Nev-Cal Electric Securities Co. v. Imperial Irr. Dist.

85 F.2d 886
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 23, 1936
Docket8106
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 85 F.2d 886 (Nev-Cal Electric Securities Co. v. Imperial Irr. Dist.) 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
Nev-Cal Electric Securities Co. v. Imperial Irr. Dist., 85 F.2d 886 (9th Cir. 1936).

Opinion

GARRECHT, Circuit Judge.

From an order and decree dismissing the appellant’s amended bill of complaint for failure to state a cause of action and denying a preliminary injunction, an appeal has been brought to this court.

*889 The suit was filed by the appellant on its own behalf; as a landowner in the Imperial irrigation district, hereinafter referred to as “the district”; as the owner of a direct, beneficial interest in the funds and property legal title to which is held in trust for the owners of land within the district; and, finally, as a taxpayer or assessment payer, on behalf of the district.

The expressed purpose of the suit is to recover on behalf of the district and the landowners therein $35,000 already alleged to have been expended, and to enjoin the further expenditure of funds of the district, or the incurring of any liabilities or the levying or collection of any special assessments upon the lands of the appellant.

It is also sought to enjoin the taking of any steps for the purpose of constructing, acquiring, or operating any electrical generating transmission, or distribution system or selling electrical energy produced from such electrical system.

A principal and controlling issue is the constitutionality of the act of 1919, as amended, entitled “An act to provide for the development of electrical power by irrigation districts.” Deering’s General Laws of California 1923, Act 3868, pp. 1503-1504.

The original complaint dealt chiefly with a proposed Diesel engine electrical generating plant at Brawley, Cal., and the distributing lines in connection therewith for the distribution and sale of electricity within the cities of Brawley and Imperial, Cal., and not elsewhere in the district. On March 21, 1935, the appellant, by leave of court, 'filed an amendment to its bill of complaint, dealing with alleged threatened expenditures and liabilities in excess of $12,000,000 for the acquisition and construction “of electrical generating plants, wires, lines and appurtenances for the generation, distribution and sale of electrical energy not less than two-thirds of which said defendants threaten and intend to, and will, generate for sale and use outside the boundaries of said district,” etc.

On March 11, 1935, immediately prior to the time when the first payment would be due on the contract for the Diesel engine generating plant at Brawley, and within a few days after work was commenced on the construction of distribution lines in that city in connection with the engine plant, the appellant obtained a temporary restraining order and an order to show cause why a preliminary injunction should not be issued, restraining and enjoining the appellees from making any expenditures, incurring any liabilities, or taking any other steps looking to the generation, distribution, or sale of light or power.

Affidavits were presented by both sides on the matter of a preliminary injunction. One of the affidavits presented by the appellees was that of M. J. Dowd, chief engineer and general superintendent of the appellee district, who stated, on information and belief, that the appellant “is a holding corporation and that either through identity of stock holdings, or through direct ownership, * * * [it] is the owner of and controls the operation of * * * the Southern Sierras Power Company,” which, he alleged, had “an absolute and complete monopoly” in the power business throughout the appellee district and in the Coachella Valley. Dowd also charged likewise on information and belief that the appellant had instituted the present suit on behalf of the Southern .Sierras Power Company, “wholly and solely for the purpose of attempting to use this court as an instrumentality to hamper,' delay and interfere with the program of the Imperial Irrigation District, * * * and of assisting said Southern Sierras Power Company in maintaining the monopoly,” etc.

A. B. West, president of the appellant corporation, submitted an affidavit denying all the foregoing allegations made by Dowd, with the exception of the statement that the Sierras Company has sold all the electric energy used in the appellee district and the Coachella Valley.. West, however, denied the existence of a monopoly.

The restraining order continued in full force, except for two modifications, for 10 months, and until the date of the order and decree from which the present appeal is being prosecuted.

On December 21, 1935, the court below, in a memorandum of conclusions, held that the amended bill of complaint failed to state facts sufficient to entitle the appellant to any relief, and that therefore tire bill should be dismissed. The same memorandum also announced that the appellant was not entitled to any preliminary injunction.

On January 15, 1936, the court signed findings of facts and conclusions of law on the preliminary injunction, and signed the order and decree from which this appeal has been taken.

Since, as the appellees concede a motion to dismiss admits, subject to an ex *890 ception to be discussed later, all the well-pleaded allegations of the bill of complaint, we will set forth somewhat fully, the averments of the bill, including a few that were ordered stricken by the court. The appellant, however, states in its brief that it “is not dependent upon any stricken portions in order to show the bill of complaint as amended states a cause of action.”

The appellant’s amended bill of complaint alleges that the appellee Imperial irrigation district was organized on July 25, 1911, under the provisions of the California Irrigation District Act (Stats, of Cal. 1897, p. 254, as amended, Deering’s General Laws of California 1931, Act 3854; Id., 1933, Supp.). The district is wholly within Imperial county, Cal., and embraces an area of more than 600,000 acres, susceptible of irrigation from a common source, namely, the Colorado river, and by the same system of works, consisting of about 3,000 miles of main and lateral ditches fed from the waters of the river.

Situated within the district are the cities of Brawley and Imperial, the former containing not mdre than 1,280 acres and a population of not more than ,11,000, and the latter with an area not exceeding 2,560 acres and a population not exceeding 2,000. The total population of the district is approximately 60,000. There are four other cities in the district — El Centro, Calexico, Calipatria, and Holtville, the total area of which is 4,000 acres and the total population of which is 18,900.

The appellant is the owner of two tracts of land containing 149.7 acres and 80 acres. Both tracts have, since the incorporation of the district, been liable for assessments levied by the district to pay for the costs of developing the irrigation system for the lands within the district, which assessments have been paid. The appellant’s lands also remain liable for special assessments made by the district, and for the operations, liabilities, and expenses of the district, as provided by the California Irrigation District Act. The actual and reasonable value of the appellant’s lands is $22,900.

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Bluebook (online)
85 F.2d 886, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nev-cal-electric-securities-co-v-imperial-irr-dist-ca9-1936.