City of Albuquerque v. Garcia

130 P. 118, 17 N.M. 445
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1913
DocketNo. 1494
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 130 P. 118 (City of Albuquerque v. Garcia) 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
City of Albuquerque v. Garcia, 130 P. 118, 17 N.M. 445 (N.M. 1913).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT.

ROBERTS, C. J.

By this proceeding the City of Albuquerque has attempted to condemn the entire ditch running longitudinally through certain of the streets of said city, and the principal question presented by the record relates to the power of the city to condemn an irrigation ditch, in actual use as a community ditch, for conducting water for the irrigation of lands, and to appropriate said ditch to the use of the public as a street, thereby destroying said ditch. The authority for the condemnation is claimed /under sub-section 91 of section 2402 of the Compiled Laws of 1897, and chapter 97 of the laws of 1905.

Appellee, in support of the right to condemn, insists, first, that the irrigation ditch in question was not devoted to a public use, and second, that the sections of the statute above referred to, authorizing cities to condemn property, by necessary implication, authorized the condemnation of property already devoted to a public use. The questions will be considered in their order.

New Mexico, being one of the arid states of the Union, and the successful cultivation of crops depending almost exclusively upon the ability of the land owner to procure water for the irrigation of his lands, the right to do so, and to, for such purpose, construct ditches and canals across lands of his neighbor, has been recognized for many years by the law-making power of the territory (now state). In 1851, the Territorial Legislature passed an act declaring that “the irrigation of fields should be preferable to all others,” and forbidding any inhabitant of the Territory to construct any building to the impediment of the irrigation of lands or fields. Sec. 1, C. L. 1897. ' In 1874 an act was passed giving to all the inhabitants of the Territory of New Mexico the right to construct either private or common acequias through the lands of others, requiring, however, compensation to be made for all damages done. See section 23, C. L. 1897; and the next succeeding section provides for the condemnation of a right of wajr for such ditch or acequia. By Section 3 of chapter 49, S. L. 1907, the right to condemn lands for irrigation ditches was conferred upon “the United States, the Territory of New Mexico, or any person, firm, association or corporation.”

The ditch in question, as shown by the complaint, was a community acequia, and under section 8, chapter 1, C. L. 1897, was a corporation. By the sections quoted from the statutes of New Mexico, it is apparent that the owners of this ditch, whether private parties, or a corporation under said section S^Jhad the right to condemn a right of way for a ditch. ^It appears that the ditch had been in use for perhaps fifty years, but the record does not disclose in what manner or method the right of way for the said ditch was originally acquired; nor it is material, for as said by the court in St. Paul Union Depot Co. v. City of St. Paul, 30 Minn. 359:

“The question for the court, when it arises in a judicial investigation in such cases, is not how the land was acquired, but how it is used, or whether it..is necessary for a public purpose. In re Water Commrs., 66 N. Y. 413.”

Therefore the court is not concerned as to how the right was originally acquired to conduct water through the acequia in question.

In 1904 the State of Utah had a statute conferring upon any person or corporation the right to condemn a right of way for an irrigation ditch across private property. The plaintiff, Nash, sought by condemnation to enlarge a private ditch owned by Clark and others. Condemnation was awarded and the case was taken to the Supreme Court, and the contention there urged was that the use to be made of the property sought to be condemned was strictly private and in no sense a public use, and that both under the constitution of the United States and the constitution of Utah, which provide that “private property was not to be taken or damaged for public use without just compensation,” condemnation could not be awarded because the constitutional provision meant that private-property could not be taken for strictly a private use, and the question as determined by the court, as stated, was, “Was the condemnation of appellant’s land in this, case in law and in fact, for a public use ?” The court said:

“In view of the physical and climatic conditions in this state, and in the light of the history of the arid west, which shows marvelous results accomplished by irrigation, to hold that the use of water for irrigation is not in any sense a public use, and thereby place it within the power of a few individuals to jilace insurmountable barriers in the way of the future welfare and prosperity of the state, would be to give to the term ‘public use’ altogether too strict and narrow an interpretation, and one we do not think is contemplated by the constitution.” Nash v. Clark, 27 Utah 158.

The court in the case above cited, sustained the judgment of the lower court awarding condemnation, and from the said court an appeal was taken to the Supreme Court of the United States, where the judgment of the- lower-court was sustained, and the reasoning upheld. See Clark v. Nash, 198 U. S. 361.

Our Territorial Supreme Court in the case of the Albuquerque Land & Irrigation Company v. Gutierrez, 10 N. M. 177, said:

“It is undoubtedly true that the diversion and distribution of water for irrigation and other domestic purposes in New Mexico, and other western states where irrigation-is neeessarj-, is a public purpose.”

These cases would seem to dispose of the question as-to the public use of the acequia in question", adversely to the contention of appellee. ^lt is our view, therefore,, that the use to which the irrigation ditch in question was devoted, was a public use, and consequently the city would not have the right to condemn the same and thereby destroy it, unless such right was expressly or by necessary implication conferred upon the City by the Legislature^/

The- Legislature, as the supreme and sovereign power of the state, may doubtless interfere with property devoted to a public use for one purpose, and apply it to another; but the Legislative intent to do so must be stated in clear and express terms, or must appear from necessary implica-tion. Sub-section 91 of sec. 2402, C. L. 1897, under -which the power of condemnation is claimed by the city, reads as follows:

“That municipal corporations shall have the power and right of condemnation of private property for public use in- the following cases, to-wit: for the laying out, opening- and widening of streets and alleys and highways or approaches to streets * * * both within their corporate limits and for a distance of two miles outside of the same.”"

Chapter 97 of the session laws of 1905, under which authority is also claimed by the city, provides for the-condemnation of property by railroad, telegraph, telephone-companies, etc. Section. 1, in so far as the same is material, reads as follows:

“In ease lands or other property are sought to be appropriated by any railroad, telephone, telegraph company, etc.”

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Bluebook (online)
130 P. 118, 17 N.M. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-albuquerque-v-garcia-nm-1913.