LaCour v. Devers Canal Company

319 S.W.2d 951, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1819
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJanuary 8, 1959
Docket6192
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 319 S.W.2d 951 (LaCour v. Devers Canal Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
LaCour v. Devers Canal Company, 319 S.W.2d 951, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1819 (Tex. Ct. App. 1959).

Opinion

McNEILL, Justice.

The statement of the nature and result of the suits is taken from appellants’ brief:

*952 “These two damage suits are, for all practical purposes, identical in nature and have been, by agreement of the parties and order of the trial court, consolidated for the purpose of appeal, since they involve a common law question concerning the jurisdiction of the Court below to try same.
“These two suits were instituted in the Liberty County District Court by individual rice farmers, Howard E. LaCour in one and Joe Jannise in the other, plaintiffs below and appellants here, against Devers Canal Company, a quasi-public water company and utility, and its manager, E. V. Boyt, both in his individual capacity and as a manager and officer, agent, and servant of said company being defendants below and appellees here, seeking relief for damages only for breach of contract to furnish water and for tortious negligence in wil-fully and negligently and/or failing to furnish water. Both plaintiffs alleged water contracts entered into with defendants and further alleged a duty to plaintiffs under the law and applicable statutes on the part of defendant, Devers Canal Company, to have furnished plaintiffs sufficient water for their crops, for failure or neglect of which rendered defendants liable to plaintiffs for their alleged damages.
“Defendants filed their plea in abatement to each of plaintiffs’ suits, asserting in each suit that the Board of Water Engineers of the State of Texas had primary and exclusive jurisdiction over the subject matter of plaintiffs’ suits, and that the District Court of Travis County thereafter had exclusive jurisdiction on an appeal from the decision of the Board of Water Engineers, and plaintiffs failed to allege that they had exhausted their said administrative remedies before filing their suits and invoking the jurisdiction of the Liberty County District Court.
“Upon a hearing on the defendants’ pleas in abatement, the trial court sustained same and dismissed plaintiffs’ suits for want of jurisdiction.”

The only question on this appeal is whether the trial court’s action was proper.

Appellees assert that Article 7560, R.S. 1925, controls this question and -under this article primary and exclusive jurisdiction over the subject matter of plaintiffs’ suits is vested in the State Board of Water Engineers. Appellees contend first, that this Article grants exclusive jurisdiction to the State Board of Water Engineers and the District Court of Travis County, Texas, and, second, if this is not true, that at least the article requires a prior resort to the State Board of Water Engineers under the doctrine of primary administrative jurisdiction. Under the first proposition it is contended that plaintiffs should have exhausted that administrative remedy before the Board, and then sought correction, if needed, in the District Court of Travis County, and under the second proposition that they should have made prior resort to such Board. They cite the article “Timing of Judicial Review” by Wm. I. Mar-schall, Jr., 33 Texas Law Review and quote therefrom at pp. 701-702 the following:

“The primary jurisdiction doctrine demands that a controversy within the general area of an agency’s statutory power be determined initially by the agency, not by the court. The exhaustion doctrine requires that all complaints concerning an initial administrative determination be presented through the remaining administrative channels before judicial relief is sought.”

Article 7560, R.S.1925, reads as follows:

“If any person entitled to receive or use water from any canal, ditch, flume, lateral, dam, reservoir * * * shall present to the board his petition in writing, showing that the person, association of persons, corporation, water improvement or irrigation district, owning or controlling such water, has a supply of water not contracted to others and available for his use, and fails or refuses to supply such water to him, or that the price or rental demanded therefor is not reasonable and just, or is discriminatory; or that the *953 ■complainant is entitled to receive or use such water, and is willing and able -to pay a just and reasonable price -therefor, and shall accompany such petition with a deposit of twenty-five dollars, it shall be the duty of the Board ■to make a preliminary investigation of ■such complaint and determine whether there is probable ground therefor. If ■said Board shall determine that no probable ground exists for such complaint, same shall be dismissed, and the ■deposit may, at the discretion of the Board, be returned to the complainant ■or paid into the State Treasury.”

This Article is first foúnd as Sec. 60 ■of Chap. 171, p. 358 et seq., of the Acts ■of the regular session of the 33rd Leg. in 1913, creating the State Board of Water Engineers -and establishing certain rules .and regulations for water conservation and ■use. This Sec. 60 was re-enacted without material change by the Legislature in the regular session of 1917, Ch. 88, Sec. 59, and lhas since remained unchanged.

Appellants contend that Article '7560 is, first, not applicable to them, and, second, that if so, the language of the •statute makes it optional whether prior report thereto need be made. A study of this Article indicates that it was passed for the ¡purpose of allowing any person to petition the Board who does not have a contract for water and is entitled to receive or use water ■from some public source, if such source '“has a supply of water not contracted to •others and available for his use,” and the -one controlling the water fails or refuses to supply him or demands unjust rates. In ■other words, if a person cannot obtain a •share of water available from the one having control of it, he may petition the Board •to have his right therein established, including reasonable water rates. But this is not the case before us now. The suits were not brought to establish plaintiffs’ I Tights as riparian owners to a certain wavier service. They were suits for damages ifor breach of contract. The petitions al-leged agreements by the Canal Company to furnish water at a price agreed upon and that each,plaintiff had theretofore been rendered water service by the defendants to his lands. On a plea to the jurisdiction these allegations must be accepted as true. To require a rice farmer, whose land had theretofore been actually served by an irrigation company, on the company’s refusal to continue such service during the crop year, to make application to the Board of Water Engineers at Austin for service would in many cases require a futile thing. After an application shall have been made, the Board would need time to investigate and, if it found probable grounds exist, it would be required under Article 7561 to set the application' for hearing and give the irrigation company notice of not less than twenty days thereof. A tender crop could perish for lack of water in the meantime. We hold, therefore, that prior resort to the Board of Water Engineers under Article 7560 need not have been made by plaintiffs before bringing the actions involved.

There are few cases which appear to help solve the question before us. The first, relied on by appellees, is McHenry v. Bankers’ Trust Co., Tex.Civ.App.1918, 206 S.W. 560, 571.

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319 S.W.2d 951, 1959 Tex. App. LEXIS 1819, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lacour-v-devers-canal-company-texapp-1959.