Klamath County v. Colonial Realty Co.

7 P.2d 976, 139 Or. 311, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 126
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 7 P.2d 976 (Klamath County v. Colonial Realty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Klamath County v. Colonial Realty Co., 7 P.2d 976, 139 Or. 311, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 126 (Or. 1932).

Opinion

CAMPBELL, J.

The Klamath Irrigation District is a quasi-municipal corporation organized, under the laws of the state of Oregon, for the purpose of dealing with the United States Government relative to waters to be used in irrigating certain lands within the district and is the successor in interest of what is known as the Klamath Water Users Association, which was a private corporation organized for the purpose of irrigating the lands of the individual members of the association. Some time after the organization of the district, the defendant became the owner of about 742 acres of land within the district and under the irrigation ditch. The defendant is a private corporation organized under the laws of the state of Oregon for the purpose of buying selling and colonizing land in Klamath county, Oregon. The United States Government through its Reclamation Service or Bureau, contracted with the owners of the land within the Klamath Irrigation District to irrigate said land, taking to itself the title to the waters and constructing the irrigation and drainage ditches and the maintenance and operation of the same. That to pay the expense of such construction, maintenance *313 and operation, the owners of the land within the district, by virtue of said contract pledged the land within the project to pay the United States, over a term of years, the cost of construction, amounting to $1,363,-036.26, together with the annual cost of maintenance and operation. This contract was entered into on the sixth day of July, 1918, pursuant to a statute of the United States commonly known as the Warren Act. One of the provisions of this act is:

“That water shall not be furnished from any such reservoir or delivered through any such canal or ditch to any one landowner in excess of an amount sufficient to irrigate 160 acres.”

It is the duty of the Klamath Irrigation District to levy a tax each year sufficient to care for the principal and interest due upon the cost of construction and to pay the cost of maintenance and operation of the reservoirs, canals and ditches.

It appears that the defendant became the owner of 742 acres of land described in the certificates of delinquency sought to be foreclosed herein, within the project subsequent to the organization of the Water Users Association and the Klamath Irrigation District and subsequent to the execution of the contract of the Klamath Irrigation District with the United States. The defendant and its predecessors in interest paid all assessments and taxes levied by the Klamath Irrigation District up to the last half of such taxes for the year 1920. From that time on they permitted all taxes to become delinquent. On August 14,1925, certificates of delinquency were issued by the sheriff of the county to plaintiff herein, covering the real estate owned by the defendant within the Klamath Irrigation District. Said certificates showed the amount of taxes that was delinquent and unpaid up to the time of issuance.

*314 The defendant’s answer was in effect an admission of its ownership of the land and a general denial of the other material allegations. For a separate answer,, defendant alleged merely as a conclusion of law that plaintiff is not the real party in interest. For a second answer it pleads what is known as the Warren Act and the contract entered into by the Klamath Irrigation District with the United States under and pursuant to said act, and alleged that it would be illegal for the Klamath Irrigation District to supply defendant with water for irrigating more than 160 acres of its land, but it nowhere alleges that sufficient water to irrigate all the land owned by it was not supplied. For a third separate answer, it alleges that the ditches for carrying the water to and over its land were so poorly and negligently constructed that water escaped therefrom and flooded a portion of its land, rendering it unfit for cultivation. It further alleges that the irrigation supplied was of no benefit to a large portion of its land for the reason that some of the land owned by it was so shallow that it could not be beneficially irrigated.

These separate answers were demurred to on the ground that they did not state facts sufficient to constitute a defense. The demurrer was sustained. The defendant thereupon filed practically the same answers over again, which on motion were stricken from the record and the parties proceeded to trial on the complaint and a general denial for an answer.

The court found in favor of plaintiff. Defendant appeals.

It appears that some time after the certificates of delinquency sought to be foreclosed were issued, and before the beginning of the present suit, the defendant paid all the taxes except those levied by the Klamath *315 Irrigation District. Defendant admits that it owns 160 acres of land that is irrigable under the project and for which it received water, but makes no tender in payment for such service.

It is first claimed by the defendant:

“The Klamath Irrigation District is prohibited by law from delivering water to this appellant in an amount exceeding that necessary to irrigate one hundred and sixty acres of land and this appellant is prohibited by law from receiving and using the water in excess of an amount sufficient to irrigate one hundred and sixty acres of land for which the taxes herein attempted to be foreclosed.”

This question is not presented under the pleadings in this case. The defendant makes no claim that it did not get the water on its land. It is claiming that it received water illegally and therefore should not be required to pay for it. What is known as the Warren Act (February 21, 1911, Ch. 141, 36 United States Statutes 925) was enacted for the purpose of declaring the policy of the Reclamation Bureau of the United States not to undertake to construct irrigation works unless the land in the project, subject to irrigation, should be held in no greater quantities by each owner than 160 acres. It is equally the policy of the government to compel the owners of land to pay for the cost of construction of irrigation works as well as of maintenance where the land is subject to irrigation from such works. There is nothing in the Warren Act that prevents a landowner under a completed project, from selling his land, or that prevents one person from owning more than 160 acres on such completed project. The government might refuse to furnish water for more than 160 acres to any one owner, but if it did furnish water which was accepted and received by such holder, then *316 the holder would be compelled to pay for the service. If such owner should refuse to pay, it cannot be heard to complain if a delinquent certificate should be issued and foreclosed against its land.

It is next contended :

“The attempt to foreclose these certificates and take from this defendant some $18,000 for benefits where no benefit whatever has been rendered nor has accrued is the taking of property without due process law, and is a taking of property without compensation and is unconstitutional and void.”

We'do not see how this question can be raised in this proceeding:

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Bluebook (online)
7 P.2d 976, 139 Or. 311, 1932 Ore. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/klamath-county-v-colonial-realty-co-or-1932.