Bear Lake County v. Budge

75 P. 614, 9 Idaho 703, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 82
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 24, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 75 P. 614 (Bear Lake County v. Budge) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bear Lake County v. Budge, 75 P. 614, 9 Idaho 703, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 82 (Idaho 1904).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, C. J.

This is an application for a writ of prohibition to the judge of the fifth judicial district of the state of Idaho. The writ is sought to prohibit the judge of said court from further proceedings in an action pending in Bear Lake county, wherein one Edward J. Turner, as water commissioner for the first district of Idaho, is plaintiff, and. [708]*708all claimants to the use of water of a certain creek known as Dairy Canyon creek, situated in said county, were defendants,, none of which defendants are named in said action. The petition or affidavit for said writ sets forth, among other facts, that the said Edward J. Turner is the duly appointed, qualified and acting water commissioner of said water division No. .1 of the state of Idaho; that under and by virtue of an act of the legislature of the state of Idaho, entitled “An act to regulate the appropriation and diversion of the public waters and to establish rights to the use of such waters and the priority of such rights,” approved March 11, 1903, the said water commissioner, as plaintiff, did, on or about the fifteenth day of June, 1903, commence in the district court of the fifth judicial district, in and for Bear Lake county, said action. It is also alleged in said affidavit that said suit was brought for the purpose of quieting title to the right to the use of the waters of said stream among the claimants thereof; that said Turner, as such water commissioner, in order to bring and prosecute said action and’to carry out and enforce the provisions of the act aforesaid, did, under the powers therein conferred, employ as his attorneys therein, D. W. Standrod and Thomas F. Terrell, Esqs., that said Turner, as water commissioner, caused to be published in the “Paris Post,” a weekly newspaper published at Paris, Bear Lake county, Idaho, a notice of the nature and pendency of said action in the manner and form and for the time required by said act, and after due return of said notice and proof of publication thereof in said court, said action was placed upon the calendar of said court for trial, and the same was set for trial on the‘ thirtieth day of October, 1903. It is further alleged that under the provisions of said act and by the bringing of the action aforesaid, heavy costs and attorneys’ fees are sought to be charged against said county of Bear Lake, and that the same will be charged against said county and judgment rendered against it for such costs and fees if said action is permitted to be tried by said court; that such costs consist of clerks’ fees, attorneys’ fees, charges for the publication of the notice aforesaid, and other fees necessarily incidental to the trial of said action; it is also alleged that said act of the legis[709]*709lature is unconstitutional and void, and confers no power upon said district court to hear said cause, and that said court is without jurisdiction to hear and determine the same, for the reason that said act seeks to have determined by judicial decision the rights of claimants in and to the waters of said creek without due process of law, and imposes costs and expenses of the litigation involved in said action upon Bear Lake county, which county is not a party to said action and is nowise interested therein. And, after stating other facts, the affiant prays for the issuance of said writ of prohibition against the defendant.

TTpon the presentation of said petition or affidavit, the court issued the alternative writ of prohibition, to which writ the said judge, by his counsel, filed a general demurrer, thus admitting that the allegations of said petition were true.

The question submitted for decision involves the constitutionality of the act above referred to, and particularly that part of said act which authorizes the bringing of said action. (See Sess. Laws 1903, p. 223.) Said act is divided into forty-two sections, and by its varied provisions it is sought to regulate the appropriation and diversion of the public waters of the state and to establish rights to the use thereof and the priority of such rights. The constitutionality of said entire act is -questioned on numerous grounds by counsel for plaintiff. But the court has concluded that the question presented by the petition, and the only one in which the plaintiff county is interested, can be disposed of by passing upon the sections of said act that authorize the bringing and maintenance of suits, like the one now pending before the defendant judge, and to prevent the trial of which the writ of prohibition is sought in this proceeding. Said sections are numbered 34, 35 and 36, inclusive, and may be stricken from said act, and leave the remaining part of said act a complete and operative act; and we shall not in this opinion pass upon the constitutionality of any part of said act except the three sections above numbered. We shall consider three questions as follows: 1. The sufficiency of the service of summons as provided by said section 34; 2. The provisions of section 35 requiring the costs and disburse- [710]*710• ments incurred in the prosecution of said suit and attorneys’ fees to be paid, in the first instance, by the county; and 3. Whether the provisions of said three sections come within the ■police powers of the state. Then (1) as to the provisions of said section 34 authorizing the service of summons by publication thereof. Said section is as follows:

“Sec. 34. In cases where the waters of any stream used for irrigation, domestic or milling purposes have, by a decree of a court of competent jurisdiction, been adjudicated and allotted, it is hereby made the duty of the water commissioner of the district in which such stream is situated, within three months after the taking effect of this act, to forthwith institute an action in the district court of the county wherein such decree was entered and recorded, and if in more than one county, then in the county to be selected by such water commissioner, -against any and all persons claiming a right to the use of the waters of said stream or streams, or either of them, for purposes of irrigation, or for domestic or other purposes, and which persons shall not, for any reason, have been included in, or his right shall not have been settled and adjudicated by said decree, and against each and every party to said decree who shall claim or assert any right in addition, or of a date subsequent to the date of such decree. In entitling said action, it shall be sufficient to refer to the defendants as ‘all claimants of a right to the use of the water of ... . (giving the name of the stream as given in said decree) whose rights have not yet been adjudicated.’ Service of summons upon said parties shall be by publication in a newspaper of general circulation published in the county where such decree is entered and through which said stream flows, and if in more than one county, then in some newspaper of general circulation published in each of said counties, in the same manner and for the same length of time as is now provided for publication of summons out of the district court, except that no affidavit to obtain order for publication of said summons, and no order for the publication of the same shall be required, and the affidavit of the publisher, proprietor, business manager or editor of such newspaper that such summons has been duly published in such newspaper at [711]*711least once a week for a period of not less than one month, shall be conclusive evidence of such publication and of due service ■of said summons upon each and every of the defendants.”

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

State v. Krystal Lynn Easley
322 P.3d 296 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2014)
Lu Ranching Co. v. United States
67 P.3d 85 (Idaho Supreme Court, 2003)
Estate of (Pepper) Martin
2001 MT 110N (Montana Supreme Court, 2001)
Pope v. Intermountain Gas Co.
646 P.2d 988 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1982)
Yellowstone Pipe Line Company v. Drummond
287 P.2d 288 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1955)
In re the Accounting of Security Trust Co.
189 Misc. 748 (New York Surrogate's Court, 1947)
Bergman v. American National Bank
151 P.2d 360 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1944)
Reynolds Irrigation District v. Sproat
151 P.2d 773 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1944)
Blackmarr v. City Court of Salt Lake City
38 P.2d 725 (Utah Supreme Court, 1934)
Big Wood Canal Co. v. Chapman
263 P. 45 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1927)
Martin v. Federal Motor Co.
1923 OK 269 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1923)
Thomas v. Boise City
138 P. 1110 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1914)
Farmers' High Line & Reservoir Co. v. Wolf
23 Colo. App. 570 (Colorado Court of Appeals, 1913)
Rodriguez v. La Cueva Ranch Co.
134 P. 228 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1912)
Speer v. Stephenson
102 P. 365 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1909)
Boise Irrigation & Land Co. v. Stewart
77 P. 25 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1904)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
75 P. 614, 9 Idaho 703, 1904 Ida. LEXIS 82, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bear-lake-county-v-budge-idaho-1904.