Borden v. Trespalacios Rice & Irrigation Co.

86 S.W. 11, 98 Tex. 494, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 133
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 23, 1905
DocketNo. 1389.
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 86 S.W. 11 (Borden v. Trespalacios Rice & Irrigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Borden v. Trespalacios Rice & Irrigation Co., 86 S.W. 11, 98 Tex. 494, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 133 (Tex. 1905).

Opinion

WILLIAMS, Associate Justice.

This case involves a contention between the parties as to the.validity of certain condemnation proceedings under which defendant in error claims a right of way for its works over the land of Borden and others, who were plaintiffs in the District Court. The judgments of that court and of the Court of Civil Appeals were in favor of defendant and the cause is before this court on writ of error.

Defendant is a corporation chartered ahd organized under subdivision 23 of article 642 and article 704, Revised Statutes, and also under an Act of 1895 (Laws 24th Leg., pp. 21-26 and pp. 27-28), the provisions of which now constitute articles 3115-3131, Bevised Statutes. The purpose declared in its charter is the construction, maintenance and operation of dams, reservoirs, lakes, wells, canals, flumes, laterals and other necessary appurtenances for the purposes of irrigation and milling, navigation and stockraising in the county of Matagorda.

After its organization it filed, on March 5, 1902, with, the county clerk of Matagorda County, in accordance with section 6 of the Act of 1895, its sworn statement showing its intention to appropriate, for irrigation purposes, the unappropriated waters of the ordinary flow or underflow of the Colorado river and of constructing canals, laterals, etc., through which to convey said water for the irrigation of agricultural land situated in said county, and showing, besides the other things required, that it proposed to irrigate approximately 75,000 acres of land. This was accompanied by the map required by the statute showing the route of the canal, from which it appeared that it would pass through or touch numerous different tracts of land.

The lands of plaintiffs lay between the headgate of the canal on the *505 river and its other terminus, and defendant instituted and conducted to a successful termination condemnation proceedings to acquire the right of way over such lands for its canal. No question is made as to the regularity and sufficiency of such proceedings to invest defendant with the right it claims, if there was lawful authority for the condemnation. It is proper to state that the condemnation was sought and allowed only, for the purpose of collecting and conveying water for irrigating agricultural lands.

In the trial of this cause in the District Court, it was made to appear that defendant’s plant is capable of irrigating 60,000 acres of land in tracts belonging to twenty-six different owners. This land is rich and is •capable of being made, by irrigation, to produce in good quantities corn, rice and most garden vegetables. Because of the irregularity and insufficiency of the rainfall, the only crop that has been grown was cotton, and that was never raised to any large extent, the principal industry of the section having been cattle raising. The value of the lands irrigated is very greatly increased thereby.

The attack made upon the condemnation proceedings is based upon the alleged absence of any sufficient authority in the statutes under which they were prosecuted. Prior to the passage of the Act of 1895, articles 642 and 704 of the Revised Statutes were in force. Subdivision 23 of the first named article authorized the formation of corporations for “the construction, maintenance and operation of dams, reservoirs, lakes, wells, canals, flumes, laterals and other necessary appurtenances for the purposes of irrigation, navigation, milling, mining, stockraising .and city waterworks. Article 704 provided that: “Every canal corporation for the purpose of irrigation shall, in addition to the powers heretofore conferred, have power;” * * * “4. To furnish water for irrigation at such rates as such organization may, by its by-laws and regulations, prescribe. 6. To enter upon and condemn and appropriate any lands of any person or corporation that may be necessary for the uses and purposes of said company, the damages for any property thus appropriated to be assessed and paid for in the same manner as is provided by law in the casé of railroads.”

The Act of 1895 provides in its eleventh section that “corporations may be formed and chartered under the provisions of this act and of the general corporation laws, * * * for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating canals, ditches, flumes, feeders, laterals, reservoirs, dams, lakes and wells, and of conducting and transferring water to all persons entitled to the same for irrigation, mining, milling, to cities and towns for waterworks, and for stockraising and for the purpose of building storage reservoirs for the collection and storage of water for the uses before mentioned.” Section 12 of that act provides that “All corporations . and associations formed for the purpose of irrigation, mining, milling, the construction of waterworks for cities and towns, and stockraising, as provided in this act,” shall have right of *506 way over public lands, and that such corporation or association of persons as well as cities and towns may obtain the right of way over private property and water belonging to riparian owners by condemnation as provided in the ease of railroads.

1. The first contention of plaintiffs is that the defendant is not invested with the power of eminent domain either by this act or the previously existing law, because it is not the identical corporation to which the power is granted by those laws. The lack of identity is said to 'consist in the facts, that only canal corporations for the purpose of irrigation alone are the recipients of the power granted by article 704, while defendant is a canal corporation for that and several other purposes; and that only corporations formed for all of the purposes mentioned in the Act of 1895 and for none others are to receive the power granted by that act, while defendant is incorporated for only a part of the purposes so mentioned and for one purpose (navigation) not mentioned. It will be observed that all of the purposes to which defendant undertakes by its charter to apply the water which it is to control are within one or the other of the laws quoted. Those laws are by the provision of the twelfth section of the Act of 1895 connected together and made to constitute the body of the law upon the subject of the utilization of water for the promotion _ of the several industries of which they treat. Those industries, as specified in article 643 and in the Act of 1895, are the same except that the former includes navigation, which is omitted from the latter. The twelfth section of the latter, however, provides that corporations may be formed under it and the general corporation laws for the purpose of constructing the named works for the specified purposes, and we think there is found in this legislation itself a refutation of this contention.

The first section of the Act of 1895 authorizes the appropriation of water, declared to be public property, “for the uses and purposes hereinafter provided.” The second section authorizes the storage and diversion of storm or rain waters for irrigation, mining, milling, waterworks, or stockraising. The latter part of the section connects together conjunctively these various industries to be promoted. The third section, with reference to the waters of streams, authorizes their use for irrigation, mining, milling, waterworks, or

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Bluebook (online)
86 S.W. 11, 98 Tex. 494, 1905 Tex. LEXIS 133, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/borden-v-trespalacios-rice-irrigation-co-tex-1905.