Brose v. Board of Directors

132 P. 799, 24 Idaho 116, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 123
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMay 20, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 132 P. 799 (Brose v. Board of Directors) 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
Brose v. Board of Directors, 132 P. 799, 24 Idaho 116, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 123 (Idaho 1913).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of the third judicial district, granting a writ of mandate to the board of directors of the Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District, requiring said board to classify the right of the land under the canal of said district, pursuant to the provisions of see. 3287, Rev. Codes. On a former appeal of this case to this court, the action of the trial court in sustaining a demurrer to the complaint was reversed and the cause was remanded for further proceedings. (Brose v. Nampa etc. Irr. Dist., 20 Ida. 281, 118 Pac. 504.) The defendants thereafter answered, denying the plaintiff’s first priority in defendants’ canal as alleged in the complaint, and averred that prior to the filing of the answer defendants had classified the lands of plaintiffs; that by reason of adverse user the priorities under defendants’ canal had been extinguished; that a suit to determine the priorities to the water of said canal was still pending and undetermined; that the court in which said suit was pending had jurisdiction to determine the duty of water from defendants’ canal, and that until such determination, it was impossible for defendant to make the classification demanded, on account of the lapse of time and the destruction of the records of the former owner of said canal.

Said answer contains the following averment: “Defendants allege that under all of the facts and circumstances sur[119]*119rounding the distribution of water from said Eidenbaugh canal to the lands watered therefrom, they cannot make a correct classification of the said rights of water involved herein; that any classification they might make would be entirely unsupported by facts and would be arbitrary and mere guesswork and do great injury to the vested property rights of the users of water from said canal.”

The cause was tried to the court and findings of fact and* judgment entered in favor of the plaintiffs. A motion for a new trial was denied, and this appeal is from the judgment and order denying the new trial.

The errors specified go to the sufficiency of the evidence to support certain findings of fact; the failure of the court to find on certain affirmative defenses set up on the answer ; to certain errors of law occurring during the trial, involving the rejection of certain offered testimony; and to the alleged error of the court in entering judgment for the defendants, for the reason that said see. 3287, Rev. Codes is unconstitutional.

If said section is unconstitutional, then that ends this ease. Said section is as follows:

“When any ditch, canal, or reservoir delivering or distributing water to several users, has one or more rights or priorities by reason of enlargements made from time to time, the right of the land being irrigated by such works shall be divided into classes; rights of the first class belonging to those lands reclaimed between the dates of the first and second priorities or rights of such works; rights of the second class belonging to those lands reclaimed between the dates of the second and third priorities of such works; rights of any other class being determined in like manner; but all the rights belonging to the same class shall be equal and subject alike to the regulations of their respective class.”

Counsel for respondents contend that when appellants make the classification provided in said section, it will be their duty in the administration of their system to follow that classification in distributing the water. That no doubt is true, but that [120]*120is not an excuse for refusing to classify if the provisions of said section are constitutional.

It is contended that said section conflicts with sections 3 and 5 of art. 15 of the state constitution. That part of said sec. 3 applicable here is as follows: “Priority of appropriation shall give the better right as between those using the water, ’ ’ and of see. 5: “Whenever more than one person has settled upon or improved land with the view of receiving water for agricultural purposes, under a sale, rental or distribution thereof, as in the last preceding section of this article, provided, as among such persons, priority in time shall give superiority of fight to the use of such water in the numerical order of such settlements or improvements.”

It is contended that those constitutional provisions require that an irrigation district shall respect the priorities established by the constitution, while the provisions of said section command such district not to do so, and that said section of the statute provides for a classification of water rights in violation of the priorities established by the constitution; also that said section of the statute could have no other purpose than the regulation of the public use of water and that it is intended to govern the canal owner in the distribution of water; and it requires that they shall classify the waters for distribution in direct violation of the priorities established by the constitution, and that under said section 3287 the canal owner is prohibited from voluntarily delivering water in accordance with the constitutional rights of the water user; that as only one-half of the water of the first appropriation had been used prior to the second appropriation, a judgment for the plaintiffs in this ease would positively require the •ditch owner to classify approximately one-half of the water coming under the first appropriation on the same footing as all of the water rights included in the second appropriation; that the decree of the trial court which was entered strictly in accordance with this statute prevents the canal owner from distributing the water according to the vested property rights of the land owner, and that in principle it is no more difficult for a canal owner to determine who was entitled to water [121]*121under the first priority, as defined by the constitution, than it is to determine what land should be included in the first class as provided for by sec. 3287, Rev. Codes, and that a law which relates by its terms to every canal owner in the state and requires that such canal owner shall distribute water in violation of the constitutional priorities of the water user would seem so clearly void as not to admit of any difference of opinion. In support of his contention, counsel cites Leavitt v. Lassen Irr. Co., 157 Cal. 82, 106 Pac. 405, where the court said:

“It is, of course, a truism of the law that an act of the legislature conflicting with constitutional provisions must fall. All of the acts of the legislature regulating or attempting to regulate the public use of waters so appropriated are subordinate to the provisions of the constitution, and, to be valid, must be in harmony therewith.”

Nielson v. Parker, 19 Ida. 727, 115 Pac. 488, is also cited, wherein the court held that both the constitution and the statutes of this state recognize the right of a prior appropriator in and to the public waters of this state, and that the first in time is the first in right, as declared by both the constitution and sec. 3245, Rev. Codes.

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Related

Bradshaw v. Milner Low Lift Irrigation District
381 P.2d 440 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1963)
Follett v. Taylor Brothers
294 P.2d 1088 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1956)
Scott v. Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District
45 P.2d 1062 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
132 P. 799, 24 Idaho 116, 1913 Ida. LEXIS 123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brose-v-board-of-directors-idaho-1913.