Idaho Fruit Land Co. v. Great Western Beet Sugar Co.

107 P. 989, 18 Idaho 1, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 1
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 11, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 107 P. 989 (Idaho Fruit Land Co. v. Great Western Beet Sugar 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
Idaho Fruit Land Co. v. Great Western Beet Sugar Co., 107 P. 989, 18 Idaho 1, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 1 (Idaho 1910).

Opinions

AILSHIE, J.

This action was instituted by the appellant, the Idaho Fruit Land Co., Ltd., for itself as the owner of a tract of land and on behalf of “about 300 who own lands, aggregating in all about 40,000 acres .... in Elmore county, Idaho,” alleging “that all of the owners of said lands are-owners of water rights entitling them to the use of water from the irrigation system hereinafter described, and are the joint, owners of said system, and that this plaintiff sues in his own behalf and in behalf of owners of all of said lands and water-[4]*4rights and of said irrigation system.” The plaintiff prayed for a decree declaring the irrigation system described in the complaint to be the property of the plaintiff, and other parties in whose behalf plaintiff prosecuted the action, and further decreeing that the Great Western Beet Sugar Company, one of the respondents herein, has no further interest in the property or irrigation system. The complaint also asks for the appointment of a receiver, pendente lite, to take charge of, and repair and operate the irrigation system during the pendency of the action. A receiver was accordingly appointed, and an appeal was taken from the action of the trial court in making such appointment, and the action of the lower» court was affirmed by this court. (Idaho Fruit Land Co. v. Great Western Beet Sugar Co., 17 Ida. 273, 105 Pac. 562.) The ease was subsequently tried on its merits, and findings and judgment were made and entered in favor of the defendants and denying the plaintiff the relief demanded. This appeal is from the 'judgment.

The brief of appellant contains no assignment or specification of errors, and we are accordingly left to an examination of the arguments and the record in the case without anything very definite as to a specific error upon which appellant assails the judgment or relies for a reversal thereof. We shall consider the matters, however, that are dealt with in the brief and argument of appellant.

The appellant alleged, and now contends, that it has proven that its contract and the contracts of all the other water users under the Great Western Beet Sugar Co.’s canal provided in terms that when the system should be completed and all the water rights sold and paid for that the system was capable of supplying, the canal, reservoirs and entire property should at once become the property of the water right holders. It also insists that the system has been completed so far as the Great Western Beet Sugar Co. is able to complete it, and that the company is now insolvent and unable to proceed further or meet its outstanding obligations, and that it has sold water rights far in excess of the capacity of the system, and that in addition to becoming hopelessly insolvent it has lost all fur[5]*5ther interest in maintaining, improving or operating the system.

The appellant also maintains, as a second proposition, that the Great Western Beet Sugar Co., which we shall hereafter designate as the “Great Western,” has sold perpetual water rights, and that such a water right is more than a mere right to the use of the water but amounts to a grant of an interest in the original appropriation and irrigation system, and that the moment the Great Western has sold such rights in excess of the capacity of its irrigation system the entire system at once became the property of the purchasers of such perpetual water rights. When the plaintiff in the lower court undertook to prove its right in this property and the rights of the 300 water users, in whose behalf it claims to have instituted this action, it did not introduce or offer to introduce its deed or contract in evidence, nor did it introduce or offer to introduce the deed or contract held by any water user which had been entered into between the water user and the Great Western. In course of the trial, however, the plaintiff attempted to prove by water right claimants the nature and character of their contracts with the Great Western. The court at first overruled objections to this class of evidence, but on cross-examination it developed that their contracts or deeds were all in writing, and the objections were thereupon renewed and motions were made to strike the evidence as to the nature and contents of the contracts from the record on the ground, first, that a water right is real property and must be conveyed by deed, and, second, that the deeds or writings themselves were the best evidence and that secondary evidence thereof should not be admitted. These motions were sustained. The ruling of the court was clearly correct.

In our judgment, as we view the whole record in this case, the final decision of thg trial court turned upon the fact that there was no competent evidence in the ease to show just what the plaintiff’s contract was or what rights it has acquired in this canal system, or the waters therefrom, by reason and virtue of its contract with the Great Western. It clearly appears that the contracts upon which the plaintiff sought to [6]*6recover had been reduced to writing, and they were consequently the best evidence of the extent, terms and nature of the contract. They appear to have been deeds to perpetual water rights for which each land owner had paid a large sum, and judging from the nature of the evidence and the arguments in the briefs we infer that those deeds specifically provided that the land owner should never be required to pay any water rates for the use of water from this canal system, and that the only charge to which they should ever be subjected would be that of meeting their proportionate share of the maintenance expense. This is inference, however, and is not established by any legitimate evidence in the case. Counsel for appellant seems to have insisted in the lower court, and so insists here, that he was “not trying the right of individual users.” It was stated by counsel in the lower court that, “the phase we are trying now of the contract is community interest. This system never did belong to the Great” "Western Beet Sugar Co.” And so it is contended here, by counsel, that the question he has been litigating and is now presenting to the court is “a community interest of the water right holders and not the individual rights, as evidenced by each one’s deed to the water right to irrigate his own particular land.” This proposition is rather vague and obscure. If it is proposed, to show a community interest and recover on that theory, that interest must necessarily be limited to those who have in some manner contracted with the company, or else who" have by reason of being members of the community acquired by operation of law some interest in the property. But it is not argued by counsel for appellant that the plaintiff and the parties for whom it sues are interested in this water system merely by reason of being members of the community at large, but rather by reason of having a contractual relation with the Great Western. In support of this position, counsel introduced in evidence a prospectus issued by the Great Western prior to the sale of any of these water rights in which it is stated:

“The Great Western Beet Sugar Company sells perpetual water rights to land under completed ditches at from $20.00 [7]*7to $30.00 per acre and tbe best of land is to be obtained within a radius of from four to ten miles of Mountain Home. Good terms of payments are made by tbe company for perpetual water rights.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
107 P. 989, 18 Idaho 1, 1910 Ida. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/idaho-fruit-land-co-v-great-western-beet-sugar-co-idaho-1910.