Cox v. City of Pocatello

291 P.2d 282, 77 Idaho 225, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 341
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1955
Docket8244
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 291 P.2d 282 (Cox v. City of Pocatello) 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
Cox v. City of Pocatello, 291 P.2d 282, 77 Idaho 225, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 341 (Idaho 1955).

Opinion

SMITH, Justice.

Respondents in a single action seek mandate to compel appellants, during irrigation seasons to permit the flow of respondents’ allotted irrigation water through a ditch or canal extending southerly through the townsite of the City of Pocatello, and to deliver the water to respondents’ ditch at the city’s south boundary; and for recovery of damages to their gardens and crops, allegedly caused by the city’s refusal so to deliver the water during the forepart of the 1952 irrigation season.

The action was tried upon a stipulation of facts, evidence adduced and affidavits filed by stipulation.

Respondents’ predecessors in interest acquired rights to the use, for irrigation purposes, of three acre feet of water per acre of their lands irrigated. They acquired those rights, dating variously during the years 1913-1918, under contracts with the United States, acting through the superintendent of irrigation of the U. S. Indian service, as authorized by the Department of the Interior. Those contracts evidenced a plan of sale and distribution of waters for use for agricultural purposes under *228 Fort Hall Irrigation Project, constructed and operated on Fort Hall Reservation.

The stipulation of facts sets forth a contract dated June 3, 1922, between the City of Pocatello, and named landowners of whom respondents are successors in interest; that Fort Hall Irrigation Project is obligated to deliver the three acre feet of water per acre, measured at the city’s north boundary where a part of the Project’s distribution system enters the city limits; that from that point, a city-owned ditch extends southerly through the city, “which receives and conveys water distributed to it as a part of the Fort Hall Irrigation Project and is known as ‘Lateral Y’.”; that it is necessary that the landowners use the city ditch thereby to convey such irrigation water to their lands.

The contract provides in effect that, in consideration of payment to the city by the named landowners of an annual charge, called rental, of SO cents an acre of their land irrigated by water carried through the ditch, and the landowners’ promises to provide a ditch or get-away for excess city water, and to save the city harmless from liability for damage caused by such excess water to property situate south of the city, the city agrees, each irrigation season, to receive at its north boundary into the city ditch, the landowners’ irrigation water as delivered by Fort Hall Irrigation Project, and to conduct such water through its town-site .and deliver if to the landowners’ ditch at the city’s south boundary.

The contract does not provide a date of termination.

The parties stipulated that respondents have paid to the city the sums of money provided in the contract.

The stipulation sets out that the city was .to convey to 141.32 acres of lands, owned by the original landowners named in said contract, water as allotted by Fort Hall Irrigation Project, distributed over the irrigation season of ISO days, at the rate of three acre feet of water per acre which amounts to 1.42 cubic feet per second; that by the spring of 1952 the original acreage of 141.32 acres had decreased, by relinquishment of rights by successors in interest to the original named landowners, to 43.63 acres which receive water under such irrigation project through the city ditch.

The city has conveyed the irrigation water (three acre feet per acre) through the city ditch and delivered it to the extension of said ditch at the city’s south boundary, for use on lands of respondents, during each irrigation season, from the inception of the contract until the spring of 1952, by means of a 36-inch concrete pipe laid along the streets of the city. The parties stipulated that such pipe interfered with construction of “curbs and sidewalks, and streets upon a portion of North 14th Avenue in the City of Pocatello.” During April 1952, the city, in order to improve certain of its streets, replaced 180 feet of *229 the 36-inch pipe with 14-inch pipe. This resulted in a decreased flow of water through the city ditch and in a decreased amount of water delivered for use on respondents’ lands as compared to deliveries made during previous years.

Prior to June 4, 1952, no actual measurement was ever made of the water so conveyed and delivered; hut, as stipulated, during the irrigation season, water in excess of three acre feet per acre was delivered to respondents, and those similarly situated, or their predecessors. Such portion of the stipulation is interpreted as referring to irrigation seasons prior to the year 1952.

The parties then stipulated as to the 1952 season, that the city did not receive any water from Fort Hall Irrigation Project May 27, May 31, and June 1, 1952, nor did respondents; that the city delivered to respondents and those similarly situated, water measured in cubic feet per second of time on dates as follows:

6-4-52 to .70 to
6-19-52, 2.56,
inclusive, varying
each date on the
being set forth, different dates,

and to the ditch of respondents, water so measured on dates as follows:

6-19-52 to
6-25-52, inclusive, 1.8 approximately,
6-27-52 to
9-23-52, inclusive, 3.15.

About June 27, 1952, the city installed a pump near its south boundary and, by pumping water into the ditch, augmented the flow to the second feet measurement then and thereafter shown. No damage thereafter occurred to respondents’ gardens and crops.

June 3, 1952, respondents’ counsel demanded of the city in writing in effect, that it continue to live up to its obligation to deliver the irrigation waters under the contract of June 3, 1922; that its failure so to do already had caused considerable damage and that if the water be not delivered in two days, the water users would hold the city strictly accountable for all resultant damages. The city commission at its meeting of June 5, 1952, caused that letter to be read and filed.

June 12, 1952, the five respondents, Cox, Walters, Peterson, McAughey and Lee, filed their verified petition for a writ of mandate to require the city to convey through its city ditch and deliver respondents’ irrigation water, alleging that June 5, 1952, the city refused to deliver the water; each claimed crop damage suffered due to lack of water. Subsequently, December 3, 1952, two additional respondents, Hildreth and Dick, joined in the action and thereupon the seven respondents filed their verified amended petition for writ of mandate; each claimed crop damage in substantially the same form as the original petition.

December 20, 1952, appellants by their answer acknowledged that the City of Pocatello entered into the contract of June *230 3, 1922, but alleged invalidity of the contract; they denied the balance of respondents’ amended petition, and set out that respondents had not filed any claim for damages against the city as required by I.C. sec. 50-162.

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Bluebook (online)
291 P.2d 282, 77 Idaho 225, 1955 Ida. LEXIS 341, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cox-v-city-of-pocatello-idaho-1955.