Lakeside Irrigation Co. v. Markham Irrigation Co.

285 S.W. 593, 116 Tex. 65, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 95
CourtTexas Supreme Court
DecidedJune 23, 1926
DocketNo. 4539.
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 285 S.W. 593 (Lakeside Irrigation Co. v. Markham Irrigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lakeside Irrigation Co. v. Markham Irrigation Co., 285 S.W. 593, 116 Tex. 65, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 95 (Tex. 1926).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Judge POWELL

delivered the opinion of the Commission of Appeals, Section B.

This cause is before the Supreme Court upon the following certificate from the Honorable Court of Civil Appeals of the First District:

“In the above styled cause, now pending in this court on motion for rehearing, we deem it advisable to certify for your decision the questions hereinafter propounded which arise upon *68 the following statement of the pleadings and evidence disclosed by the record:

“Appellees, each of whom is a Texas corporation with its domicile in Matagorda County, brought this suit against the Lakeside Irrigation Company, a corporation organized under the laws of this State and having its domicile in Colorado County, and the Garwood Irrigation Company, an Ohio corporation, having a permit to do business in this State, its place of business and domicile in this State being in Colorado County.

“Plaintiffs’ petition alleges in substance that plaintiffs are organized and chartered as irrigation companies and own and operate irrigation canals and ditches in Matagorda County and also own lands adjacent to the canals and that the operation of said irrigation canals and the irrigation of the lands adjacent thereto is dependent upon water taken from the Colorado River.

“After alleging the number of acres of land which each of the plaintiffs and defendants is entitled, under its permit from the State, to irrigate with water taken from the Colorado River, the petition contains the following allegations:

“ ‘Fourth.

“ ‘Plaintiffs further allege that notwithstanding the defendant Lakeside Company has no right to take water from the Colorado River for irrigation purposes for a greater area of land than above stated, that nevertheless it did, in the year 1923, take water from the Colorado River, and appropriate same to the irrigation of more than fifteen thousand (15,000) acres of land, or nearly four (4) times the volume of water that it was entitled to take. And said Lakeside Company has so extended its canals and its pumping capacity as to enable it to irrigate this last named acreage and it plans and is now engaged in preparation for the irrigation season of 1924, to take and use and appropriate water to irrigate as much as twenty thousand (20,000) acres of land, though, in point of fact, its water rights are limited as aforesaid.

“ ‘Plaintiff further alleges that notwithstanding the defendant Garwood Company has no right to take water from the Colorado River for irrigation purposes for a greater area of land than above stated, that nevertheless it did, in the year 1923, take water from the Colorado River, and appropriate same to the irrigation of more than seven thousand five hundred (7,500) acres of land, or nearly three (3) times the volume of water that it was entitled to take. And said Garwood Company has *69 so extended its canals and its pumping capacity as to enable it to irrigate this last named acreage, and it plans and is now engaged in preparations for the irrigating season of 1924, to again take and use and appropriate water to irrigate as much as ten thousand (10,000) acres of land, though in point of fact, its water rights are limited as aforesaid.

“ ‘Fifth.

“ ‘Plaintiffs further allege that the intakes of the plaintiff companies, and the points of diversion from which they take water from the river, for the purpose of applying same to the lands upon their canals, are in Matagorda County, Texas, and that the lands watered by them through their canals are all in Matagorda County, Texas, and that these lands and canals and points of diversion are more than thirty (30) miles below the pumping plants and points of diversion of the defendant companies in Colorado County, Texas.

“ ‘Plaintiffs further aver that both themselves and the defendant divert and use water solely for the irrigation of rice, which is the only crop which can be profitably irrigated by any of the parties hereto. That the irrigation season for rice begins about the 1st of May of each year, and the rice crop reaches its maximum requirements during June, July and August. That normally these last three months are the dry season in Texas, and in normal years the flow of the Colorado River and the volume of water therein available for irrigation is often lower during these months than during other periods of the year. That since it is necessary for all rice irrigators to take water during this period, the uses of all the companies plaintiff and defendant herein require them to draw upon this volume of water during this same period. * * *

“ ‘Sixth.

“ ‘Plaintiffs further aver that the volume of water in the Colorado River, at and below Columbus, in Colorado County, Texas, during normal years, is not sufficient to water in excess of sixty thousand (60,000) acres. That there are many years in which, due to drought and meagre rainfall, this volume of water will not be sufficient to irrigate more than half of such acreage, and they aver that the volume of water in said river, which reached Matagorda County, and was available for their uses *70 in the "season of 1923, was not sufficient to irrigate as much as thirty-five thousand (35,000) acres. * * *

“ ‘That if the defendants are permitted to take the volume of water in 1924 that they did take in 1923, or are permitted to take any volume of water from the river in excess of the amount that they have the right to take under their appropriation, and uses, they will be taking water that does not belong to them, to which they have no right, and water that is covered by the appropriations owned and controlled by the plaintiffs, and that they will thus deprive the plaintiffs of a part of their fixed and vested water rights.

“ ‘Seventh.

“ ‘The plaintiffs allege that they and their predecessors in title have made vast improvements, and investments in canal plants, canal systems and equipment, and plans for irrigating large areas of land in Matagorda County, these improvements and expenditures amounting to in excess of one million (¡¡>1,000,-000.00) dollars. That they have at this large expense and after years of effort built up large and successful irrigation systems. That the defendants, because of their position on the river, are able to divert and take such volumes of water as they will, regardless of the rights of these plaintiffs, and that in taking and appropriating such excess volumes of water as they did during the year 1923, they thus deprive these plaintiffs of water to which plaintiffs were entitled, and caused a shortage and loss of crops upon plaintiffs’ canals.

“ ‘Eighth.

“ ‘Plaintiffs aver that so long as these defendants continue their wrongful diversion of this volume of water to which they are not entitled, that these plaintiffs and their water users and water tenants are without remedy and are wholly at the mercy of the defendants. That if the water supply runs low during June, July and August, the defendants will, without regard to any limitation upon their rights, take all of the water that they want, depleting the volume that should come down to these plaintiffs, and the plaintiffs are wholly without remedy.

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Bluebook (online)
285 S.W. 593, 116 Tex. 65, 1926 Tex. LEXIS 95, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lakeside-irrigation-co-v-markham-irrigation-co-tex-1926.