Cater v. Sunshine Valley Conservancy Dist.

274 P. 52, 33 N.M. 583
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 17, 1928
DocketNo. 3357.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 274 P. 52 (Cater v. Sunshine Valley Conservancy Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cater v. Sunshine Valley Conservancy Dist., 274 P. 52, 33 N.M. 583 (N.M. 1928).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

WATSON, J.

Chapter 45, Laws of 1927, provides for the organization of conservancy districts, and is of state-wide application, except for subsection 12 of section 202, which is as follows :

“No district formed under the provision of chapter 140, Laws of New Mexico 1923, or formed under the provisions of this act, for the protection and conservation of property in the Rio Grande Valley, shall include any lands south of the Elephant Butte dam, or in or north of the county of Santa Fe, provided that any district formed under said chapter 140, Laws of New Mexico, 1923, shall retain all rights to impound and control the water of the Rio Grande or other streams or waters, or to acquire rights and property incident thereto that it now possesses, whether within or without the district as hereby limited and defined. Except as otherwise provided herein, the boundaries of any such district heretofore created shall be limited and confined to the territory as herein defined.”

Owners of lands in the Rio Grande Valley north of Santa Fe county petitioned the district judge of Taos county, as a “conservancy court,” for the organization of a conservancy district. That court, after hearing, finding that the “public safety, health, convenience, and welfare will be promoted by the organization of a conservancy district substantially as prayed in said petition, and that public necessity exists for-the construction of the proposed work,” made his decree, creating a district, designating its principal place of business, and appointing its directors.

Among other things the court found “that the purposes for which said district is established are:

“A. To build reservoirs, canals, drainage, irrigation, or community ditches, and acequias.
"B. To construct and complete an irrigation system to maintain the irrigability of the lands herein described.
“C. To purchase, extend, improve, operate, and maintain the Sunshine Valley irrigation canal, now owned and operated by the Sunshine Valley Irrigation Company.
“D. To sink wells on the land herein described for the purpose of irrigating and reclaiming the water supply, on said lands for irrigation and domestic purposes.
“E. To co-operate and contract with the federal or any state government or agent or any department thereof, to promote the agricultural resources and marketing facilities of the district, to levy assessments, issue bonds, and make appropriations of money and do all things necessary to effectuate and fulfill the purpose of the said Conservancy Act.
“F. To do all other acts within the contemplation of the said Conservancy Act, not herein specified and set forth.”

Appellant had protested the organization upon the sole ground that, under subsection 12, above set forth, such organization would be illegal, because the lands therein included were all in the Rio Grande Valley and north of the county of Santa Fe. The overruling of this protest and the organization of the district are here sought to be justified by appellee on the sole ground that subsection 12, supra, is unconstitutional. Section 907 provides that the unconstitutionality of one provision shall not affect any other.

Appellee’s first contention is that said subsection 12 is void under the “equal protection of the laws” clauses of the Fourteenth Amendment of the federal Constitution and of section 18, article 2 of the state Constitution.

Counsel, respectively, have cited many authorities discussing these constitutional limitations, and their relation to the police power of the state. In view of the conclusion we reach, we need not allude to them. It is sufficient to say that it is contended on the one side, and denied on the other, that there is a difference in the situation between that part of the Rio Grande Valley in and north of Santa Fe county and that part south of it, which justified the Legislature, in the exercise of the police power, in extending to the latter section and denying to the former the benefits of the Conservancy Act.

As bearing upon this question the record discloses no facts, and we have before us only such as may be judicially noticed. Appellant contends that we should taire judicial notice of the fact that the lands in question are under no menace from floods, because in that section of the state the Rio Grande flows through deep gorges, which confine it to its regular course, while in that part of the valley to the south the situation is exactly the contrary. This, he contends, was a proper basis of classification. It is appellant’s theory that the central idea of the Conservancy Act is protection from floods, and that the distinction made by the Legislature has a direct relation to the purpose to be accomplished by the statute.

Appellee does not deny the physical difference pointed out, nor contend that that difference would not constitute a proper basis of classification, if appellee’s theory as to the purpose of the Conservancy Act were correct. It contends, however, that irrigation, equally with flood control, is a purpose of the Conservancy Act, and warrants the organization of a district. It contends that, if we take judicial notice of the fact claimed by appellant, we should likewise note that the lands in question are highlj’’ susceptible and greatly in need of irrigation. This fact appellant does not dispute.

From the findings above quoted it is plain that irrigation is the essential purpose for which the district was established. If there was any pretense of a need of flood protection, the findings do not reflect it. The petition is not before us. So it is of no importance on this appeal whether, with respect to flood protection, the two sections of the state have been differently treated. Appellee is in the position of requiring the benefits of the act only to further its irrigation needs, and, so far as this case is concerned, is not interested otherwise.

Assuming, as we do, that both the middle and the upper Rio Grande Valleys require irrigation, we have the question whether subsection 12 unlawfully discriminates be- ' tween them. The question is modified to an extent by the fact that, even if the property owners here interested coidd not invoke the Conservancy Act, they could still have the benefit of organization under Laws 1919, chapter 41, “An act in relation to irrigation districts.” However, appellee points out wide distinctions in the two acts, by reason of which the Conservancy Act might be considered more beneficial. At the best, according to appellee’s theory, this discrimination exists: As between two sections of the Rio Grande Valley, both equally to be benefited by irrigation, the one may invoke either the Conservancy Act or the Irrigation Act, while the other is restricted to the latter. Whether this is a denial of equal protection of the laws is the question to which we are brought by the briefs and arguments.

Preliminary to that question, we must'pass upon, appellee’s contention that irrigation alone, without reference to flood prevention, is sufficient cause to invoke the benefits of the Conservancy Act.

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Related

City of Albuquerque v. Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District
259 P.2d 577 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1953)
In Re Arch Hurley Conservancy Dist.
191 P.2d 338 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1948)
Hamilton v. Arch Hurley Conservancy Dist.
75 P.2d 707 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1938)
Burns v. Heron
13 P.2d 875 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1932)

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274 P. 52, 33 N.M. 583, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cater-v-sunshine-valley-conservancy-dist-nm-1928.