State v. Twin Falls Canal Co.

121 P. 1039, 21 Idaho 410, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 152
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 1911
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 121 P. 1039 (State v. Twin Falls Canal Co.) 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
State v. Twin Falls Canal Co., 121 P. 1039, 21 Idaho 410, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 152 (Idaho 1911).

Opinions

SULLTVAN, J.

This is an action brought by the state of Idaho and H. T. West as plaintiffs, against the Twin Falls Land & Water Company, a corporation, and the Twin Falls Canal Company, a corporation, praying for a writ of mandate against the defendant corporations, requiring them to issue shares of water stock to the plaintiff West, who is a purchaser of state land under the irrigation project of said corporations, and also to issue shares of water stock to other land owners in the same status, and also praying for such other equitable relief as may be just.

The plaintiff sets up substantially the following state of facts, and alleges that the Twin Falls Land & Water Co. is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Utah and authorized to do business in the state of Idaho, its purpose being, to acquire water rights and to construct dams, canals, ditches and "a complete irrigation system and sell water rights in the state of Idaho under what is commonly called the Carey Act, an act of Congress approved August 18, 1894, and acts amendatory thereof (Vol. 6, Federal Stat. Ann., p. 397), and for the purpose particularly of constructing, operating and disposing of a Carey Act project in the state of Idaho, commonly called the Twin Falls South Side project. Said Twin Falls Land & Water Co. will hereafter be referred to as the Land & Water Company.

The Twin Falls Canal Company is a corporation organized under the laws of the state of Idaho and authorized [417]*417to do business therein, with a capital stock of 240,000 shares, its object and purpose being to take and hold the title to and operate certain dams, canals, laterals and other works constructed by said Land & Water Company for the irrigation of the land included within said Twin Falls South Side project, which main canal takes water from Snake river at a ■point particularly described in the complaint, and to acquire from said Land & Water Company all its right to the appropriation of water made by said Land & Water Company for use on said South Side project, and to acquire, hold, maintain and distribute among its stockholders and others equally and ratably the water diverted from said Snake river pursuant to the appropriation of the said Land & Water Company, and to fix charges for said water among its stockholders and others using said water or entitled thereto, and to do other and various things more fully described in the complaint, the express purpose of said corporation being to receive from the said Land & Water Company the title to the canals, dams and franchises of said last-named corporation, and to manage them for its shareholders.

Within said irrigation project, the state of Idaho owns school lands in considerable quantity, said land being dry and arid and practically valueless without water for its irrigation. On the 18th of June, 1910, the state of Idaho sold to the plaintiff West the N. W. % of the S. E. % °f Sec. 16, Tp. 11 S., R. 18 E. of B. M., and issued to him a certificate of sale of said school land. The application of the Land & Water Company for segregation of the land included in said South Side project under said Carey Act, bears date October 12, 1900, and proposes to irrigate, among other lands, the particular forty acre tract above described, and one of the prime reasons assigned by the applying company for the segregation, and one of the considerations which moved the land board to grant the segregation to said company, was that the state owned some 18,000 acres of land within the said project, and on the 2d day of January, 1906, the state of Idaho entered into a contract with the said Land & Water Company for the reclamation of the land owned by the state [418]*418under said project. The terms upon which water was to be sold by said Land & Water Company for the reclamation of the state’s land was $15.50 an acre, provided the applications therefor were made within one year after the date of the purchase of said land from the state; otherwise, $25 an acre. In the meantime the Land & Water Company had •made application to the state engineer for a permit to appropriate 3,000 cubic feet of water per second of time of the public waters of this state flowing in Snake river, for the purpose of irrigating lands embraced in the proposal above referred to, including the state’s school lands within said project, and the state engineer granted his permit to said company on condition that said company fulfill all the terms and conditions for the proposal for segregation, among which was the irrigation of the state’s land included within said, segregation.

Moved by the above considerations, the state land board accepted the proppsal of the said Land & Water Company and took the necessary steps prescribed by said Carey Act to procure the segregation of said lands from the federal government. One of the provisions of the contract between the said Land & Water Company and the state was that there should be formed a corporation known as the Twin Falls Canal Company, to which corporation the Land & Water Company should convey its entire holdings, consisting of dams, canals, laterals, water rights, etc., and that shares of stock bargained for or contracted for with the Land & Water Company should be replaced by shares in said Canal Company, share for share. It was deemed necessary by the state to provide a convenient method of transferring the ownership and control of said dam and canal system and water rights, after its completion, from the said Land & Water Company to the purchasers of shares or water rights in said canal, and said Canal Company was formed as a holding company for that purpose.

Pursuant to these considerations and in view of these contracts, the Land- & Water Company constructed its dam and irrigation works sufficient to divert the water applied for to [419]*419the state engineer, and in accordance with its contract, subsequently transferred all of its holdings to the Twin Falls Canal Company. At the time of turning over the said system to the said Canal Company, there remained unsold 42,174.51 shares of stock in the Land & Water Company, each share representing a maximum water right of one-eightieth of a cubic foot per second for each acre of la'nd remaining unsold, and there remained unsold at that time an amount of land sufficient to utilize said water and the shares of stock, among which land was the portion of said section 16 now owned by plaintiff West, and this amount of water stock was held in reserve to be applied to said land when it should pass into private hands.

By the terms of the contract between the state and the Land & Water Company, the water appropriated was dedicated to the lands' segregated and to the school lands within the segregation. It is alleged that the land owned by plaintiff West cannot be irrigated from any other source than the ditches and laterals of the defendant company, and that the said land is worthless without water to irrigate it, and that the plaintiff West has requested the Canal Company to deliver shares of stock to him in accordance with its contract with said Land & Water Company and the state of Idaho and in accordance with the company’s dedication, and that said company has refused and still refuses to deliver water or to issue shares of stock to the plaintiff West. It is also alleged that the plaintiff is the real party in interest in this case and that he has no adequate remedy by suit at law.

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Bluebook (online)
121 P. 1039, 21 Idaho 410, 1911 Ida. LEXIS 152, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-twin-falls-canal-co-idaho-1911.