Capital Water Co. v. Public Utilities Commission

262 P. 863, 44 Idaho 1, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 3
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1926
DocketNo. 4661.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 262 P. 863 (Capital Water Co. v. Public Utilities Commission) 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
Capital Water Co. v. Public Utilities Commission, 262 P. 863, 44 Idaho 1, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 3 (Idaho 1926).

Opinions

BUDGE, J.

On November 9, 1922, the Capital Water Company filed with the Public Utilities Commission an inventory of its property and application for an order fixing rates, charges and tolls to be collected by it. Prior to a hearing on the application a complaint in intervention was *8 filed by J. F. Koelseh, on behalf of himself and others in like situation, and the city of Boise filed its appearance as an adverse party. Hereinafter these parties will be referred to as the company, intervenor, the city, and the commission.

A motion made by the company to strike certain portions of the complaint in intervention and a demurrer filed thereto were denied and overruled, and, we think, correctly so, whereupon the company answered said complaint, and the commission proceeded to hear and determine the issues presented by intervenor.

The complaint in intervention alleges, inter alia, that on December 9, 1878, John Krall was the owner in fee of lots 2, 3 and 4 and the northwest quarter of the southwest quarter of section 11, and lots 1 and 2, section 10, township 3 north, range 2, east of the Boise meridian; that on said date Krall conveyed by deed to J. B. Walling a right of way through the lands described, for the construction and enlargement of a certain irrigation ditch or canal known as the Walling ditch, and agreed to perform fifty dollars’ worth of work on said ditch and thereafter to keep the same in good repair through said lands, in consideration of which Walling by said instrument conveyed to Krall, his successors and assigns, a sufficient amount of water to irrigate his lands each and every year thereafter; that these lands were thereafter platted into what is known as Krall’s Additions to Boise City, and the plats recorded, consisting of blocks subdivided into lots aggregating several hundred; that intervenor became the owner of certain of the lots and that divers parties, all of whom are in like situation with intervenor, became and are the owners of other lots in said additions.

It is further alleged by intervenor that by the terms of the instrument of December 9, 1878, Krall acquired not less than 100 inches of water of the Walling ditch, and that since the platting and sale of the Krall land intervenor and all persons similarly situated have continued to demand, receive and apply to a beneficial use said 100 inches of water, and that they own and for many years last past have owned, operated, controlled and maintained the headgate, pipe-lines, *9 mains, taps, etc., used in the distribution of said Krall water right, and that the company does not own or control any interest therein, all that it has done in the past being to turn into the headgate the allotted amount of water; that on April 19, 1907, the company acquired by purchase from the Cruzen Investment Co. a one-fifth interest in the Walling ditch and at the same time acquired from Joseph Perrault et ux. the remaining four-fifths interest, both instruments of conveyance containing the following clause:

“Subject, nevertheless, and excepting from this grant, any vested right to the use of water from said ditch or canal heretofore granted, sold or transferred by said party (parties) of the first part or its (their) grantors or predecessors in interest and now of record in the office of the recorder of said county of Ada, and all rights attaching thereto under the laws of the state of Idaho.”

This same clause appears to have been inserted in all conveyances of said water right by Walling and his successors in interest, down to and including the conveyances whereby the company obtained its title, and doubtless referred back to the original conveyance from Walling to Krall.

In litigation that arose in 1902, to determine the respective rights and priorities of the appropriators of the waters of Boise River, which reached this court by appeal and is reported as Farmers’ Co-op. Ditch Co. v. Riverside Irr. Dist., 16 Ida. 525, 102 Pac. 481, the ownership in Krall of a perpetual right to the use of the 100 inches of water theretofore appropriated for and to be used upon the lands of what are now the Krall additions was acknowledged and admitted by a granteee of Walling whose testimony is contained in the transcript’ of the evidence taken during the trial of that action and offered in the record here as an exhibit. Joseph Perrault, who was then one of the owners of the Walling «ditch, there testified substantially as follows: That Krall had a perpetual water right in the ditch for 100 acres of land and that a large part of the Krall tract had been cut up into town lots and sold to individuals and that they were included in the water right for 100 acres.

*10 It would appear, therefore, that by the indenture executed between Walling and Krall, on December 9, 1878, Krall acquired a perpetual water right of 100 inches for use upon the lands of what are now the Krall additions, and that by mesne conveyances this right has inured to intervenor and others similarly situated, the same having been expressly reserved and retained in the various instruments of conveyance of the Walling ditch right, including those whereby the company acquired its title thereto. The company therefore never having acquired any right, title or interest in or to the Krall water right or to the Krall distributing system, the same could not properly be considered as a part of the property of the company used and useful in its service to the public upon which it would be entitled to have a valuation placed for the purpose of rate making, and the commission was justified in finding and holding that the allegations of intervenor’s complaint were fully sustained.

We come now to that portion of the appeal dealing with the order of the commission fixing rates and values based upon the company’s property exclusive of the Krall additions.

Appellant makes forty-eight assignments of error, all of which it will not be necessary to consider in detail. Assignment No. 1 is predicated upon the denial of the company’s application for rehearing on the commission’s order No. 943, the same being erroneous, “(b) in refusing to fairly consider and to make allowance and to find value in the property of appellant company for the water rights owned by said company and used in its public service.’’ In its findings the commission says, in effect, with reference to the water right, that the company attempted to prove the market’ value for the water right under which water is diverted from Boise River and distributed to the lands under its system of works and to compute such market value upon the cost of storage water in Arrow Rock reservoir; that the company has no interest in any storage right in Arrow Rock reservoir, and the acquiring of an interest in this, or any other reservoir, is unnecessary; that its water had been diverted from the *11 Boise River and applied to a beneficial nse upon the lands served by the canal now owned by the company at such an early date that it had priority in the natural flow over subsequent rights that is sufficient at all times to fill the requirements of its appropriation of 2,500 inches.

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Bluebook (online)
262 P. 863, 44 Idaho 1, 1926 Ida. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capital-water-co-v-public-utilities-commission-idaho-1926.