San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Co. v. County of Stanislaus

99 P. 365, 155 Cal. 21, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 287
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1908
DocketS.F. No. 4798.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 99 P. 365 (San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Co. v. County of Stanislaus) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Co. v. County of Stanislaus, 99 P. 365, 155 Cal. 21, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 287 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

*22 LORIGAN, J.

Plaintiff is a corporation engaged in furnishing water for irrigation purposes in the counties of Fresno, Merced, and Stanislaus, and brought this action in the superior court of Fresno County against the county of Stanislaus and the counties of Fresno and Merced, and the boards of supervisors of said three counties respectively, to have declared null and void certain orders of said boards establishing the maximum rates to be paid plaintiff by the inhabitants of each county for water for irrigation of lands therein.

All the defendants demurred to the complaint, and their demurrers being sustained without leave to amend, and judgment being entered thereon against plaintiff, it appeals therefrom.

Referring to those portions of the complaint pertinent for consideration, it is alleged that the plaintiff organized as a corporation in 1871 for the purpose of constructing canals for irrigation purposes, and that since its incorporation it had been engaged in the business of appropriating water for irrigation, sale, rental, and distribution; that it owned and maintained a system of canals and waterworks therefor, heading in the San Joaquin River in Fresno County, and running through Fresno and Merced counties into Stanislaus County, furnishing water through said canals to the inhabitants of said counties of Fresno, Merced, and Stanislaus for irrigation, and that the works used in the appropriation and furnishing of said water to the inhabitants of said counties were of an actual and proper cost of not less than $1,019,763.97.

The complaint then sets forth specifically certain proceedings of the board of supervisors of Stanislaus County taken under the act of the legislature of March 12, 1885, for the purpose of establishing water rates to be charged by plaintiff, and it is alleged that on June 24, 1896, said board estimated the value of plaintiff’s canals, ditches, and other property used in the appropriation and furnishing of said water at the sum of $337,000, and the annual reasonable expenses of plaintiff to be the sum of twenty-two thousand dollars, and thereupon made an order fixing certain specified rates for water to be paid by the inhabitants of said county for irrigation purposes, and which the complaint proceeds to declare “then were and ever since have been, grossly unfair and unreasonable, and such that if rates were fixed by the boards of super *23 visors of Fresno and Merced in due proportion to the rates so fixed by said board of supervisors of said county of Stanislaus, the net annual receipts and profits thereof to the plaintiff could not possibly amount to six per cent, nor to more than one and one-quarter per cent upon the value of its said property actually used and useful to the appropriation and furnishing of said water.”

The complaint then proceeds to allege similar proceedings by the board of supervisors of Merced and Fresno counties in the year 1904, an estimation by said boards of the value of plaintiff’s canals, ditches, etc., to be $832,681.20, and its annual expenses relating thereto, $34,943.65, and the fixing of certain water rates to be charged in said counties for irrigation.

It is not alleged that these latter rates of the counties of Merced and Fresno were unreasonable, considered by themselves. It is, however, alleged “that the rates so fixed by the said boards of supervisors of the said counties of Stanislaus, Merced, and Fresno, taken as a whole, are grossly unfair and unreasonable, and will not and cannot insure to the plaintiff, or permit it to receive, net annual receipts and profits in said business of six per cent upon the value of its said canal and other property actually used and useful to the appropriation and furnishing of said water to the inhabitants of said counties, nor more than two per cent upon said value. . . .”

The prayer of the complaint is, that the orders establishing said water rates made by the boards of supervisors of the three counties be declared void and the defendants enjoined from attempting to put in force or enforcing the rates established by them.

The action was commenced on July 28, 1904.

The act of March 12, 1885 (Stats. 1885, p. 95), under which the rates of which plaintiff complains were established by the boards of supervisors of the several counties sued herein, after providing that the use of all water in this state for irrigation, sale, rental, or distribution is a public use, declares that the right to collect the rates therefor shall be regulated and controlled in the different counties of the state by the boards of supervisors thereof. The act provides special proceedings to be taken by said boards for that purpose upon the petition of twenty-five inhabitants who are taxpayers of *24 any county in which said waters are distributed; provides for a hearing upon the petition after public notice; ah estimation of the value of canals, etc., belonging to the person, company, association, or corporation whose franchise is to be regulated and controlled; an estimate of the annual reasonable expenses, etc., of such person, company, association, or corporation, including the cost of repairs, management, and operating of such works; and requires the board of supervisors of the county thereupon to fix the maximum rate at which such firm, company, association, or corporation shall sell, rent, or distribute any appropriated water to any of the inhabitants of the county. In fixing such rates it is provided that, as near as may be, they shall be so adjusted that the net annual receipts and profits of the sale or distribution of such waters to-the firm, company, association, or corporation appropriating and distributing them shall be not less than six nor more than eighteen per cent upon the value of the canals, etc. It is further provided that the rates as originally fixed shall be binding and conclusive for not less than one year next after their establishment, and until established anew or abrogated, as the act further provides they may subsequently be.

As to the establishing anew, or abrogating of such original rates, the act then proceeds, by section six thereof to declare as follows: “At any time after the establishment of such water rates by any board of supervisors of this state, the same may be established anew, or abrogated in whole or in part by such board, to take effect not less than one year next after such first establishment, but subject to said limitation of one year, to take effect immediately in the following manner: Upon the written petition of inhabitants as hereinbefore provided, or upon the written petition of any of the persons, companies, associations or corporations, the rates and compensations of whose appropriated waters have already been fixed and regulated, and are still subject to such regulation by any board of supervisors of this state, as in this act provided; and upon the like publication or posting of such petition and notice, and for the like period of time as herein-before provided, such board of supervisors shall proceed anew, in the manner hereinbefore provided, to fix and establish the water rates for such person, company, association, or corporation, or any number of them, in the same manner as if such *25

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Bluebook (online)
99 P. 365, 155 Cal. 21, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 287, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-joaquin-kings-river-canal-irrigation-co-v-county-of-stanislaus-cal-1908.