Twin Falls Salmon River Land & Water Co. v. Caldwell

266 U.S. 85, 45 S. Ct. 22, 69 L. Ed. 178, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2938
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedOctober 27, 1924
Docket8
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 266 U.S. 85 (Twin Falls Salmon River Land & Water Co. v. Caldwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Twin Falls Salmon River Land & Water Co. v. Caldwell, 266 U.S. 85, 45 S. Ct. 22, 69 L. Ed. 178, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2938 (1924).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Van Devanter

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This appeal presents a controversy over an assessment for operation and maintenance of the Salmon River irrigation project in the State of Idaho.

In 1914 eight settlers under the project, for themselves and all others similarly situated, brought a suit in equity in the United States District Court to obtain a comprehensive adjudication of various disputes which had arisen respecting the relative rights and obligations of the parties interested in the project, — the court’s jurisdiction being invoked because of the involution of the construction and application of the Carey Act, c. 301, § 4, 28 Stat. 422, and its amendments. The principal defendant was the company which had contracted with the State to construct the irrigation works and to sell necessary water rights to settlers; and another was the company which was to operate and maintain the works when completed, but which was as yet under the control of the construction company. The early proceedings in the suit are reported in 225 Fed. 584, and 242 Fed. 177.

In 1919, while that suit was still pending, the two companies — one still under the control of the other — made and sought to collect from the settlers an assessment of fifty cents per acre to defray the cost of work about to be done on a section of the irrigation works called the check basin. The assessment was made as part of an annual maintenance charge which the settlers were to bear; but they refused to pay because they regarded the work as construction work the cost of which was to be borne by the construction company. The companies threatened to shut off the water if payment was not made; and one of the plaintiffs in the equity suit, for himself and all other settlers, brought an action in a court of the State *88 to have the assessment annulled and to enforce delivery of the water.

During a subsequent hearing in the equity suit the defendants therein, who were also defendants in the action brought in the state court, presented to the District Court a petition setting forth the institution of that action, alleging there was such relation between the two proceedings that their prosecution in distinct tribunals would embarrass the parties and lead to possible conflicts of authority, and praying for an injunction against the prosecution of the proceeding in the state court. An informal but extended discussion followed, in which counsel on both sides recognized the propriety of drawing the whole matter into the District Court. Counsel for the plaintiffs took the position that, if the injunction was granted, there should be some provision assuring prompt repayment to the settlers if the assessment was collected and their objection to it afterwards was sustained by the court. Counsel for the defendants assented to this and indicated that the defendants or some of them stood ready to give a bond of that character. Accordingly the court, with full acquiescence of the parties, entered an interlocutory order (a) enjoining the prosecution of the action in the state court, (b) requiring the construction company within a limited time to execute a bond to repay within thirty days all moneys collected on'the assessment if the court determined it was a construction charge to be borne by that company rather than a maintenance charge to be collected from the settlers, and, (c) enjoining the collection of the assessment if the bond so required was not given. The bond was given and the settlers paid the assessment. Subsequently, after a due hearing, the court rendered a decree determining that the work was construction work the cost of which was to be borne by the construction company, and requiring that company to repay to the settlers within thirty days the amounts collected from them.

*89 The defendants appealed to the Circuit Court of Appeals, which at first reversed the decree, but later in the same term, on finding that it had proceded on a mistaken understanding of the circumstances in which the District Court came to adjudicate the controversy, changed the reversal into a decree of affirmance. 272 Fed. 356. The appeal to this court is from that decree.

1. The defendants complain that the Circuit Court of Appeals in changing its decision acted on an application for rehearing and evidence submitted therewith without granting a rehearing.

It is true that the change in decision was prompted by an application for rehearing, but not that any evidence was submitted with the application. What the defendants refer to as evidence was not such, but was a supplemental transcript containing their petition for an injunction against the prosecution in the state court of the action relating to the assessment. The petition had not been included in the original transcript sent to the Circuit Court of Appeals; and that court, finding no pleading relating to the controversy over the assessment, held that the District Court had no occasion to adjudicate the controversy, and accordingly reversed its decree. When that decision was announced the plaintiffs obtained the supplemental transcript and, under a prior stipulation permitting omissions in the record to be supplied, filed it in the Circuit Court of Appeals with an application for rehearing. The court then recalled its first decision and substituted another dealing with the merits of the controversy and affirming the decree. The second decision was given at the same term as the first, and therefore while the matter was still within the court’s control. An examination of the two transcripts shows that the supplemental one served only to bring sharply to the court’s attention what already appeared in the original — that the controversy was laid before the District Court in circum *90 stances which made it admissible and appropriate for the court to proceed to its adjudication. Among other things, the original transcript set forth at length the discussion had when the defendants presented the petition for an injunction, and also contained the interlocutory order made at the time and the bond given under that order. The discussion, as set forth, disclosed the substance and purpose of the petition, the nature of the controversy over the assessment and a tacit consent of the parties that the matter be dealt with on the lines followed in the interlocutory order and bond. The ultimate decree recited that it was rendered after a hearing had under the order and bond. In short, the original transcript showed such a submission of the controversy that the absence from the record of the petition for an injunction was not material.

In our opinion it was quite admissible in the circumstances for the Circuit Court of Appeals to change its first decision and correct the mistake therein by disposing of the merits without granting a rehearing. The parties had been fully heard in the beginning.

2. The defendants further complain that in adjudging that the moneys collected on the assessment should be repaid to the settlers the court failed to give proper effect to what the State Land Board had done in the matter and encroached on the board’s province.

By the laws of the State the board is invested with authority to supervise the fulfilment of contracts for the construction of irrigation works under the Carey Act and to accept the work when completed. But there was no acceptance in this instance. One of the state laws, c. 14, Sess.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
266 U.S. 85, 45 S. Ct. 22, 69 L. Ed. 178, 1924 U.S. LEXIS 2938, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twin-falls-salmon-river-land-water-co-v-caldwell-scotus-1924.