemental contract, would be delivered water on the same basis as the public notice group were served. Those who refused to surrender their contracts would have their water delivered on a continuous flow basis rather than a beneficial use basis.

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Bluebook (online)
221 P.2d 827, 37 Wash. 2d 115, 1950 Wash. LEXIS 389, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barker-v-sunnyside-valley-irrigation-district-wash-1950.