Heath v. Green City Irrigation District

13 P.2d 1113, 91 Colo. 202
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 20, 1932
DocketNo. 12,839.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 13 P.2d 1113 (Heath v. Green City Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heath v. Green City Irrigation District, 13 P.2d 1113, 91 Colo. 202 (Colo. 1932).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The aim of this proceeding is the dissolution of defendant in error, the Green City Irrigation District, located in Weld county, Colorado. It was organized as a district in 1909, by conforming to the requirements of chapter' 113 of the Laws of 1905. Section 48 of that chapter relates to the dissolution of irrigation districts organized thereunder.- Among other things this chapter prescribes that the petition for such dissolution shall recite “that all bills and claims of every nature whatsoever have been fully satisfied and paid.” If the directors of the district are so satisfied, and if they should so find, it shall be their duty to call an election upon the question of dissolution. The sole plaintiff in error here, Heath, does not question the sufficiency of this petition for dissolution, or the subsequent proceedings followed by the district under the laws of 1905" as amended and revised in 1915 and 1917. His sole contention is that the *204 trial court was without jurisdiction to entertain the petition for dissolution because the 1905 statute requires that all claims against the district be satisfied and paid as a condition precedent to the right of dissolution, and that his claim, a just one against the district, has never been satisfied or paid. Heath was made a party respondent to this proceeding in the trial court. He appeared below and filed a petition therein in which he asserted, among other things, that he is a creditor of the district and its indebtedness to him is upon matured bonds of the district, together with interest thereon and interest, upon such interest coupons subsequent to their maturity. Much evidence was taken and the trial court made elaborate findings of fact and among them a finding as to the bonds of the district owned by Heath. In these findings of which Heath complains, the trial court held in effect that Heath was entitled to recover, and to be paid by the district, the full principal of his bonds and interest thereon to maturity, but not to interest on the principal or interest coupons after maturity, or, in other words, to compound interest. The court further specifically found that the district, through its agent, the county treasurer of Weld county, had collected and held in hand the total amounts of the principal and interest of Heath’s bonds to maturity, and had tendered such amounts to him in payment of his bonds, but Heath refused to accept the same, unless and until he was also paid interest upon the principal and interest upon the coupons attached to the bonds, which accrued after their due date. The refusal of the district to make the payments demanded by Heath, the trial court decided was proper. All the holders of the bonds, except Heath, acquiesced in the decree of the trial court dissolving the district. He alone is here with his writ of error for a review thereof.

Before the recent death of Heath’s able counsel, the late Edwin H. Park, he had in elaborate briefs, and with his usual fairness and force, discussed at length *205 many important questions relating to irrigation districts, some of which we find it unnecessary to determine in view of our conclusion that the trial court rightly found that Heath got judgment for all of his just claims against the district. The specific finding of the trial court of which Heath now complains, and upon which its judgment was rendered, is that he is entitled only to the principal of his bonds and interest thereon to the date of maturity. The gist of his argument is that these bonds, and the attached interest coupons thereon, are negotiable instruments and that, by previous decisions of this and other courts, the holder thereof is entitled to receive the principal thereof and interest thereon, and also interest on the interest coupons attached thereto after the due date and up to the time of payment. Heath’s opening brief under the heading “Argument” is under two separate heads. First, he says, that the district court had no jurisdiction to entertain this proceeding or to dissolve the district, unless and until all of its debts had been paid or satisfied. The second branch of the argument is that the trial court improperly denied to him any interest either upon the bonds of the district which he owned or' interest on the coupons attached thereto after the date of their respective maturities, and the decree below dissolving the district was wrong because all of its debts were not paid or satisfied or adequate security furnished to the creditors, of which he was one. Counsel for the district concedes, as it must, that dissolution may not be made unless and until all of its just indebtedness is paid or satisfied. Our' original act in relation to irrigation districts, that of 1901, of which the act of 1905 is a revision, was adjudged constitutional against an attack made upon it in Anderson v. Grand Valley Irrigation District, 35 Colo. 525, 85 Pac. 313. The 1905 act is the one under which the Green City District was formed, but in so far as concerns the question for decision here, it in no material respects differs from the act of 1901. Sections 48 and 49 of the 1905 act embody all of the provi *206 sions of our legislation relative to the dissolution of irrigation districts formed thereunder until our General Assembly in 1915 and 1917 enacted further legislation relative to districts of this character. In our view it is not important on this review whether the method of dissolution of this district, which in this case the trial court followed, was under the act of 1901 or 1905 or 1915 or 1917. Under either or all of these statutes no dissolution could take place, unless and until all of its indebtedness is paid or liquidated or adequate security furnished by the district to, and accepted by, its creditors. Michigan Trust Co. v. Otero, District, 76 Colo. 441, 232 Pac. 919. In his pleadings Heath admits that the county treasurer of Weld county has in his hands an amount of money sufficient to pay all of his bonds and interest coupons thereon up to maturity, which was collected by the treasurer fr’om assessments against the lands within the district. This amount the'treasurer, before this action was begun, tendered to Heath in cash, which he refused, and still refuses, to accept, but demands in addition thereto interest upon the principal and the attached interest coupons after the due date thereof and until the same is paid.

• [2] It also appears that Heath filed his claim in the dissolution proceedings, thereby tacitly admitting its propriety, and asked for the payment of the principal and interest of his bonds as above recited. It may be that Heath is estopped now to assert the objections that he might have urged had he not, by his conduct, acquiesced in the proceeding’ for dissolution. But we do not place our decision upon the ground of such estoppel.

There is a better and safer reason for holding Heath may not now complain of the dissolution of this district. Our original act of 1901 which, as already stated, so far as concerns the question here involved, is substantially the same as the act of 1905, is modelled upon, and substantially like, a previous statute of the state of California commonly called the Wright Act. We *207 upheld the constitutionality of our' 1901 act and followed and approved the decisions of California as to the constitutionality of its statute.

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Bluebook (online)
13 P.2d 1113, 91 Colo. 202, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heath-v-green-city-irrigation-district-colo-1932.