Greeson v. Imperial Irrigation Dist.

55 F.2d 321, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1938
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. California
DecidedDecember 5, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 55 F.2d 321 (Greeson v. Imperial Irrigation Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Greeson v. Imperial Irrigation Dist., 55 F.2d 321, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1938 (S.D. Cal. 1931).

Opinion

MeCORMICK, District Judge.

Two owners of land within the present boundaries of the Imperial Irrigation District in California bring this suit in equity for an injunction to restrain the district and its officers and directors from entering into a certain agreement with other irrigation districts, public agencies, and municipal corporations of California for an apportionment among themselves of water rights in the Colorado river system. The contemplated allocation contract is an important part of the program of construction under the Boulder Canyon Project Act (45 Stat. 1057 [43 USCA §§ 617-617t]) of a canal entirely within the United States, whereby water will be diverted from the Colorado, river for public and beneficial uses by the respective public bodies in California that are parties to the proposed contract. These parties are, respectively, Palo Verdes Irrigation District, Imperial Irrigation District, Coachella Valley Water District, Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, City of Los Angeles, City of San Diego, and County of San Diego. None of said proposed contracting parties except the Imperial Irrigation District are made parties to this suit. Plaintiffs are residents and citizens of the states of Indiana and Illinois, respectively, and they invoke the jurisdiction of the federal court in this matter solely because of diversity of citizenship with the defendants. The amount in controversy is a property right exceeding in value $3,000.

The Imperial Irrigation District, which for brevity will be hereafter referred to as the district, has appeared pursuant to an order to show cause and temporary restraining order that was issued ex parte on the application of plaintiffs at the time the complaint was filed by them. The district asks for a discharge of the order. It has also filed a motion to dismiss the bill of complaint herein. The plaintiffs ask the court to continue the restraining order heretofore issued and to enlarge it pendente lite by granting a temporary injunction, not only to restrain the district from entering into the proposed agreement with the other parties, but also to forbid the district from pursuing under the proposed contract any further activity during the pendency of this suit directed to the accomplishment of a plan required by [323]*323the Secretary of the Interior to bring governmental aid to the several public agencies that are parties to the proposed agreement for the construction of the so-ealled all-American canal. There are several grounds stated in the motion to dismiss and all of them have been argued and are urged by the district as sufficient reasons for the dismissal of this suit. They have all been carefully considered by the court. There will be discussed in this memorandum, however, only the main ground of the motion to dismiss, namely that the bill of complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against the defendants, and that said bill of complaint does not state facts justifying any relief in equity to complain-

The bill substantially alleges that defendants have passed a resolution authorizing the execution of the allocation contract and that, unless enjoined, they will enter into the agreement that will have the effect of diminishing and relinquishing the vested water rights of complainants which they, as landowners within the district, now enjoy through priorities and appropriations on the Colorado river. It is claimed that, if said contract is made by the respective publie feones, the two_ landowners will sustain immediate and irreparable injury to their property and water rights. They assert that they have no plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law that will operate to prevent the injury that is threatened by the defendants. An analysis and consideration of the allegations of the complaint, aided by facts whieh this court judicially knows, and which it has the right to consider in determining the^ sufficiency of ^ the complaint under the decision of the United States Supreme Court in Arizona v. California, 283 U. S. 423, 51 S. Ct. 522, 75 L. Ed. 1154, fails to sustain plaintiffs’ contentions.

The gist of this suit, as well as the threatened injury that plaintiffs seek to restrain by it, is not the allocation contract per se, but the consequent inclusion of additional and more irrigable land within the Imperial Irrigation District than lies therein at present. The making of the proposed allocation contract ex proprio vigore can have no such effect. It will be necessary for the district to do something more than merely execute the proposed agreement with the various bodies before plaintiffs’ water rights are jeopardized so as to justify this court in issuing any injunction against the defendants. There can be no doubt that all parties to the agreement contemplate an enlargement of the district and the intended eon-tract expressly states that other California lands are to be taken in and are to participate in the benefits that are expected to inure to an enlarged and unified all-American water -district. But the contract standing alone cannot possibly bring such other lands into the district. They can be brought in only by further proceedings under the laws of California, and until there is a legal and effective inclusion of additional lands that will share in the enjoyment of the water rights of the Imperial Irrigation District with the complainants neither of them has been damaged in any way.

R hag long. bem establislled tllat tlle absence of a plain and adequate remedy at ¡aw affords the only test of equity jurisdietioil) and the application of this principle to a particular case must depend altogether upon tbe character of the case as disclosed j-g the pleadings. The complaint in this ease discloses no existing or threatened injury to the iands 0r water rights of plaintiffs that jg not adequately remediable without the interposition of a court of equity at this time. The Imperial Irrigation District was created, organized, and functions under the Calif ornia irrigation District Act (Stat. 1897, p. 254) and California laws supplementary and amendatory thereto. These statutes constifade the structure of the district and are the soie measure of its powers and that of its officers and directors, and nothing is found these laws or in the proper construction of them that prevents the district from enterjng jnt0 the proposed agreement. Considgrmg briefly the claim that the district has no jgggi right to make the allocation eon-tract, we know judicially, by reference to an act 0f the California Legislature approved January 21, 1915 (Stat. 1915, p. 1), that the Imperial Yalley and its population of over 30,000 people has been in serious danger of loss of life and a vast amount of property damage by reason of threatened overflow of the Colorado river, and that, by reason thereof, the Irrigation Act of 1897 was amended so as to expressly authorize the board of directors of the district to expend such sum as they deemed necessary for the protection of the lands within the district from damage by floods and from overflow of the Colorado river, and, moreover, we know from notorious historical facts that the flood menace and insufficiency of water for irrigation purposes has been, and is now, a serious obstacle to the development and [324]*324prosperity of the lands within the district and of the people who reside therein.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
55 F.2d 321, 1931 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greeson-v-imperial-irrigation-dist-casd-1931.