In Re Proposed Middle Rio Grande Conservancy Dist.

242 P. 683, 31 N.M. 188
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 12, 1925
DocketNo. 3095.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 242 P. 683 (In Re Proposed Middle Rio Grande Conservancy Dist.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In Re Proposed Middle Rio Grande Conservancy Dist., 242 P. 683, 31 N.M. 188 (N.M. 1925).

Opinion

OPINION OP THE COURT

BICKLEY, J.

This case involves the construction of the Conservancy Act; the same being chapter 140 of the Session Laws of the State of New Mexico for the year 1923, entitled:

“An act to provide for the organization of conservancy districts for the purpose of co-o.perating with the governent of the United States under the terms of the federal reclamation law and other federal laws, and to define the purpose and powers thereof.”

These proceedings come before this court on a stipulated record designated, “Agreed Statements of the Case and of the Facts Proven on Appeal to the Supreme Court of the State of New Mexico.” From such agreed statement of the case, we find therein:

“(1) That a petition- praying for the establishment of a conservancy district to be known as the Middle Rio Grande conservancy district was signed by the required number of landowners under the law, and that it was also signed by the City of Albuquerque, a municipality, which said municipality is within the proposed district, and was duly and properly authorized thereunto, and that said .petition was in all things drawn up in conformity with the requirements of law, and was legally sufficient for the purposes it sought to accomplish.
“(2)That proper and sufficient notices of the pendency of said petition for the establishment of the conservancy district were duly published in English and Spanish, in the manner and for the time required 1‘y law.
“(3) That the demurrer cf the protestants as same appears on pages 3 to 9, inclusive, of the transcript, was overruled by an order of the district court entered on August 26, 1925, wherein the court found: ‘That the act commonly known as chapter 140 of the Session Laws of the State of New Mexico for the year 1923 is in all respects constitutional and within- the police power of the state of New Mexico.’
“(4) That there was filed in said cause a protest purporting ot be signed by 3,046 people, who claimed to live within the proposed district and also claimed to own 429,271 acres of land within the proposed district, but that, after a hearing had on the merits, at which evidence was taken and certificates from the county treasurer and ex officio collectors of taxes for the counties of Socorro, Valencia, Bernalillo, Sandoval, Santa Pe, Taos, and Rio Arriba, state of New Mexico, the court made its findings of fact and conclusions of law as the same are shown on pages 20 to 23 of trascript, and on August 26, 1925, entered an order declaring the organization of the Middle Rio Grande conservancy district, adjudicating all questions of jurisdiction and findings on hearing.
• “(5) Thereafter the board of directors of the Middle Rio Grande conservancy district made a preliminary fund assessment of 25 cents an acre on the lands within the Middle Rio Grande conservancy district and the same was in effect approved by the court by ‘order regarding preliminary fund assessment’ entered September 8, 1925.
“(6) And from all of said .proceedings an appeal has been taken by protestants to this court, attempting to attack the constitutionality of said Conservancy Act and the proceeding's had in the organization of the Middle Rio Grande conservancy district, as said proceedings are set forth in the stipulated record now before the Supreme Court of the state of New Mexico.”

Certain findings of the court will be referred to dnr- ■ ing the course of this opinion.

There are 13 assignments, of error presented by appellants. Attorneys for appellees have filed ,an analysis of assignments of error and points raised on appeal which contain 15 points, which they ask this court to decide. For convenience, we will consider the points as presented by this analysis..

“(1) Does subsection 2 of section 205, c. 140, of Sessions Laws of 1923 (Conservancy Act), providing for certificates of county treasurers showing total number of owners, number of owners signing protest, total acreage, and number of acres owned by signers of protest, prohibit county treasurers from adopting as their own information or data furnished by abstracter and surveyor, taken from last tax rolls of his county and certifying the same to the district court under his official seal?
‘‘(2) Were certificates of county treasurer inadmissible in evidence because based on information furnished by abstracter and surveyor-, taken from last tax rolls, or did such fact only go to the credulity of the certificates made prima facie evidence under the Conservancy Act? On the record and findings of the court below was there evidence to support the decree declaring the organization of the conservancy district?”

Subsection 2 of section 205 of the Conservancy Act is as follows:

‘‘Upon the filing of such protesting petition, it shall be the duty of the clerk forthwith to make as many certified copies thereof, including- the signatures thereto, as there are counties into any part of which said proposed district extends, and forthwith to place in the hands of the county treasurer of each of such counties one of said certified copies. Thereupon it shall be the duty of eadh of such county treasurers to determine from the last tax rolls of his county, and to certify to the said court under his official seal, on or before the tenth day prior to the day fixed for the hearing- aforesaid, the total number of owners of the land situate in said proposed district within his county. * * * ”

It is not contended that the certificates are not fair on their face, and no exception was taken on the grounds of lack of proper and formal execution. No charge of fraud or mistake in their execution is made. However, the county treasurers for certain counties were called to the witness stand and testified as stated in the agreed statement of facts as follows :

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Bluebook (online)
242 P. 683, 31 N.M. 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-proposed-middle-rio-grande-conservancy-dist-nm-1925.