Hanny v. Sunnyside Ditch Company

353 P.2d 406, 82 Idaho 271, 1960 Ida. LEXIS 214
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 10, 1960
Docket8777
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 353 P.2d 406 (Hanny v. Sunnyside Ditch Company) 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
Hanny v. Sunnyside Ditch Company, 353 P.2d 406, 82 Idaho 271, 1960 Ida. LEXIS 214 (Idaho 1960).

Opinion

SCOGGIN, District Judge.

Sunnyside Ditch Company, Limited, was incorporated February 16, 1895, the purpose of its formation being to build, construct and maintain ditches, flumes, reservoirs, and laterals for the purpose of diverting water from Weiser river, in Washington county, Idaho, for irrigating lands of the individual stockholders. The capital stock of the corporation was established at eight thousand dollars, divided into one hundred and sixty shares. At the time of the incorporation (which was for fifty years) one hundred and six shares of stock had been subscribed, the names of the subscribers and numbers of shares subscribed for by each being set out in the articles of incorporation.

Prior to the expiration date of the above corporation and on December 19, 1941, Chester Thorson, Wallace Laird, and George Chadwick formed a non-profit irrigation corporation to be known as Sunny-side Ditch Company; the objects and purposes of such corporation being, generally, to acquire all the assets of the Sunny-side Ditch Company, Limited; to operate the cánal system theretofore operated by said Sunnyside Ditch Company, Limited; to appropriate additional waters or natural streams; to operate the canal system; to acquire rights of way, etc.

*274 December 1, 1947, the corporate charter of the Sunnyside Ditch Company was forfeited for failure to file its annual statement with the Secretary of State, and its corporate charter was not reinstated until March 8, 1954; in the meantime, the officers of said corporation continued to conduct the affairs of said corporation. The minute records of said corporation prior to 1950 have become lost, and the minutes kept since that time are extremely brief; this also appears true as to the stock records. It appears that between 1895 and 1950 the corporation acquired at least two shares of stock from nonpayment of assessments or otherwise, leaving 104 shares issued and outstanding.

Said Sunnyside Ditch Company owns and operates what is known as the Sunny-side canal, which is approximately eight miles long. Plaintiffs are water users along the lower three miles of said canal, below what is commonly referred to as Frazier gulch.

Prior to July 26, 1950, Chester Thorson owned twenty-one shares of the capital stock of said corporation and between that date and October 11, 1950 (as shown by Exhibits 6, 7, and 8) he acquired an additional forty-six shares. Mr. Thorson paid $50 per share to the company, and the money therefrom was used by the corporation for construction, maintenance, and operation of its canal and irrigation system. Mr. Thorson acquired storage water in the Crane creek reservoir, installed a pump in the Sunnyside canal, and irrigated between nine and eleven hundred acres of land owned by him above the canal by means of said pumping system. Other individuals acquired Crane creek reservoir water and have also installed pumps and pumped said water to lands above the canal.

Plaintiffs complain of Thorson’s acquisition of said forty-six shares of stock and allege he acquired such additional stock with the design, intent and purpose of controlling said canal and manipulating the board of directors to his personal gain and advantage, and that the purchase of said stock by him was contrary to law, illegal, and void; they further complain that Thorson and his widow and successor in interest, Junia Thorson Jones, have allowed large quantities of waste water to accumulate and find its way by force of gravity into gulches and draws which intersect, cross, or empty into the Sunnyside canal, causing the banks to be cut and washed out, filling the canal with dirt and debris, causing the canal to overflow, hindering and impeding the operation of said canal, and damaging the plaintiffs’ properties. Plaintiffs also complain that Thor-son and the other directors have for many years refused to allow or permit the expenditure of any funds of the corporation for the maintenance and upkeep of the last three miles of said canal (along which *275 three miles plaintiffs own property) or to do any work thereon or repair or clean it, at the same time levying excessive assessments against them for use in widening, deepening, enlarging, and maintaining the upper part of said canal for the benefit of said Thorson. Plaintiffs ask that the stock certificates acquired after 1950 from the company for its long unissued treasury stock be canceled and the voting .rights of Mr. Thorson’s successor in interest be limited accordingly; that Junia Thorson Jones be restrained and enjoined from permitting waste water to waste down from the upper lands into said Sunnyside canal, that a watermaster be appointed, and for damages. Defendants are Sunnyside Ditch Company and Junia Thorson and Wallace W. Laird, individually and as directors of said corporation.

The district court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law favorable to the defendants and ordered that plaintiffs take nothing by virtue of their action ; and the plaintiffs have appealed from such judgment.

Appellants set out thirty-six specifications of error; however, in their briefs and oral argument they stated there are only two major issues involved in this case, namely, (1) the status of the long unissued treasury stock which was issued to Chester Thorson, and (2) the status of the last three miles of the ditch — whether that portion of the ditch is a lateral or a part of the canal system and entitled to the same treatment, so far as stockholders are concerned, as the upper five miles of said canal. We will, therefore, discuss first the question of the long unissued stock.

The articles of incorporation of Sunnyside Ditch Company, adopted in December, 1941, provided in part as follows:

“Section 2. (Article' III) That this corporation is organized for the purpose of acquiring the assets of Sunnyside Ditch Company, Ltd., a corporation whose franchise is about to expire and that stock in this corporation will be issued to each stockholder now owning stock in the Sunnyside Ditch Company, Ltd., to the end and purpose that each stockholder of said Sunnyside Ditch Company, Ltd., may acquire in this corporation the same number of shares and of the same par value as the shares of stock held by him in said Sunnyside Ditch Company, Ltd., and the surrender or transfer to this corporation by each stockholder of the Sunnyside Ditch Company, Ltd., of his shares of stock in that corporation will be accepted by this corporation as full payment for the shares of stock so to be issued *276 to the present stockholders of Sunny-side Ditch Company, Ltd.; ”

Section 1 of Article IV of the by-laws, adopted December 31, 1941, is as follows:

“Section 1. The President and Secretary are authorized to issue stock in this corporation to any stockholder who shall turn to them shares of stock of the Sunnyside Ditch Company, Ltd., or proof of loss thereof, in an amount equal to the shares of the said Sunny-side Ditch Company, Ltd., that shall have been turned to them, and they are authorized to sign said certificates.”

Clearly the articles of incorporation and by-laws prohibited the issuance of further stock, and its issuance was contrary to said articles of incorporation and by-laws.

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Bluebook (online)
353 P.2d 406, 82 Idaho 271, 1960 Ida. LEXIS 214, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hanny-v-sunnyside-ditch-company-idaho-1960.