Day v. Buckeye Water Conservation & Drainage District

237 P. 636, 28 Ariz. 466, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 284
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJune 30, 1925
DocketCivil No. 2428.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 237 P. 636 (Day v. Buckeye Water Conservation & Drainage District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Day v. Buckeye Water Conservation & Drainage District, 237 P. 636, 28 Ariz. 466, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 284 (Ark. 1925).

Opinion

LOCKWOOD, J.

The Buckeye Irrigation Company, a corporation, is now and long has been the owner of an irrigation system, consisting of diversion works in the Gila River below the month of the Agua Pria and a canal system extending in a general westerly direction therefrom.

For many years some 16,000 acres of land have been irrigated from this canal. Under the articles of incorporation of the Company, each shareholder must own an acre of land for every share of stock he holds, and the stock is inseparably attached to the particular land served.

*469 In the year 1922, a number of the stockholders desired to organize an irrigation and drainage district, for the purpose of improving their diversion and drainage works and the additional purpose of rounding out the project by including some 6,000 acres of land irrigable from the Buckeye Canal, but which was not at the time represented by stock in the canal, or receiving water therefrom. The district was duly organized according to law under the provisions of chapter 149 of the Session Laws of 1921, as modified by chapter 6 of the Session Laws of 1922 (Sp. Sess.), which last was apparently passed with this particular situation in view, taking the name of Buckeye Water Conservation & Drainage District. Hereinafter in this opinion the Buckeye Irrigation Company will be called the Company and the Buckeye Water Conservation & Drainage District will be called the District.

On the 13th of October, 1923, the board of directors of the District and the Company entered into a certain agreement. It is extremely lengthy and we will not set it forth in full, but the substantial provisions are as follows: After reciting the facts that the District was organized to provide irrigation and drainage facilities for the land therein, and that the Company owned an irrigation system for the purpose of irrigating the 16,000 acres of land above referred to, with its capital stock appurtenant to the land, and that the District was organized for the purpose of irrigating all the land therein owned by the shareholders of the Company as well as the nonshareholders, it further states that it was necessary that the District acquire the use of the Company’s irrigation and drainage work and improve the same. It proceeds to estimate the value of the Company’s property at some $600,000 and the total cost of improving the same and purchasing it from the Company by the *470 District at $1,600,000 stating it was not advisable to attempt to issue district bonds to that extent for purchasing the system as well as improving the same. It was then mutually agreed: First, that the District would, if possible, issue $1,000,000 worth of bonds, for the purpose of making the necessary improvements on the Company’s property; second, that, if and when the bonds were issued, the improvements should be made on said property in accordance with a determined plan under the direction of both the Company and the District, and paid for out of the bond issue of the District; that the Company’s indebtedness, then amounting to over $110,000, should also be paid therefrom, and the property of the Company as it existed at the commencement of said improvements be valued in a certain manner. The Company agreed, in return for this large expenditure of money, to divert from the Gila Eiver all the water it could legally take for the irrigation of the land of the District, giving all the land therein equal service so far as it legally could. It further agreed to issue to all the owners of land who were not already stockholders, on their application therefor, stock to represent their land without further payment; it being agreed that the payment by the District above set forth was 'payment for the stock. The title to all of this property was to remain in the Company until the happening of one of several contingencies, with the proviso that, under any circumstances if the District took the title, it must pay for the property its appraised value, plus 8 per cent compound interest. The District further agreed to raise by taxation each year an amount sufficient to take care of its running expenses and its bonds, and in addition thereto 8 per cent interest on the estimated value of the Company for distribution among its original shareholders. Thereupon the District proceeded to adopt the plan in said contract as its general plan of proposed work *471 under the law and file with the board of supervisors a map and list as provided by section 11(a), chapter 149, Session Laws of 1921, and secured from the state certification board an approval of the bond issue and the plans. Thereafter said bond issue was duly submitted to the voters of the District, and was defeated, whereupon the board of directors declared the result of the election in accordance with section 11(b), chapter 149, Session Laws of 1921.

On the 7th of October, 1924, the District and the Company entered into a supplementary agreement which was, in substance, as follows: After reciting the failure of the previous bond issue and a second attempt by the District to submit a 'modified proposition which had never been carried to completion, and a mass meeting of the land owners of the District which approved a bond issue of $200,000, it was agreed that the District should submit the bond issue for $200,000, which money should be used for opening up a new canal to make more safe the.then existing head of the Company’s system, and to pay some $100,000 of the Company’s bonds, and that in return therefor the Company would carry water for the irrigation of all the District lands through its system as far as possible, but would not grant the same rates to nonshareholders as to shareholders. It further provided that the District might still buy the Company property at the appraised value, and that any time within five years from the date of the supplemental contract the Company might request the District to proceed under the original agreement and it would do so.

Thereafter the District postponed the adoption of the original general plans and set up a new general plan in accordance with the supplemental agreement. No new survey map, or list, was made, and filed with the supervisors, but the state board of certification approved the new plan and the proposed bond issue *472 of $200,000, which was duly submitted to the electors of the District, and carried. Thereafter the bonds were advertised for sale and awarded to the First Securities Company of Los Angeles as the highest and best bidder, but before their delivery plaintiff herein, being the owner of land within the District not represented by stock in the Company, brought suit to enjoin the issuance of the bonds. He raises five objections to their validity, which we will consider as seems advisable.

The first and most serious objection is that the contracts and general plans above referred to violate provisions of section 7, article 9, of the state Constitution, which reads as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
237 P. 636, 28 Ariz. 466, 1925 Ariz. LEXIS 284, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/day-v-buckeye-water-conservation-drainage-district-ariz-1925.