Gantenbein v. City of Pasco

129 P. 374, 71 Wash. 635, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1379
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 23, 1913
DocketNo. 10861
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 129 P. 374 (Gantenbein v. City of Pasco) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gantenbein v. City of Pasco, 129 P. 374, 71 Wash. 635, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1379 (Wash. 1913).

Opinions

Chadwick, J.

The legislature of 1911 passed two acts, chapter 98, p. 441, and chapter 111, p. 510, each designed to aid and empower cities and towns to acquire the benefits of water for irrigation. The city of Pasco, acting by its council, submitted a proposition to acquire a water system under chapter 98, the system and source of supply suggested being the one owned by the Pasco Reclamation Company. This was defeated. The council then undertook to provide a system under the special assessment provision in chapter 111. An ordinance was passed providing for the laying of pipes throughout the several assessment districts created By the ordinance, and a contract with the Pasco Reclamation Company was authorized. It will be necessary to advert in some slight degree to the history of this company. Reference may be had to the case of Pasco Reclamation Co. v. Cox, 70 Wash. 549, 127 Pac. 107, where the plan of organization and the purposes of the company are set forth. The testimony in this case shows that the contract of the com[637]*637pany to furnish water to irrígate the lands described in the Cox case, all of which was outside of the city limits of Pasco, had been entered into under the mistaken belief that eighteen inches of water per annum were sufficient to raise and mature crops, whereas it has been practically demonstrated, and further in the opinion of experts, no less than twenty-four inches of water per annum are necessary.

Certain of the councilmen of the city of Pasco owned land under the irrigation project of the reclamation company, and had subscribed to the contract considered in the Cox case. In the negotiations leading up to the contract, and as it seems, as an inducement to the city to enter into the contract with the reclamation company, it was proposed that, in the event the city entered into a contract with the company and issued bonds in the sum of $50,000 and provided for an annual maintenance charge, all to be collected under the special assessment plan, the company would furnish to each of the contracting parties under its ditches outside of the city, provided they signed up a new contract, six inches of water in excess of the amount originally contracted to be delivered, or a total of twenty-four inches per annum. That part of the reclamation company’s contract with the city of Pasco was as follows:

“It is further understood and agreed that certain contracts have heretofore been given to divers and sundry persons granting perpetual water rights to be used upon and appurtenant to certain lands therein described, the quantity of water to be supplied thereunder being only eighteen acre inches per season at $5 and not to exceed six inches additional at thirty-five cents (35c) per inch on each acre of land; and, a part of the consideration accruing to each and all the parties to this contract, and especially to the city of Pasco, is the agreement herein by the Pasco Reclamation Company to furnish to the holders of said last named contracts twenty-four acre inches per acre of land at $5 per acre, during each irrigation season between April 1st and October 1st, and in order to expedite at the minimum cost the modification of said contracts so as to give the said con[638]*638tract holders the increased quantity of water herein offered to them, it is further stipulated that said contract holders may have and enjoy the benefit of said twenty-four acre inches of water per acre of land per irrigation season aforesaid by signifying their several and respective acceptances hereof in writing duly acknowledged and addressed and delivered to said Pasco Reclamation Company, of by joining in the execution of this agreement on or before the 1st day of September, 1912, the terms of said contracts to remain in force except as to the formation of said new corporation, the transfer of said system to it, and the quantity of water to be delivered.”

The ordinances having been passed and the contract entered into, work was begun, and shortly thereafter this suit was instituted, plaintiff and others alleging the ordinances and contracts to be void for several reasons which will hereafter be noticed, and praying for a restraining order, and upon final hearing, a perpetual injunction. The case was tried out on its merits, and plaintiffs have appealed from an adverse decision.

The jurisdiction of this and the lower court is challenged by the respondents. The challenge is based upon the statute providing for objections and hearings before the council, and upon the following cases: Broad v. Spokane, 59 Wash. 268, 109 Pac. 1014; Renard v. Spokane, 48 Wash. 345, 93 Pac. 517; Rucker Brothers v. Everett, 66 Wash. 366, 119 Pac. 807, 38 L. R. A. (N. S.) 582; Chandler v. Puyallup, 70 Wash. 632, 127 Pac. 293, and many cases from other jurisdictions. This court, in common with others, has held that it is competent for the legislature to create a special tribunal, either directly or indirectly to hear and determine all questions going to the regularity of proceedings brought under statutes providing for improvements made under the special assessment plan, as well as the amount to be charged against specific property; that the conduct of such board, commission, or committee will not be controlled through the use of extraordinary writs; that we will not in such proceed[639]*639ings question the motives of the officers; and that the party aggrieved must first submit to the judgment of the legislative tribunal and then appeal.

There has been much misuse of the word “jurisdiction” in the cases. There is a vast difference between jurisdiction and the exercise of jurisdiction. That the courts have jurisdiction to construe contracts cannot be denied, for it is granted by the constitution. If any of the cases cited seem to hold otherwise, they should not be followed; for in the same cases the jurisdiction of the courts is not only admitted but asserted when it is said that the aggrieved party may come to the courts by appeal, the only question decided being that the legislature may define remedies and direct procedure. The jurisdiction of the court is not defeated or taken away; it is only postponed.

“A court of equity has no rightful authority to interfere with the enactment of municipal ordinances, merely because it may question the expediency of the measures, the motives inducing their enactment, or the regularity of the proceedings by which they are being enacted; it is limited solely to an inquiry into the question of power.” Broad v. Spokane, 69 Wash. 268, 109 Pac. 1014.
“It undoubtedly is a general rule that the courts will not interfere with an action of a body exercising legislative functions, to correct mere errors or mistakes in its proceedings, or to prevent the passage of a law or ordinance duly pending before a legislative body, because it may conceive that the law or ordinance will be ineffective if passed, but clearly the courts have power to inquire into the validity of a law or ordinance after it has passed the legislative body and an attempt to enforce if is made or threatened to the injury of the personal or property rights of the citizen. The courts have exercised this power since the foundation of the government, and it is not necessary now to enter into a discussion of the principles that are thought to justify it.” Smith v. Centralia, 65 Wash. 573, 104 Pac. 797.

This brings us, then, to the only question open in this case, whether the city of Pasco, acting through its present [640]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
129 P. 374, 71 Wash. 635, 1913 Wash. LEXIS 1379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gantenbein-v-city-of-pasco-wash-1913.