Hanes v. Idaho Irrigation Co.

122 P. 859, 21 Idaho 512, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 131
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1912
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 122 P. 859 (Hanes v. Idaho Irrigation Co.) 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
Hanes v. Idaho Irrigation Co., 122 P. 859, 21 Idaho 512, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 131 (Idaho 1912).

Opinion

SULLIVAN, J.

This is an action to recover damages for the loss of certain fruit trees set out on the lands of plaintiff and the loss alleged to have occurred by reason of a failure of the defendant company to furnish water for the irrigation of said trees, as provided by contract.

The appellant corporation is engaged in the construction and operation of a system of canals and irrigation works in Lincoln county, for the reclamation of a large tract of land under the Carey Act, having entered into a contract with the state land board for that purpose on August 1, 1907. The respondent is a purchaser and holder of a water right contract from the appellant, and brings her suit against appellant for damages resulting from a failure on the part of appellant to fulfill the obligations of its contract with her. It appears from her complaint- that she purchased a water right from appellant on January 29, 1909, for the irrigation of forty acres of Carey Act land, then entered by her under the state [518]*518law. She pleads her contract of purchase and the contract between the state land board and the irrigation company, according to their legal effect, and alleges that on the 15th of March, 1909, she was notified by appellant that water would be ready for her land under her said contract for the irrigation season of 1909, which season opened April 1st, and relying thereon, she planted 2,700 apple trees; that she was unable to secure water to irrigate said trees and by reason thereof her trees were destroyed; that if she had been able to secure the amount of water contemplated by her contract, her trees would have lived and thrived. She prays for damages in the sum of $1,500.

The answer of the defendant corporation admits the making of the contract with the state and with the plaintiff, and attaches a copy of each contract as a part of said answer, and avers that those contracts constitute the sole and only contracts existing between the state and the defendant and between the defendant and plaintiff relating to water for said forty acre tract of land; admits that the defendant corporation is in possession, ownership and control of the irrigation works constructed and to be constructed under said contract with the state, subject to the rights of the entryman, and is also in possession and control of the majority of the shares of the Big Wood River Reservoir & Canal Co., Ltd., and in actual control of the last-named company, in pursuance of the provisions of said state contract; admits that on or about March 15, 1909, it notified plaintiff that water would be available for the irrigation of said lands of plaintiff for the irrigation season of 1909, a copy of which notice is attached to said answer; denies that the plaintiff notified the defendant corporation that she desired the use of said water for her lands for said season of 1909, or that she intended to cultivate said lands or set out an orchard thereon; and denies, on information and belief, the setting out of said trees and that the defendant failed to keep said irrigation system in repair or that plaintiff was unable to procure water for her lands, and denies that the defendant corporation, under the terms of said contracts and notice, or either of them, was under obligations or re[519]*519quired to furnish water to plaintiff for the irrigation season of 1909, and denies that the plaintiff has complied with the terms, of her said agreement or offered to comply therewith, or paid or offered to pay or tendered the amount of the annual maintenance which is required by the terms of said contracts; and avers that the plaintiff entirely failed to make the payment denominated the “first deferred payment” or any payment, as provided for in said contracts as a condition upon which water was to be supplied to entrymen under said irrigation system. It also denies that proper care and attention were given to said trees or that the same would have lived under the most favorable conditions of water supply, and alleges that if any trees were planted the same were inferior in growth and quality, and did not possess sufficient life to live and thrive, and that proper care was not taken in planting the same; denies that the destruction of said trees was due to the failure of said defendant to deliver sufficient water for the irrigation of the same, and that plaintiff has suffered any damages by reason of the acts of appellant.

Upon the issues made by the pleadings, the case was tried by a jury, which returned a verdict in favor of the plaintiff for $900. A motion for a new trial was denied, and this appeal is from the order denying the new trial and from the judgment.

(1) It is conceded by counsel for both parties that the plaintiff seeks to recover in this action upon a breach of contract to deliver water, and the trial court proceeded in the trial of the case upon the theory that it was an action on contract; but counsel who appears as a friend of the court contends that this is an action in tort and not on contract. The allegations of the complaint charge a breach of said contracts in three particulars: 1. Failure to keep the irrigation system in proper repair and condition; 2. Failure to construct its system so that water would be available therefrom, as contemplated by the contract; 3. Failure to make water available. The contract, among other things, was for the delivery of water to the respondent upon notice by appellant, and it is clear that under the allegations of the complaint and denials [520]*520and averments of the answer this was intended as an action on the contract and not one in tort.

It is stated by the text-writers and courts that they have been unable to find any accurate and perfect definition of a tort. It is said that between actions plainly ex contractu and those as clearly ex delicto there exists what has been termed a borderland, where lines of distinction are shadowy and obscure and the tort and the contract so approach each other and become so nearly coincident as to make their practical separation somewhat difficult. (38 Cyc. 415; Moak’s Underhill on Torts, p. 23.) A tort has been defined as the infringement of a right created otherwise than by contract; and again: A wrong independent of contract. (38 Cyc. 415, and notes.) In the case at bar the plaintiff by contract agreed to deliver certain water to the respondent at a' certain time, which time was to be determined by. written notice. The water was not delivered. The violation was clearly that of contract under the allegations of the complaint, and the failure to deliver wafer was nof a wrong independent of the contract but a wrong in violation of it.

(2) The decision of this case depends largely upon the proper construction of a contract made by the state of Idaho, through the state board of land commissioners, with the Idaho Irrigation Company, and a contract of the Idaho Irrigation Company with respondent, under what is known as the Carey Act of Congress and the laws of this state. We shall hereafter, for convenience, refer to the state board of land commissioners as the “state,” the Idaho Irrigation Company as the “irrigation company,” the agreement between the state and said irrigation company as the “state agreement” and the Big Wood River Reservoir & Canal Co-., Ltd., as the “operating company,” and to the plaintiff as the respondent or settler, and the agreement between the plaintiff and the irrigation company as the “settler’s agteement.”

The act of Congress known as the Carey Act, approved August 18, 1894 (28 Stat. U. S.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
122 P. 859, 21 Idaho 512, 1912 Ida. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanes-v-idaho-irrigation-co-idaho-1912.