Skinner v. Jordan Valley Irrigation District

3 P.2d 534, 300 P. 499, 137 Or. 480, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 169
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 6, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 3 P.2d 534 (Skinner v. Jordan Valley Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Skinner v. Jordan Valley Irrigation District, 3 P.2d 534, 300 P. 499, 137 Or. 480, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 169 (Or. 1931).

Opinions

BEAN, C. J.

The Jordan Valley project is situated in Malheur county and was originally a Carey Act project. The construction company was the Jordan Valley Land and Water Company and the operating company was the Jordan Valley Water Company. The state contract between the construction company and the desert land board was executed June 21, 1918, under the provisions of the acts of Congress, commonly known as the Carey Act (§§ 641 et seq., Ü. S. C. A., Title 43) and the laws of the state of Oregon accepting the same.

The Jordan Valley Land and Water Company appropriated a large amount of water of Jordan creek, Jack creek, Antelope creek and Boulder creek, and secured a permit from the state engineer of the state *483 of Oregon to store said waters in a reservoir, known as the Antelope reservoir. The main purpose of appropriating and storing the water was to use the same in the reclamation of arid lands under the Carey Act contract with the state of Oregon. The construction company began the construction of the system and partially completed it to a point where the water was actually delivered from the Jordan creek in the canal some twenty-two miles long and stored in the Antelope reservoir, and the distribution system was completed to a point where practically 1,700 acres of land were under cultivation, including the lands of plaintiff.

In February, 1918, the construction company entered into a contract with plaintiff whereby, in consideration of 420 acres of land conveyed to the construction company by plaintiff, it sold to plaintiff 258.5 acres of land in section 19, township 30 south, range 45 east, Willamette meridian,

“together with a water right for an equal acreage which first party, his grantees or assigns, may use either upon the said lands and premises in section 19, so to be conveyed to him by the party of the second part, or upon any lands owned by the first party in sections 13, 14 and 23, township 30 south, range 44 east, W. M.; it being understood and agreed that the amount of water to which the party of the first part shall be entitled under his water contract or the shares of stock to be issued to him in the Operating Company, to be organized for the purpose of operating the irrigation system now being constructed by the party of the second part in Jordan Valley, Oregon, shall be such amount per acre for 258.5 acres as may be fixed by the State Engineer or the Desert Land Board of the State of Oregon in the contract to be entered into between the State of Oregon and the said party of the second part for the irrigation and reclamation of certain lands situated under said irrigation system, com *484 monly known as the Jordan Valley Project, which lands are now being segregated from the Public Domain under the Act of Congress commonly known as the Carey Act; and the party of the first part shall bear the same relation to' such irrigation system and receive the same amount of water per acre for a total of 258.5 acres for the irrigation of his said lands as other purchasers of water rights in said irrigation system; but the party of the first part shall be entitled, as aforesaid, to use said water upon any lands owned by him in said sections 13,14 and 23, township 30 south, range 44 east, and section 19, township 30 south, range 45 east; and such water shall be delivered to first party, his grantees and assigns, as and when demanded during the irrigation season, but at a rate of flow not exceeding ten (10) cubic feet per second.”

On November 15, 1919, the same parties executed a supplemental agreement, by which the construction company agreed to rebuild the flume, if necessary, and maintain the same in a serviceable condition for a period of three years. The construction company had constructed a flume for plaintiff’s use, which was not of sufficient capacity to carry ten cubic feet per second and was so constructed that it was destroyed during the high water in the spring rains of 1922, and was not thereafter rebuilt by the construction company. The plaintiff improved the lands conveyed to him by the construction company, and the waters so conveyed to plaintiff were used on the lands until such time as the use thereof was impossible by reason of the destruction of the flume. During the following years a small portion of water was delivered to plaintiff, which he used upon his other lands.

After the partial construction of the irrigation system, as above mentioned, the construction company became financially involved and could not complete the *485 contract with the state. Thereafter the desert land board took the necessary steps under the statute to forfeit the rights of the construction company in the contract, and about the same time the construction company was declared a bankrupt by the United States District Court for the District of Idaho. The owners of the desert lands susceptible of irrigation from this project, other than the plaintiff, organized an irrigation district, and this defendant irrigation district became the purchaser at the bankrupt sale of all the right, title and interest of the construction company in the incompleted works, rights of way, permits and other property of the construction company, and on April 30, 1924, the defendant district entered into a contract with the desert land board of the state of Oregon whereby, in consideration of the sum of one dollar and covenants and agreements to complete the irrigation system according to the specifications set forth in the contract, all of the incompleted project was transferred to the defendant herein. One of the covenants of said contract provides:

“The district agrees to allow proper credits of all amounts paid by the purchasers under outstanding water right contracts issued by the Jordan Valley Land and Water Company, it being understood that the value of a full water right under the district plan, shall form the basis of a new contract between the district and each water user, which shall replace present outstanding contracts.”

Plaintiff complied with the terms of his contracts with the construction company and claims a vested right to the use of the water conveyed to him by virtue of his contract. After the irrigation district acquired this irrigation system there was a dispute as to the right of plaintiff to receive the water according to *486 the contract, and only a portion thereof has been delivered to him during certain years, and during the years of 1928 and 1929 defendant refused to deliver any water to the plaintiff. It is stated that the plaintiff’s contract is the only outstanding contract in existence entered into by the construction company. All the other water users from defendant’s system are landowners and taxpayers of the Jordan Valley Irrigation District, or some other irrigation district, and adjusted their rights so that they claim their water by virtue of such district organization, and not through any contract with the original construction company.

It appears from the testimony that the officers of the irrigation district had knowledge of plaintiff’s contract with the construction company and of what had been done in carrying out the contract in the way of constructing the canal and irrigating his land.

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Skinner v. Jordan Valley Irrigation District
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 P.2d 534, 300 P. 499, 137 Or. 480, 1931 Ore. LEXIS 169, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/skinner-v-jordan-valley-irrigation-district-or-1931.