Harelson v. South San Joaquin Irrigation District

128 P. 1010, 20 Cal. App. 324, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 279
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 8, 1912
DocketCiv. No. 980.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 128 P. 1010 (Harelson v. South San Joaquin Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harelson v. South San Joaquin Irrigation District, 128 P. 1010, 20 Cal. App. 324, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 279 (Cal. Ct. App. 1912).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Mandamus. Plaintiff seeks to have his land situated within the boundaries of defendant district excluded therefrom. To this end he filed his petition in due form with the board of directors of defendant district which was denied. Thereupon he complained to the superior court and prayed for a writ of mandamus to compel the said board to make the necessary order excluding his lands from said district. A general demurrer to the complaint was overruled; defendant answered; the cause was tried and plaintiff had findings and judgment as prayed for. The appeal is from this judgment on the judgment-roll.

At the hearing before the board of directors on said petition there was “filed a protest against the granting of said petition”; witnesses were called and evidence taken and the board of directors made findings and rendered its decision which are made part of the findings of the court and are as follows:

“3. That W. B. Harelson now is and was during all the times mentioned in his petition the owner of the lands hereinbefore described, which said land is entirely surrounded by lands included within the boundaries of the South San Joaquin Irrigation District.

“4. That said South San Joaquin Irrigation District was organized during the year 1909; that prior to the organization of said South San Joaquin Irrigation District said W. B. *326 Harelson sunk a well to the depth of one hundred and thirty-seven feet upon said land and premises for the purpose of irrigating crops grown and to be grown thereon, and proceeded to construct ditches and otherwise prepare said lands for irrigation and installed a pumping-plant and gasoline engine thereon at a cost of about one thousand four hundred dollars, with which he has since irrigated and is now irrigating alfalfa growing upon about forty acres, a portion thereof being in each forty of said eighty-acre tract; that said ditches, etc., can be used to irrigate from the system of canals and ditches of the South San Joaquin Irrigation District, and will be necessary for such purpose.

“5. That said pumping-plant installed by the said W. B. Harelson is adequate for the irrigation of the lands and premises heretofore irrigated therefrom, and the same has been and now is'being used for such purpose.

“6. That a general• system of pumping would probably lower the water level in said district, and that the water level has been raised materially by the irrigation system now in operation which the South San Joaquin Irrigation District has agreed to purchase and take over.

“7. That irrigation by a pumping system is practicable, but more expensive than by a system taking water from streams through canals and ditches. That subsequent to the filing of said petition herein referred to, a bond issue has been regularly authorized and provided for by said district.

“8. The board further finds that said pumping-plant does not constitute a source or system as contemplated by sec.- 78 of the Irrigation Act and that said lands are not already irrigated or entitled to be irrigated from another source or by another system of irrigation works, and deem it not for the best interests of said district that the lands mentioned in said petition should be excluded from the district, and that petitioner has failed to establish any facts showing that he is entitled to have such lands excluded. ”

The court made the following findings not appearing in the findings of the board of directors: Finding VII is that, under section 78 of the act approved March 31, 1897, [Stats. 1897, p. 279], and the acts amendatory thereof, on a showing of the facts therein mentioned, “the directors of such district have no discretion, or authority, or jurisdiction, to deny or refuse *327 to make and enter an order excluding such lands. That upon the finding that said lands are irrigated hy a well and pumping-plant the petitioner herein became entitled to and it was the duty of said board of directors to make and enter its order excluding the lands of petitioner. ’ ’ That from the facts found by the board of. directors it resulted “that said petitioner has a feasible and practicable system of irrigation established, and it was so established prior to the organization of said the South San Joaquin Irrigation District, and the aforesaid well and pumping-plant provided is sufficient for the irrigation of the lands, and that the irrigation of the lands of said petitioner by means of the aforesaid well, gasoline engine and pumping-plant constitutes, and is, a source other and different from the South San Joaquin Irrigation District.” (Finding IX.) That it is immaterial that the said board refused to make its order excluding said lands, “upon the ground, or for the reason, that said board of directors did not deem it for the best interests of the district that the lands of petitioner, or any part thereof, described in the petition, should be excluded from said district, or not, because and by-reason of the findings of said board of directors (which are hereinafter set forth) were required and compelled under and by reason of the law hereinbefore set forth, to exclude such lands, and each and all thereof.” (Finding XI.) Finding XII is as follows: "That notwithstanding that it may be that the lands of the petitioner herein are within the watershed or drainage basin of the Stanislaus River, nevertheless the lands of said petitioner, as hereinbefore described, have not, and neither of them has, been materially, or at all, benefited by the said irrigation system known as the Tulloch System,’ or Tulloch canals, and the water level has not been materially raised by the irrigation system known as the ‘Tulloch System, ’ which has its ditches near the lands of said petitioner ; and neither have the lands of said petitioner been benefited, neither will they continue to be benefited by the said irrigation system of said respondents, and if the lands of said petitioner are excluded from the said South San Joaquin Irrigation District, the petitioner will not obtain the benefit of any money or labor expended by either the respondents, or the assessment payers of said South San Joaquin Irrigation District, and neither will the said petitioner be *328 come a beneficiary of said irrigation system, and neither will his lands be benefited thereby.

“XIII. That the underground flow, tapped by the well of the petitioner herein has its ultimate source and head in the Sierra Mountains to the east of said lands, and said source is, and has been, amply sufficient for the irrigation of the lands of said petitioner.

“XIV. That it is immaterial whether the lands of said petitioner obtained their supply of water from the same watershed and drainage basin as that from which the waters of the Stanislaus River flow, and from which the Tulloeh system obtained its water, for the reason that the said Tulloeh system and the South San Joaquin Irrigation District are not injured by reason of the irrigation of the lands of said petitioner by the pump and well of said petitioner. ’ ’

The position taken by the trial court and by respondent here is that, under the facts as found, the board of directors had no discretion or power to do otherwise than order the land excluded and, failing in its duty, plaintiff is entitled to the writ of mandamus to compel its performance.

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Bluebook (online)
128 P. 1010, 20 Cal. App. 324, 1912 Cal. App. LEXIS 279, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harelson-v-south-san-joaquin-irrigation-district-calctapp-1912.