Moore v. Anderson

68 F.2d 191, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4919
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedDecember 22, 1933
Docket7196, 7197
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 68 F.2d 191 (Moore v. Anderson) 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
Moore v. Anderson, 68 F.2d 191, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4919 (9th Cir. 1933).

Opinion

SAWTELLE, Circuit Judge.

The above-entitled causes, hereinafter referred to' as the Anderson case and the Graham ease, involve similar questions of law and were heard together in the District Court on motion to dissolve and on motion to modify the temporary injunctions herein.

On the application of the appellees, the court below issued temporary injunctions commanding the appellants (1) to desist from diverting the waters of the Sunnyside Canal and laterals therefrom as described in the bills of complaint, from the lands known as old supplemental water right lands, comprising about 28,700 acres, and from the lands of the appellees, covered by the old supplemental water right contract, which waters might be necessary successfully to irrigate the land in question and the crops growing thereon, “and in conformity to and in harmony with the amount of water delivered by” the appellants “to each tract of land covered by said water rights for a period of more than twenty years, and in harmony with the rules and practice that have been in force prior to the recent regulation of the Bureau of Reclamation relative to what is known as excess or rental water”; (2¡) to open forthwith the headgates and permit that supply of water which is necessary successfully to irrigate each tract of land, and the crops growing thereon, and in harmony with the practical determination made by the appellants, etc., “and in harmony with the practical furnishing’ of water prior to the regulations of the Bureau of Reclamation relative to excess or rental water, and until the further order of this Court.”

Thereafter an amended bill of complaint asking that the injunction he made permanent was filed in each case. The amended complaints are similar in most respects, but are not the same.

The material allegations of the amended complaint in the Anderson ease are as follows :

Prior to 1906, the Washington. Irrigation *192 Company owned the Sunnyside Main Canal, at Sunnyside, Wash., and the laterals and distribution system therefrom, as well as the water appropriations from the Yakima river. Pursuant to an act of Congress of June 17, 1902, known as the Reclamation Act (32 Stat. 388), the United States purchased from the company the canal and its appurtenances. At the time of the purchase, 28,720 acres of oldi supplemental water right lands, which include the Anderson lands, had appurtenant thereto what is known as the Washington Irrigation Company water right, which was insufficient beneficially and successfully to irrigate the 28,720 acres.

Shortly after the purchase by the United States, the Bureau of Reclamation negotiated with the owners of the old supplemental water right lands relative to furnishing water for irrigation purposes, and represented to the owners that the government would construct adequate storage facilities to supplement the natural flow of the river and would furnish an adequate supply of water.

Accordingly, Anderson and his wife entered into a contract with the government for the purchase of a supplemental water right; a copy of the contract being attached to the complaint. It is further alleged that the An-dersons fully complied with the terms of the contract and have made all the required payments. The contract was acknowledged July 30,-1910.

For more than twenty years after the execution of the contract, the “authorized agent of the United States” determined the amount of water necessary to irrigate the land, and the amount so determined was delivered to •the Andersons by such authorized agent.

In the latter part of May, 1932, however, the appellants notified the Andersons that, unless they signed a new contract to pay a water rental for all water in excess of a certain classification, no water in- exeess of that amount would be delivered to any of the old supplemental right lands after June 1, 1932, and that the headgates would be shut down. It is alleged that the amount specified as to Anderson’s lands was 3% acre feet per acre per annum, “on an average less than the amount that had been determined by actual experience of over twenty years to be the amount necessary to successfully irrigate said land and the amount that could be beneficially used thereon as determined by the authorized agent of the United States and the amount actually delivered.”

The complaint sets forth the text of a “water rental application,” as follows: “The undersigned applicant requests exeess water under public notice issued by the Secretary February 19,1932, and agrees to pay applicable charges, with 6 per cent, interest from December 1,1932, until paid. He further agrees that water may be withheld from his land after 1932 until such charges are paid. It is understood that advance payment will be required in 1933 if the 1932 rental charge re-* mains unpaid at that time.”

It is therefore evident that these exeess charges were fixed by the Secretary of the Interior himself; yet the complaint goes on to say: “That these defendants [appellants] claiming to act as Superintendent, Irrigation Manager, Watermasters and officials of the Bureau of Reclamation of the United States of America but without warrant of law or contract did wrongfully and unlawfully and contrary to the terms of all contracts * * * and contrary to the practical construction of said contracts for a long term of years and contrary to the terms of the Reclamation Act did on or about June 1st, 1932, shut off the supply of water from the land of your orators * * * in excess of 3% acre feet per acre per annum measured at the land * * * and did proceed then and there to destroy all water belonging to your orators * * * in exeess of 3% acre feet per acre per annum measured at the land by dumping said water above said amount into waste ways and did proceed then and there to destroy said water above the amount specified as to each of the other Old Supplemental Water Right Lands by dumping said water above the amount specified into waste ways from which it ran into the Yakima River, thence into the Columbia River and into the Pacific Ocean, completely destroying' the value of said water for all purposes. * * * ”

It is then asserted that the ruling and order requiring a new contract to be entered into and the acts of the appellants as previously set forth in shutting down the headgates “were arbitrarily made and were made without regard to the prior determination by the authorized agent of the United States as to the amount of water necessary to sueessfully irrigate said land and the amount that could be beneficially used thereon,” etc.

The complaint alleges that, at the time of the commencement of the action, a “mandatory injunction” was issued requiring the appellants to deliver the amount of water necessary to irrigate the tract in question, and that, pursuant to the mandatory injunction, the appellants have actually furnished all the water necessary to irrigate the land. It is al *193 so asserted that, at the time the headgates were shut down, “water was actually being wasted and there was more than a sufficient amount of water available to furnish the irrigation requirements of all lands within said project, which said water had actually been diverted from, the Yakima River and was flowing in the Sunnyside Main Canal and laterals leading therefrom and was under the dii-rect supervision and control of these” appellants. (Italics our own.)

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Bluebook (online)
68 F.2d 191, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4919, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moore-v-anderson-ca9-1933.