Cotulla v. La Salle Water Storage Co.

153 S.W. 711, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 599
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 29, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 153 S.W. 711 (Cotulla v. La Salle Water Storage Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cotulla v. La Salle Water Storage Co., 153 S.W. 711, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 599 (Tex. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

ELY, C. J.

Appellee, a corporation formed under the laws of Texas for the purpose of constructing, maintaining, and operating dams, reservoirs, lakes, wells, canals, flumes, laterals, and other necessary appurtenances, to be used for irrigation, navigation, milling, mining, and stock-raising purposes, instituted proceedings before the county judge of La Salle county to condemn two certain tracts of land belonging to appellant, the first being one-half an acre, desired for a dam site, and the second 3% acres, desired for a storage reservoir site. The Statutes as to condemnation were strictly followed, and the commissioners assessed appellant’s damages at $168.-75. Appellee deposited the amount with the county clerk and filed the bond required by statute. Appellant filed his exceptions to the report of the commissioners, and on a trial before the county judge the damages were assessed at $175, and judgment rendered in favor of appellee for recovery of the land sought to be condemned.

There is no statement of facts, and consequently the conclusions of fact and law of *712 the county judge must be adopted by this court

The county judge found that the appellee was incorporated on January 22, 1910, under the authority of subdivision 23, art. 642, Revised Statutes of 1895, which provides that corporations may be formed for “the construction, maintenance and operation of dams, reservoirs, lakes, wells, canals, flumes, laterals and other necessary appurtenances for the purpose of irrigation, navigation, milling, mining, stock raising and city waterworks.” Through the first and second assignments of error, the claim is advanced that the condemnation proceedings are void, because the right of condemnation is not conferred on corporations organized under article 642 by subd. 6 of article 704, Rev. Stats, of 1895; the rights granted in that article being to canal companies only. The latter part of the proposition as to article 704 need not be discussed, because, whether well founded or not, appellee has the right of eminent domain conferred upon it by the law of 1895 (Laws 1895, c. 23), embodied in articles 5002 and 5004, Revised Statutes of 1911.

In article 5002 it is provided: “Corporations may be formed and chartered under the provisions of this chapter and of the general laws of the state of Texas for the purpose of constructing, maintaining and operating canals, ditches, flumes, feeders, laterals, reservoirs, dams, lakes and wells, and of conducting and transferring water to all persons entitled to the same for irrigation, mining, milling, to cities and towns for waterworks and for stock raising, and for the purpose of building storage reservoirs for the collection and storage of water for the purposes before mentioned.” Then follow the powers given and restrictions placed upon such corporations; among the former being the power to condemn land for dam sites and storage reservoirs. We think that a proper construction of the statute is to confer the right of eminent domain, not only on corporations formed under the act of 1895 and the general corporation laws together, but upon those incorporated under either; and that a corporation formed under the provisions of subdivision 23, art. 642, Revised Statutes, has the same power of eminent domain as one organized under the act of 1895.

In the case of Borden v. Rice & Irrigation Company, 98 Tex. 494, 86 S. W. 11, 107 Am. St Rep. 640, the court held that the company was incorporated under articles 642, 704, and act of 1895; the purpose of its incorporation being identical with the purposes of appellee, evidently copied from subdivision 23; herein mentioned. In that case it was contended, as in this, that only canal corporations are the recipients of the power granted by article 704, and the court said of articles 642 and 704 and the act of 18951: “Those laws are, by the provision of the twelfth section of the act of 1895 [Laws 1895, c. 21], connected together and made to constitute the body of the law upon the subject of the utilization of water for the promotion of the several industries of which they treat. Those industries, as specified in article 642 and the act of 1895, are the same, except that the former includes navigation, which is omitted from the latter. The twelfth section of the latter, however, provides that corporations may be formed under it and the general corporation laws for the purpose of constructing the named works for the specified purposes; and we think there is found in this legislation itself a refutation of this contention.” In other words, all the irrigation laws of Texas must be construed together, as forming one whole, and incorporation under one gives all the rights and powers of both.

The language of the charter, found'in the conclusions of the trial judge, shows that the company was incorporated, not only under the provisions of article 642, but under those of the act of 1895, as is clearly held in the Borden Case, where the company, was formed under the terms of article 642, as it is stated it was formed, in the brief of plaintiffs in error found in the report of the case. 98 Tex. on page 496, 86 S. W. 11, 107 Am. St. Rep. 640.

In the Borden Case, when before the Court of Civil Appeals of the First district, it was held that article 704 conferred the power of eminent domain upon corporations organized under subdivision 23, art. 642, for some purposes at least; and the Supreme Court affirmed that decision.

It is contended, through the fifth, sixth, seventh, and eighth assignments of error, that the act of 1895 is unconstitutional and void, because the right of eminent domain conferred by it is confined to the arid regions of the state, because it does not determine the quantity of land necessary for the purposes named, and no method is provided for ascertaining the quantity, and because it and article 704 are violative of section 17, art. 1, of the state Constitution. We do not think that there is any question as to the statutes being valid, in so far as not providing a method for determining what portions of the state are arid, and what amount of land is necessary. Those are clearly questions of fact which can be readily ascertained in each case. The. act, nor article 704, intimates that the land for irrigation purposes should be taken without adequate compensation; and no attempt is made to deprive any citizen of his property without due process. Provision is made that the property shall be condemned as is prescribed in the case of railroads. The same provision as to taking earth, gravel, stone, or other materials, except fuel and wood, necessary for the construction of its railway, is provided for in article 6502 (4443), and in article 6504 (4445); and railway companies are authorized to condemn lands required for its depots, station buildings, for the construction of reservoirs for a water supply, and other purposes “con- *713 neeted with or necessary to the building, operating or running its road.” No amount is named in that statute, and no method for determining it is given which does not apply with equal force to irrigation companies. That law has never been questioned, although 'open to the same objections urged by appellant against the irrigation laws. It would be impracticable to name the amount that could be condemned for dam sites and storage reservoirs; and it would be useless and unnecessary to provide a mode of ascertaining the amount necessary, when the machinery of the courts are set in motion for that very purpose, among others.

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153 S.W. 711, 1913 Tex. App. LEXIS 599, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cotulla-v-la-salle-water-storage-co-texapp-1913.