Billings Ditch Co. v. Industrial Commission

253 P.2d 1058, 127 Colo. 69, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 346
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 9, 1953
Docket16927
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 253 P.2d 1058 (Billings Ditch Co. v. Industrial Commission) 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
Billings Ditch Co. v. Industrial Commission, 253 P.2d 1058, 127 Colo. 69, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 346 (Colo. 1953).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Clark

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Billings Ditch Company, appearing as plaintiff in the trial court, sought therein, without success, to *71 have set aside an award of the Industrial Commission in behalf of claimant Allen.

There appears no substantial disagreement with respect to the facts. In November, 1950, claimant Allen, a farm laborer, with others, was engaged for hire in the task of cleaning and putting in repair the Billings ditch. The work included the removal of certain deteriorated wooden structures, designated in the record as “bulkheads,” and the replacement thereof by new ones. While so engaged, on November 22, 1950, claimant suffered an injury to his back, on account of which he was awarded compensation by the Commission.

Plaintiff contended at the hearings before the referee and the Commission, however, that claimant was not entitled to compensation for the reason that he was at the time of his injury engaged in farm and ranch labor, thus falling within the exemption clause of the Workmen’s Compensation Act and relieving plaintiff from liability thereunder. This exemption having been urged before the commission, upon remand from the district court requiring the Commission to make a specific finding thereon, the Commission, under date of January 4, 1952, entered a supplemental award by which it held that at the time of his injury claimant was not employed to perform, and was not performing, farm and ranch labor and that he is not exempt from the operation of the Workmen’s Compensation Act by the provisions of section 287 (c), chapter 97, ’35 C.S.A. The Commission affirmed its previous award, together with the order of the referee. The district court upon final hearing entered judgment ratifying and confirming, in all respects, the award of the Commission and directed that plaintiff’s amended complaint be dismissed.

There is presented here the single question of whether the claimant, at the date of his injury on November 22, 1950, was employed in the performance of farm and ranch work, thus coming under the provisions of the *72 exemption clause of section 287 (c), chapter 97, ’35 C.S.A.

Farm and ranch labor falls, of course, within the field of agriculture, which, while not a technical term, has many times been legally defined. Without undertaking to repeat these definitions at length, we state that, agriculture in general refers to any activity incident to the cultivation of land for the growing of crops, the harvesting thereof, and the care and feeding of livestock. In general, see, Great Western Mushroom Co. v. Industrial Commission, 103 Colo. 39, 82 P. (2d.) 751. It includes tillage, seeding, husbandry, and all things incident to farming in the widest sense of that term. In Colorado, as in all arid Western states, irrigation of the soil for the growing of crops and pasturage is one of the important features of agriculture, and is as necessary to the growing' of abundant crops as are the processes of tillage and cultivation.

Had claimant been employed by one of the individuals owning an interest in the Billings Ditch in the maintenance, cleaning and repair of an irrigation ditch on his individual premises, it is readily apparent that his injury would be noncompensable as falling within the exemption clause of the statute. This would also have been true had a call been put out by the ditch company on its stockholders to furnish men for the cleaning and repair of the main ditch and claimant had been hired expressly for that purpose by one, or more, of the individual owners of the ditch, and this, regardless as to whatever point throughout the length of said ditch claimant had been working at the time of his injury. These assumed situations are of course not in accordance with the facts of this case, and are here stated only for the purpose of clarifying the scope of agricultural exemption and for the purpose of later herein drawing comparison.

In this case disagreement between counsel, and difficulty to the court, arises over determination of the *73 character of plaintiff company. On behalf of the plaintiff it is contended that the Billings ditch is a strictly mutual ditch, owned exclusively by the individual ranch-men who derive water therefrom and who own all of the stock in the company; that it is a nonprofit organization limited in its field of operation to the use and benefit of the stockholders who own it, and that it is, in fact, nothing more than a corporate association of its stockholding individual farmers for their own convenience. This is not conceded on behalf of the Commission or the claimant, who contend that, under its articles of incorporation, plaintiff is set up to own and maintain the ditch, to supply water to lands adjacent thereto and to such lands as lie beyond the eastern terminus thereof, or adjacent to or near any of its branches or laterals, and particularly “also for the purpose of furnishing water to all such persons as have or may hereafter desire to purchase the same from the owners of said ditch.”

It is disclosed clearly by the record, and without dispute, that in practical operation the use of the Billings Ditch is strictly confined to those individuals who are stockholders in the company, the water carried thereby being divided pro-rata according to the number of shares of stock held by each participant. It is equally clear, and the bylaws provide, that no person other than a stockholder may draw water through said ditch and that the stockholders themselves are restricted from loaning or leasing the water to which they are respectively entitled to any other person, or permitting use thereof by others. Its maintenance and entire cost of operation is borne by assessments levied upon its shares of stock, either in cash or in labor. No charge is made for the carriage of water; no profit results from the operation of said ditch; its stock pays no dividends. The Billings ditch is not assessed for taxation purposes, the water rights represented therein being assessed under and in connection with the land of each of the respective ranch owners.

*74 On behalf of the Commission and the claimant it is argued that the Billings Ditch Company owns the ditch and the water. This is incorrect, for while the naked title may stand in the name of the ditch company, the actual owners of the ditch and water rights are the owners of the farms served thereby, in proportion to the stock interests of each thereof. The water rights may not be sold separate from these several tracts of land, and the sale and conveyance of the land carries with it the ditch and water rights, regardless of the transfer of the stock on the books of the company. Tinder the undisputed facts of this case the conclusion is inescapable that the Billings Ditch is a mutual irrigation ditch, and that the corporation is merely the vehicle by which its owners operate and manage its affairs. It was neither organized, nor is it operated, for profit, but solely for the convenience of its members in the management of their irrigation system and the distribution of the proper apportionment of water to the owners as their respective interests may appear; the shares of stock being merely incidental to the ownership of the water rights. Comstock v. Olney Springs Drainage District, 97 Colo. 416, 419, 50 P.

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Bluebook (online)
253 P.2d 1058, 127 Colo. 69, 1953 Colo. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/billings-ditch-co-v-industrial-commission-colo-1953.