Carlson v. City of Helena

114 P. 110, 43 Mont. 1, 1911 Mont. LEXIS 2
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 23, 1911
DocketNo. 2,979
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 114 P. 110 (Carlson v. City of Helena) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carlson v. City of Helena, 114 P. 110, 43 Mont. 1, 1911 Mont. LEXIS 2 (Mo. 1911).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

On November 22, 1910, the plaintiff, a taxpayer, and the defendant city, submitted to the district court of Lewis and Clark [3]*3county, upon an agreed statement of facts, a controversy which had arisen respecting certain proceedings taken and contemplated by the city to secure a water supply to be owned, operated, and controlled by it. Many of the facts agreed upon have become so familiar by reason of their repeated recital in litigation heretofore that they will not be referred to specifically. It is sufficient for the purposes of this appeal to say that for many years the city of Helena has been indebted beyond the three per cent limit; that heretofore a private corporation has been supplying the city and its inhabitants with water under and by virtue of a franchise granted by the city; that the franchise expired on January 15, 1910, and the private concern has since occupied the streets of the city by sufferance. Some time prior to October 10, 1910, the city council took steps looking to the acquisition of a water supply to be owned and controlled by the city, and to that end certain water rights in Beaver creek were purchased, and thereafter the matter referred to the water committee of the council, which reported on October 10, 1910, a comprehensive plan for the installation of a city-owned plant, if funds sufficient to meet the expense could be secured by vote of the qualified electors. The report of the committee was adopted by the council and Ordinance No. 785 passed and approved. This ordinance provides for holding a special election to determine whether the limit of the city’s indebtedness shall be exceeded by the issuance and sale of city bonds to the amount of $650,000, “for the purpose of procuring a water supply from Beaver creek and constructing a water system for said city.” The purpose of this action is to secure an injunction prohibiting the city from proceeding further in the matter. The trial court determined the cause adversely to plaintiff’s contention, refused an injunction, and rendered judgment in favor of the city, from which judgment this appeal is prosecuted.

The proceedings of the city are attacked upon the ground that Ordinance 785 does not submit the question to the voters in the [1] manner required by law. In Carlson v. City of Helena, 39 Mont. 82, 102 Pac. 39, a similar question was considered. In that case, however, it appeared affirmatively that the city council [4]*4had not ascertained that the particular water supply there in question could be procured, or that the installation of the system could be compassed by the amount of indebtedness sought to be incurred, and this court said: “The contention is that the council is authorized to consult the taxpayers in general, as to whether it may proceed to acquire a supply of water for the city, but that it may not devest itself of the discretion vested in it by law, as the governing body of the city, by leaving it to the electors to select a particular supply. This objection, it is said, is fundamental, because the discretion to purchase a particular supply is vested in the council, and this discretion cannot ordinarily be exercised until the council has ascertained that the particular supply is available, and that the cost of acquiring and installing it can be compassed by the amount of the indebtedness to be incurred. The contention must be sustained.” The court further said, however: “If the council should have first ascertained that the particular supply could be acquired, and that the cost of it, together with the cost of installment, is within the compass of the sum which the city can lawfully expend for that purpose, then there could be no possible objection to allowing the voters to speak as to the propriety of securing the particular supply.”

The question for determination here is: Has the city council ascertained that the Beaver creek supply is available, and that the cost of acquiring and installing it can be com passed by the amount of indebtedness sought to be incurred? It appears that the city has already acquired by purchase certain water rights in Beaver creek. These rights are: (1) Three agricultural appropriations: (a) The Reynolds right, of 67 miner’s inches, appropriated March 31, 1865; (b) the Beatty et al. right, of 194 inches, appropriated April 1, 1865; and (e) the Davies right, of 67 miner’s inches, appropriated October 1, 1865. (2) The French Bar placer mining right of 1,000, appropriated October 1, 1865. The rights of the several appropriators to the use of the waters of Beaver creek have heretofore been fully adjudicated, first in Beatty v. Murray Placer Mining Company, and again in Spokane Ranch & Water Company v. Beatty et al. The [5]*5first case was decided many years ago in the district court, and there was not any appeal. In the second case there was an attempted appeal to this court; but, by reason of the failure of appellants to give notice of appeal to all adverse parties, the appeal was dismissed. (Spokane Ranch & Water Co. v. Beatty et al., 37 Mont. 342, 96 Pac. 727.) The dismissal of the appeal operated to affirm the decree of the district court. (Rev. Codes, see. 7117.)

It is agreed that the waters of Beaver creek are pure and wholesome, and that the minimum supply is never less than 165 inches, and that this quantity is ample to meet the needs of the city and its inhabitants. It is further agreed that the city first determined that the cost of procuring this water supply for the city, including all the expense of right of way and installation of a water system, will not exceed the amount sought to be raised by this issue of bonds. There is left, then, but the single question: Does it appear that the city has a supply of water which is available 1 And this is to be answered by the reply to another question, viz.: Does it appear that the city of Helena can lawfully divert from the Beaver creek watershed sufficient water to supply its needs?

In the Spokane Ranch & Water Co. Case above the court decreed that the Reynolds right of 67 inches is the first in time and prior to all other rights; that the Beatty et al. right, of 194 inches, is the second; that the Davies right, of 67 inches, is the third; and the French Bar right, of 1,000 inches, is the fourth. With reference to the French Bar right, the court found: “(10) That on the first day of October, 1865, the said city of Helena, and its predecessors in interest, diverted 1,000 inches, being 25 cubic feet per second of the waters of Beaver creek, and appropriated the same for useful and beneficial purposes, through its French Bar ditch, extending from Beaver creek, in Broadwater county (then Jefferson county), state of Montana, to French Bar on the Missouri river, in Lewis and Clark county, said state, beyond the watershed of said Beaver creek, and appropriated the same for useful and beneficial purposes (being the same water right decreed, as of said date, to the Murray [6]

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Bluebook (online)
114 P. 110, 43 Mont. 1, 1911 Mont. LEXIS 2, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carlson-v-city-of-helena-mont-1911.