Meyer v. WICHITA COUNTY WATER IMP. DISTS. NOS. 1 AND 2

265 S.W.2d 660
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 12, 1954
Docket15482
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 265 S.W.2d 660 (Meyer v. WICHITA COUNTY WATER IMP. DISTS. NOS. 1 AND 2) 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
Meyer v. WICHITA COUNTY WATER IMP. DISTS. NOS. 1 AND 2, 265 S.W.2d 660 (Tex. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

MASSEY, Chief Justice.

From-a summary judgment in behalf of defendants E. F. Moore and R. D; Kirk,' individually and as’ representatives-'of a class' of persons, denying the plaintiffs’1 suit1 as against' them and in effect dismissing the "plaintiffs’ action; at least in so far as it obtained against them as defendants thereto, the plaintiffs, Lester Meyer, et al., individually and as representatives of a class of persons' appealed. •

Judgment reversed and remanded.

In order to understand the matter involved in this case, reference must be made to the issues of a former cause disposed' of by a judgment in the trial court on Augüsf 4th, 1951. . In that cause, docketed as No. 48,463-Á and styled E. F. Moore, et al. v. Wichita County Water Improvement Districts Nos. One and Two, et al., E. F. Moore and R. D. Kirk, individually and as a class representing all of the property owners of certain lands, were .plaintiffs and the Water' Improvement Districts were, defendants. By the judgment entered it was decreed that the plaintiffs and the persons of the class represented were entitled to .have delivered to them for, irrigation..purposes certain waters from Lake Wichita. . The obligation to make such delivery was adjudged . as against the Water Improvement Districts, and the lands to which the Districts were obligated to so - deliver the waters were designated. : The judgment further adjudged the 'entitlement:by way of fee. or-toll ' the • Water Improvement Districts should have, from the owners of said.land “for making water from Lake-Wichita accessible .for'irrigation purposes through the presently 'existing canals, the lands .contiguous. and adjacent to such canals, laterals and.ditches ,of the old irrigation system”.. ■ The fee or .toll was decreed to. be. $2' per acre .per year based upon- the acreage of the lands set out.

.This present suit was filed by Lester Meyer et al., individually and. as representatives of a class, on December 6, 1951>. four months and two days subsequent to the entry of the judgment in Cause No. 48,463-A. No appeal was ever perfected from the former judgment. The substance of the-pleadings'of the parties in that for-: *662 mer case 'was set forth in the pleadings of Lester Meyer et al. These pleadings, verbatim as. filed in the former action, have been included in the transcript. The judgment of the trial court in C.ause No. 48,463-A was made a part of the pleadings in the present suit. Said judgment incorporated by reference certain lands as being those affected by it, and to which waters for irrigation purposes must be made available, and as to the owners of which the obligation to pay fees or tolls are incumbent. Lester Meyer et al. are owners of some of the lands to which said judgment relates. They claim by their suit, however, that their interests are not now common with the interests of other owners of lands to which the judgment relates, nor yrsre they at time of the judgment, in that they do not and did not desire the waters the Water Improvement Districts _ became obligated to furnish to them by virtue of the judgment in Cause No. 48,463-A. They claim further that the defendants Moore and Kirk had no authority to represent them in said suit, that they did not in fact represent them, and that though they w'ere necessary parties to said suit they were never served or notified, of the suit.

Obviously the suit in Cause No. 48,-463-A was brought as a class action under the provisions of Texas Rule of .Civil Pro-, cedure No. 42. ■ Reference to that rule and to the pleadings reveals that all the owners of the land affected by the judgment in such cause would presumptively fall within the same class. :The- lands were-embodied within an area susceptible to irrigation from Lake Wichita and, obligations were fixed by the judgment which created the obligation on the part of' the Water Improvement Districts to make available the water wherewith to irrigate such lands, and correspondingly established the obligation upon the owners of the lands to pay the Districts for making the water available.

Understandingly there are almost cer-, tainly some owners who have no need or desire for water in every area susceptible of irrigation and those landowners ¡do, nqt feel any moral obligation to pay out money merely because water is made available to them. The question in our case is whether such persons are truly within the class of persons comprising all the owners of all the lands within the area affected by the judgment or whether they are in a separate class from that inclusive of those who do want water for irrigation purposes. The interests of the latter group of persons undoubtedly were truly represented in the class action No. 48,463-A. Are those who neither want the water nor desire to become obligated to pay for its availability an exception — coming without the class — merely because of their position on the matter? Under the authority of Knioum v. Slattery, Tex.Civ.App., San Antonio, 1951, 239 S.W.2d 865, writ refused, and the Federal authority discussed therein, Hansberry v. Lee, 311 U.S. 32, 61 S.Ct. 115, 119, 85 L.Ed. 22, 132 A.L.R. 741, we believe that there is a distinction, and that such persons comprise a 'separate class in so far as a class action pursuant to T.R.C.P. 42 might be brought by the members of one group purportedly for both groups as one class of persons.

Generally, only parties and privr íes are bound by. judgments. There is a seeming exception to this rule which recognizes that a person may be bound, by a judgment under the theory of virtual representation. ' However, for- the exception to apply, as in the case of a class suit, such a person is to bé bound only where’ the representative parties actually participating in the suit as such are either prosecuting or defending rights or interests so substantially identical to those of such person as insure'his adequate representation therein. Knioum v. Slattery, supra. In view thereof, if the allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition in this regard should be established, the plaintiffs in the instant action were pot bound by the judgment of the trial court in Cause No. 48,463-A.

The plaintiffs sought by their pleadings to set aside the judgment in Cause No. 48,463-A,- at least in so far as the same might be held to pertain to them, *663 and additionally to litigate a question of injunction. The injunction they seek is one against Moore añd Kirk ef al. from interfering with their property ■ and their use and enjoyment thereof, and further, and as against the Water Improvement Districts to enjoin said Districts from using the flumes, canals, and laterals under or on their property for irrigation' or other purposes. In the nature of an alternative the same remedy is sought against the Districts for such time- as might be necessary until the Districts should repair the flumes, canals, ditches and laterals to such extent that they would' not leak and overflow water on plaintiffs’ properties. It was alleged that the flumes, canals and laterals were in such condition that the leakage and overflow was occurring and would continue to occur - as result of the use thereof by the Districts in making available the irrigation water to Moore and Kirk et al. It is to be noted that the form of the injunction sought is prohibitory and in view of this Moore and Kirk et al.

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Bluebook (online)
265 S.W.2d 660, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meyer-v-wichita-county-water-imp-dists-nos-1-and-2-texapp-1954.