Oury v. Goodwin

26 P. 376, 3 Ariz. 255, 1891 Ariz. LEXIS 3
CourtArizona Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 24, 1891
DocketCivil No. 301
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 26 P. 376 (Oury v. Goodwin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Arizona Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Oury v. Goodwin, 26 P. 376, 3 Ariz. 255, 1891 Ariz. LEXIS 3 (Ark. 1891).

Opinion

GOODING, C. J.

This is an action under title 22 “Eminent Domain,” of the Revised Statutes of Arizona, act approved March 9, 1887, to condemn real estate of appellant for the purpose of a canal or ditch for irrigating purposes. The appellant contends—1. That the legislature had no power to pass the act; 2. That the court, and not the legislature, must be the final judge of what is a public use, as distinguished [260]*260from a private use; and 3. That the use in this case is private, and not public.

These are questions of the utmost importance in this territory, and have been presented and argued with ability commensurate with their importance. Was the act, “Eminent Domain,” beyond the power and authority of the legislature, and therefore void? The organic law of Arizona provides (U. S. Rev. Stats. 1878, sec. 1851): “The legislative power of this territory extends to all rightful subjects of legislation-not inconsistent with the constitution and laws of the United States. But no laws shall be passed interfering with the primary disposal of the soil. . . .” The exercise of the power of eminent domain is certainly “a rightful subject of legislation.” The various and imperative demands for the exercise of this power are so obvious as to preclude the idea that Congress did not intend to confer it by the language used in the organic act. Public buildings, public roads, railroads, canals, water-works, sewers, gas, electric lights, and all the modern improvements of a public character are dependent on the exercise of this power. Not only is the exercise of the power of eminent domain a “rightful subject of legislation,” but this power is implied from the negative. “But no law shall be passed interfering with the primary disposal of the soil.” The primary disposal, it is needless to say, is the disposal of it by the government when it parts with its title. The legislature has the power to determine and fix by what tenures lands in the territory shall be held, and under what forms titles shall pass, and who shall be the heirs at the death of the proprietor and pass other like laws. The purpose of the Organic Act was to transfer from Congress to the territorial legislature the power that Congress had to pass laws for the people of the territory upon £ £ all rightful subjects1 of leg-. islation.” The territorial legislature’is substituted for Congress, and clothed with the power of Congress, except that it may not pass laws interfering with the primary disposal of the soil, nor tax the property of the United States, nor tax the lands or other property of non-residents higher than the lands or property of residents. That Congress had the power to pass an act providing for the exercise of the power of eminent domain in the territory no one will question. That it [261]*261lias delegated this power to the territorial legislature we think is quite clear. Cooley on Constitutional Limitations, 650, says: “In the new territories, however, where the government of the United States exercises sovereign authority, it possesses, as incident thereto, the right of eminent domain, which it may exercise directly or though the territorial governments.”

Was the property taken for a private or public use? The court below found that the property in question was sought to be condemned for a “use. authorized by law,” and was necessary for said use. The “statement of facts” is the evidence taken on the trial. It appears that the ditch in question is connected with the Tempe Canal, and what is known as the “Southern Branch.” Mr. Goodwin says: “Our branch is not an organization of its own. It is a part of the southern branch, in which Mr. Oury owns stock; it is a part of the same canal.” He further states that: “The zanjero of the southern branch has charge of our canal; our canal is just a part of the southern branch.” “The directors of the southern branch have control of our ditch as well as the southern branch; the whole business is under one set of directors.” He further states that there are about eight thousand acres of land under the ditch, desert land, worthless without irrigation. He further mentions the names of thirteen persons who own stock, and states that none of these shareholders own more shares than is necessary to irrigate their land, and that it was the intention to give each shareholder sufficient to irrigate his own land. That others besides these shareholders owned land within the boundaries marked and as covered by the canal. The ditch is owned by a joint-stock association, not a corporation. That about one thousand inches of water was used through the canal, and the shareholders owned , about two thousand acres. The one thousand inches of water run through the ditch was owned by the shareholders in the Tempe canal, and in the southern branch both. That one hundred inches would be used to one hundred and sixty acres, sometimes more. These facts, not contradicted, bear on the question of the use being a public use, or a purely private use. The other facts we deem it unnecessary to set forth, as the controversy arises on the facts above set out. The amended complaint alleges, among other [262]*262things, that the “plaintiff is a resident of the territory of Arizona, county of Maricopa, and an agent of the said territory for the purpose hereafter mentioned, by virtue of title 22 of the Revised Statutes of said territory, and as such agent brings this suit against the defendants for the purposes mentioned aforesaid”; and in paragraph 4, in substance, “that plaintiff, J. C. 'Goodwin, Robert G. Goodwin, James Mc-Clintock, Robert J. Martin, Janies Gilliland, T. G. Cartlidge, Fisher G. Bailey, Douglas Lemon, Adams, and numerous other persons, farmers residing in the Missouri Flat neighborhood, county and territory aforesaid, are the owners of about eight thousand acres of arable and irrigable lands in said neighborhood, wholly valueless without irrigation, ’ ’ etc.; and prays “to condemn the land for the purposes mentioned in the complaint.” The damages, as found by the court, amounted to $124.50.

Do the facts of the case disclose that the use was a “use authorized by law,”—in other words, a public use, in the view of the law? There is no definition of a public use that has yet been formulated to' which we can go as a certain criterion. To know what is a public use which authorizes the exercise of the power of eminent domain, we must have recourse to cases rather than definitions,—to uses that have been held to be public. There are certain uses about which there is no controversy. Property taken for state-houses, for courthouses, for school-houses, for public roads, and the like, which pass under the immediate control of the public authorities, are cases of clear and direct public uses. Property taken for railroads, canals, and the like have also been conceded to be taken for public uses. In this class of cases the property is not in the possession of or controlled by the officers or agents of the public. Private individuals own and control the property. The title to the property is not in the public, nor is the possession or control, as in the case of court-houses, schoolhouses, efe. The public use consists in the right of the people to transit and transportation at reasonable rates. The public receives a benefit and advantage in this: that a new and better means of travel and transportation is afforded. In other words, in this class of eases it is conceded that the property of the individual owner is properly and lawfully [263]*263taken, because tbe general public receives a convenience and advantage, and a right to participate in the use. But there is another class of cases on an entirely different basis.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 P. 376, 3 Ariz. 255, 1891 Ariz. LEXIS 3, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oury-v-goodwin-ariz-1891.