Toyah Valley Irr. Co. v. Winston

174 S.W. 677, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 221
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedFebruary 25, 1915
DocketNo. 383.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 174 S.W. 677 (Toyah Valley Irr. Co. v. Winston) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Toyah Valley Irr. Co. v. Winston, 174 S.W. 677, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 221 (Tex. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HARPER, C. J.

This suit was instituted by W. E. Winston against the Toyah Valley Irrigation Company, alleging that the defendant was a corporation organized under the laws of Texas as an irrigation company for the purpose of constructing, maintaining, and operating canals, ditches, flumes, etc., and of supplying water as a common carrier thereof to all persons entitled to the same for irrigation, and that as such common carrier it was engaged in transporting and furnishing the waters of Toyah creek to all the riparian lands entitled to water from said stream.

*678 That plaintiff was the owner of certain lands riparian to said Toyah creek, and as such owner was entitled to be supplied by the defendant with water from said Toyah creek for the purpose of irrigation. That the defendant company from its organization up to the time of filing this suit, which was October 25,1911, had entered into contracts with various owners of land riparian to Toyah creek, whereby it agreed and bound itself to deliver to such owners 65,340 cubic feet of water per acre per annum for irrigation purposes for the sum of $1.50 per acre per annum. Plaintiff alleges that although his lands are riparian to Toyah creek and, as such, entitled to water for irrigation purposes - from the defendant, and although he has at all times tendered and offered to pay to defendant the sum of $1.50 per acre per annum, for the usual quantity of water, yet the defendant on and after January 1, 1911, has negligently and willfully and persistently refused to carry and deliver to him, or any. of his said lands, any of the water of said creek, except at such times as suited the convenience of defendant. That by reason of defendant’s failure to furnish him water during the year 1911, he lost the profits on a crop of alfalfa and milo maize for want of sufficient water, to his damage $1,780. Plaintiff alleged a willingness to pay defendant the sum of $1.50 per acre per annum, until April 1, 1957, the time for which he alleged defendant had entered into contract to supply to other riparian owners, and prayed for such judgment for his damages for loss of crops, and that his lands be adjudged riparian to Toyah creek and entitled to receive their, appropriate part of Toyah creek for irrigation and domestic purposes, and that defendant company, its successors and assigns, be compelled, by writ of mandatory injunction, to transport and deliver to his said lands the water to which they are entitled, on the same terms, conditions and prices as charged by said company to other persons similarly situated.

The defendant answered first by plea in abatement for want of necessary parties defendant, by general and special exception to plaintiff’s original petition, by general denial, and especially that prior to the year 1911, defendant found it was unable to deliver water through its system of canals to the land claiming the right of water from Toyah creek for the sum of $1.50 per acre per annum, and that to continue to do so would result in great loss to defendant for the reason that said sum' did not constitute an adequate and reasonable charge. That $1.50 per acre per an-num does not furnish defendant company a sufficient revenue from which to defray its operating expenses, fixed charges, and reasonable compensation for the money invested in its said system of canals. That it, therefore, had from and after January 1, 1911, fixed a reasonable sum of $2.50 per acre per annum for furnishing water to customers who thereafter were entitled to and demanded the same. That though the plaintiff was advised of defendant’s said action, he at all times refused to enter into contract with it to pay the said reasonable sum of $2.50 per acre per annum, or to pay the same, but at all times refused to pay the defendant for its services more than the sum of $1.50 per acre per annum. Defendant further answered that it had no means of knowing whether or not the plaintiff’s lands were really riparian to Toyah creek, and that plaintiff, although requested so to do, had at all times refused to furnish the evidence of such fact

The plaintiff interposed an exception to the defendant’s plea in abatement, and on final trial the same was sustained and said ' plea was stricken out. The cause was thereupon submitted to a jury, which returned a verdict on special issue in favor of plaintiff, upon which the court entered judgment for plaintiff in the sum of $169 for damages for loss of crops, and further ordered that a mandatory injunction do issue, commanding the defendant to furnish water to the lands of plaintiff for the sum of $1.50 per acre per annum from and after the date of said judgment to April 1, 1957.

The first assignment is that the trial court erred in striking out, upon motion, the defendant’s plea in abatement which charged that there were other necessary parties without which the issues in the cause cannot finally be determined. The allegations of fact relied on to support the plea are that a number of owners of land, some of which land is riparian and some not, claim to have the right by adverse user or prescription, to all the waters of Toyah creek, naming them. That defendant had, prior to the time plaintiff applied for water, executed contracts to convey water to various lands other than those claiming the water by prescription. That it is necessary to judicially determine whether the said lands are entitled to all the waters of the said creek, in order to determine whether in fact this plaintiff is entitled to any water. That in order to determine this, the parties so named are necessary and indispensable.

[1] The burden is upon the plaintiff to establish not only that his lands are riparian to the stream, but also that there was water in the stream to which he is lawfully entitled, for if all the waters have been contracted to other parties, or lawfully appropriated by prescriptive right, or. otherwise, prior to the time plaintiff made application to the company, then, clearly, he is not entitled to a decree in his favor for water unless he can establish that his lands have a priority of claim for water over some other lands to which the defendant has contracted to deliver water, and the proof of either or all of these facts can be made without such claimants being made parties to this action. No reason occurs to us why the plaintiff could not establish that the waters to which others were, legally entitled by prescription and by prior contract did not constitute the whole or such *679 portion of the waters as to preclude him from receiving the amount demanded or a portion of it, without making additional parties, but this question is settled by the agreement between the parties, viz.:

“It is agreed between the _ plaintiff and defendant that the lands described in plaintiff’s petition is * * * riparian to Toyah creek, and is entitled to its proportionate share, of the water flowing therein, and that if plaintiff had had a contract to receive water for the year 1911, he would have received as much as 18 inches of water during said year.”

The second assignment asserts that the plaintiff’s petition states no cause of action, therefore the court erred in overruling general demurrer. The answer to this is that the allegations in the pleadings are sufficient, as quoted in the original statement in this opinion, as to that portion of the judgment which by this opinion is held to be valid.

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Bluebook (online)
174 S.W. 677, 1915 Tex. App. LEXIS 221, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/toyah-valley-irr-co-v-winston-texapp-1915.