Smith v. Progressive Irrigation District

156 P. 1133, 28 Idaho 812, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 45
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 156 P. 1133 (Smith v. Progressive Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smith v. Progressive Irrigation District, 156 P. 1133, 28 Idaho 812, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 45 (Idaho 1916).

Opinions

SULLIVAN, C. J.

This action was brought by the plaintiffs, who are appellants here, for the purpose of establishing their right and quieting title to a certain flow of water in that certain canal now owned, operated and controlled by the defendant irrigation district. Their claim is based-upon a verbal contract alleged to have been entered into by the appellants and the Snake River Canal Company, a corporation which was the predecessor in interest to the defendant herein.

It is alleged, among other things, that in the year 1879 the plaintiffs had settled upon 320 acres of desert land; that they have since procured title to said land and that they are the owners thereof; that in that year they located a certain canal on the south fork of Snake river and commenced the construction thereof for the purpose of appropriating water from the south fork of Snake river and conducting the same to and upon said land, which land is situated about three miles from the head of said canal, and had constructed about three-fourths of a mile of said canal during the year 1879; that in [815]*815February, 1880, the Snake River Water Company was organized for the purpose of taking water from said river and conveying the same by means of canals and ditches to and upon land situated in the Snake river valley; that said water company being desirous of securing a location for its canal at the same point where the appellants had commenced the construction of their canal, entered into negotiations with plaintiffs to secure said location, and it was mutually agreed that if said appellants would turn over to said water company their headgate location and diversion point and the portion of the canal already constructed, said water company would grant to appellants a free and perpetual water right for 640 acres of land which these appellants and their associates owned, the appellants each being the owner of an undivided one-fourth interest in said canal, which would entitle each of them to sufficient water to irrigate 160 acres of land, or to 3y5 cubic feet of water per second of time; that in pursuance of said agreement said appellants turned over to said canal company their said location and ditch, and the said canal company thereafter constructed a canal from said diversion point on Snake river to the town of Eagle Rock, now the city of Idaho Falls; that. in pursuance of said agreement said canal company commenced to and did furnish appellants water free of charge, as agreed, for the irrigation of their said land, and that said water company and its successors in interest did continue to so furnish water to appellants free of charge up to and including the year 1911; that prior to that time there was organized the respondent, the Progressive Irrigation District, which took over the canals and water rights from the owner of said Snake River Irrigation Company and its successors; that said lands of appellants are now included within the boundaries of the Progressive Irrigation District, the respondent herein, and since the organization of the district, said district has assessed the lands of appellants the same as other lands within said district; that the appellants herein have paid their assessments under protest to prevent the sale of their lands for the nonpayment of such assessments; that said canal was originally owned by the Snake [816]*816River Water Company, a corporation, and later the Snake River Water Company transferred its rights in and to said canal and water rights to the Eagle Rock and Willow Creek Canal Company, which latter company transferred its interests and rights to the Farmers’ Progressive Canal Company,, and the latter company sold its rights in said canal and water rights to the respondent corporation, the Progressive Irrigation District; that from the time of said transfer of appellants’ rights to their location and that portion of the ditch constructed by them until the organization of the Progressive Irrigation District, to wit, January 13, 1908, appellants’" rights were recognized as a binding contract between appellants and the Snake River Water Company and its successors in interest, and appellants prayed that l'espondent be required to set forth the nature of its claim and that at the final hearing the court adjudge and decree that the right and title of appellants to 3% cubic feet of water per second of time, to be delivered through said canal to the appellants, be superior in time and right to the claim and rights of the respondent irrigation district, and that appellants’ right be decreed to-date from the year 1879, and prayed for other relief.

The respondent answered, admitting some of the allegations and denying others, and set up other matters as a defense, and among them the organization of the respondent district, the confirmation of the organization of the district and also-the voting of $350,000 in bonds for the purchase of the canals, ditches and water rights of its predecessors in interest, and that the said lands of the appellants were included within said district, and that the assessments of benefits to the lands included in said district were duly made and confirmed by the proper court, and the said bonds thereafter issued in the said sum of $350,000; that all of the proceedings in regard to-the organization of said district, the voting of the bonds and the assessment of benefits were all confirmed as required by law; that notice of all of such proceedings was given as required by law, and that neither of the appellants appeared, answered or demurred to either of the petitions filed in the district court asking for the confirmation of the proceedings, [817]*817under said petitions, and that neither of them ever appeared before the board of directors of the said irrigation district at any meeting held for the purpose of correcting assessments, and no one has ever appeared for said appellants, or either of them, at either of said meetings of said board or either of said proceedings for confirmation.

Upon the issues thus made the cause was tried by the court without a jury. At the close of appellants’ testimony, counsel for respondent moved for a nonsuit and the court, in disposing of that motion, said: “Yes; the motion will be denied, reserving the right of the court to sustain the motion at a later stage in the case.” Thereupon the respondent proceeded to introduce its testimony and after both parties had rested, counsel for respondent renewed his motion for a non-suit on the ground that the complaint did not state a cause of action, and that the appellants had not proved a cause of action and were entitled to no relief whatever. Thereafter said motion for a nonsuit was sustained and judgment of dismissal entered, from which decision this appeal is taken.

The main assignment of error is that the court erred as a matter of law in granting said motion for a nonsuit and entering judgment of dismissal. It is contended that the allegations of the complaint and the admissions made in the answer and by stipulation and upon the trial in the evidence introduced for and on behalf of the appellants established a prima facie case and the respondent should be put to its proof to disprove the allegations made and proved by the appellants.

At the close of all the evidence both for the appellants and respondent, the motion for a nonsuit was made and the court by its decision concluded that the appellants had not made out a case entitling them to any judgment whatever, and hence entered a judgment of dismissal.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
156 P. 1133, 28 Idaho 812, 1916 Ida. LEXIS 45, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smith-v-progressive-irrigation-district-idaho-1916.