Moody v. Johnston

66 F.2d 999
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedSeptember 6, 1933
Docket6785
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 66 F.2d 999 (Moody v. Johnston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Moody v. Johnston, 66 F.2d 999 (9th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

NORCROSS, District Judge.

This is an appeal from decrees entered by the court below (Scheer v. Moody, 48 F. (2d) 327) in five suits consolidated for trial and appeal, enjoining defendant, appellant herein, individually and as Project Manager of the Irrigation Project within the Flathead Indian Reservation in Montana, from assessing or causing any assessment against appellees for the construction, operation, or maintenance of said project and from asserting or claiming that appellees have no water right from Finley creek, a natural stream arising within said reservation, and from any and every way clouding the right, title, and interest respecting the waters of said stream as determined by said decree to bo in appellees. The decrees also contain a provision reading: “Plaintiffs are entitled to the full extent of their necessities to sufficient water to irrigate their said lands, which in no event will exceed one inch per acre of the waters of Finley Creek.”

*1000 It is appellant’s contention that the suits cannot be maintained without making the United States and the Secretary of the Interior parties defendant, and should have have been dismissed upon appellant’s motion for the reason they seek to adjudicate property rights of the United States; that appellees are not entitled to water rights as alleged or found by the court below, and are liable for charges for construction, operation, and maintenance for the Irrigation Project. Appellant, officially designated Project Engineer, is manager of said Irrigation Project under authority of the Commissioner of Indian Affairs and the Secretary of the Interior.

Appellees are white owners of former Indian allotments within the limits of the project upon which trust and fee patents were issued, and claim exemption from construction, operation, and maintenance charges for the reason that water rights were appurtenant to their lands prior to the initiation of such project, and hence that appellant is without authority to interfere with their private property.

The assignment of error in each case in respect to the overruling of defendants’ motions to dismiss for want of necessary parties presents serious questions.

The motions to dismiss in the several cases interposed by defendant, appellant herein, as Project Manager, were, among others, upon the following grounds: “That there is a defect of parties defendant in said action in that it appears from the bill of complaint therein that said C. J. Moody as Project Manager of said Flathead Reclamation Project is an employee of the United States, and is interested and can be interested in said cause of action only in his capacity as such employee of the United States of America in charge of said Reclamation Project as Project Manager; that the property rights of the United States of America are involved in this action; and that the United States of America is a necessary party defendant to the said action, but is not joined or sued as defendant therein.”

The motions to dismiss interposed by defendant as an individual read: “Comes now the defendnant C. J. Moody in his individual capacity and moves the Court to dismiss the above entitled action as to said defendant as a private individual upon the ground and for the reason that the bill of complaint herein fails to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action against said C. J. Moody as a private individual, in that it affirmatively appears upon the face thereof that all acts complained of on the part of C. J. Moody were acts performed by him in his capacity as Project Manager of Flathead Reclamation Project, under the direction and authority of the Secretary of the Interior of the United States of America, and not in his capacity as a private individual or otherwise than as such Project Manager.”

In the several complaints there appears the following allegation:

“That the defendant, C. J. Moody, is now, and for more than ten years last past has been, the engineer and project manager, for the United States of America under the Department of the Interior, of the Flathead Irrigation Project upon the Flathead Indian-Reservation in Missoula County, Montana.

“That as such engineer and project manager the said defendant has charge of, under the Secretary of the Interior of the United States, the construction, operation, management and control of the Flathead Irrigation Project, and as a part of his duties collects cost of construction, operation and maintenance of ditches built, and distributes under said Reclamation Project the waters of Finley Creek, which is an unnavigable, natural stream of flowing water located in Missoula County, Montana.”

.In the answers to the complaints of the several plaintiffs appears the following allegation: “Defendant, however, admits and avers that as a duly authorized employee and as said manager in behalf of the United , States Government, under the direction and authority of the Secretary of the Interior, pursuant to the laws and statutes of the United States, he assessed against said lands claimed by plaintiffs the said charges for construction, operation and maintenance of said irrigation system for the years 1927 and 1928; and further alleges that said charges, and each thereof, were and are lawful and proper.”

That these suits may be prosecuted against the Project Manager without joining the United States or the Secretary of the Interior, respondents rely on the eases of Magruder v. Belle Fourche Valley Water Users’ Association (C. C. A. 8) 219 F. 72, and Baker v. Swigart (D. C.) 196 F. 569, 571, affirmed in Swigart v. Baker, 229 U. S. 187, 33 S. Ct. 645, 57 L. Ed. 1143. Both in the Magruder and Baker Cases the suit was against a subordinate officer of the Department of the Interior in immediate charge of the particular reclamation project. The cases presented questions of a similar character to those de *1001 termined by the court below in the ease at bar. The right to proceed against such officers without joining the Secretary of the Interi- or does not appear to have been raised in either the Magrader or Baker Case, and that question was not considered in the opinion rendered.

Appellant relies on decisions of the Supreme Court of the United States rendered subsequent to the decisions in the Magruder and Baker Cases, citing Webster v. Pall, 266 U. S. 507, 45 S. Ct. 148, 149, 69 L. Ed. 411, and Gnerich v. Butter, 265 U. S. 388, 44 S. Ct. 532, 533, 68 L. Ed. 1068, and upon the decision in Warner Valley Stock Co. v. Smith, 165 U. S. 28, 34, 17 S. Ct. 225, 41 L. Ed. 621, rendered prior thereto, as determining the question that a suit may not be maintained against a subordinate officer without joining the superior officer under whose authority and direction he is acting.

The case of Gnerich v. Butter, supra, on appeal from this circuit, was a case in which the Prohibition Director for the District of California was made sole defendant.

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Bluebook (online)
66 F.2d 999, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moody-v-johnston-ca9-1933.