United States v. Tilley

124 F.2d 850, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4512
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 23, 1941
Docket11587
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 124 F.2d 850 (United States v. Tilley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Tilley, 124 F.2d 850, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4512 (8th Cir. 1941).

Opinion

JOHNSEN, Circuit Judge.

In a suit for an injunction against the .administrative officers of the State of Nebraska in charge of the diversion and ■distribution of its appropriated irrigation waters, and also against the Farmers’ Irrigation District of that state, the United States seeks to have it decreed (1) that the appropriative rights claimed by the District to natural flow waters of the North Platte River under the laws of Nebraska, and recognized by the administrative officers of the State in favor of the District, had been transferred to and become vested in the United States under a contract with the District’s predecessor in interest, the Tri-State Land Company, dated August 12, 1912; and (2) that the State of Nebraska and its administrative officers have no right to interfere with the collection by the United States of the seepage waters from the irrigation of lands in the Pathfinder division of its North Platte Irrigation Project, and the carriage and re-application of such waste waters to further beneficial use on lands in the Northport division of the same government reclamation project, nor to permit the District to use and to obtain the benefit of such seepage waters as against the United States.

Two wholly separate causes of action and independent legal issues are thus presented. The District Court held that there was no right to an injunction on either cause of action, and the United States has appealed from the dismissal of its action.

As to its first cause of action, the United States contends that the Tri-State Land Company — to whose rights and property the Farmers’ Irrigation District had succeeded — had previously assigned and transferred the appropriative rights, which the District claims it acquired from the Company, to the United States, by a contract dated August 12, 1912, in exchange for an agreement by the United States to supply the Company with surplus waters from the storage reservoirs and other available sources in its North Platte Irrigation Project, in an annual amount of 180,000 acre feet, to be released and delivered to the Company in accordance with a prescribed monthly schedule. The appropriative rights of the Company which the United States claims had been assigned to it, in exchange for this regulated storage supply, had an early priority date, in the history of Nebraska water rights, of September 16, 1887, and were considerably in excess of the quantity of water which the United States was to release from its storage sources under the contract schedule; but the flow of the North Platte River was not constant throughout the year, and there were periods during the irrigating season when there was insufficient water to provide for the needs of growing crops on the lands which the Tri-State Land Company’s canal had been constructed to serve.

The contract of August 12, 1912, between the United States and the Company was made under the provisions of the Warren Act of 1911, 36 Stat. 925, 43 U.S.C.A. §§ 523-525, which authorized the Secretary of the Interior to contract with distributors of irrigation waters for the impounding, storage, and carriage of water, to the extent of the excess capacity of the facilities of any project constructed under the Reclamation Act of 1902, 32 Stat. 388, 43 U.S.CA. § 372 et seq., not required for the purposes of the lands intended to be reclaimed and irrigated by such project. By the terms of the contract, the Company was to pay the United States the sum of $500,000, and was further to bear one fourth of “the total operation and maintenance charges in connection with the storage works from which said stored water may be supplied”.

The position of the Farmers’ Irrigation District is that the contract was merely intended to supplement and stabilize the water supply and irrigation service of the Company, and of the District as successor-owner of the canal; that it did not purport to assign or transfer the Company’s appropriative rights to the United States; and that it could not in any event enable the United States by injunctive process to *854 deprive the lands lying under the canal of the benefits of the appropriation.

Turning to the contract itself, its preamble recites, as the reason and basis for the agreement, that the United States had certain surplus storage waters in the Pathfinder Reservoir of its North Platte Irrigation Project available for disposal under the terms of the Warren Act; that the Company had certain appropriative rights in the natural flow waters of the North Platte River which were insufficient for the proper irrigation of the lands intended to be served by its canal; that the Company was desirous of perfecting its water supply by arranging with the Secretary of the Interior for the use of a portion of such surplus storage waters; and that the landowners under the Company’s canal, who had organized themselves into the Farmers’ Irrigation District and were contemplating “taking over the Company’s canal, water appropriation and other like property in connection with the canal” were “desirous of having the Company purchase water to supplement the appropriations already held by the Company in a sufficient quantity for the irrigation of lands included within the District.”

This preambulatory recitation, though, of course, not controlling, lends at least some indicative support to the District’s contention, as to the intended purpose and effect of the transaction. In addition, Article I of the contract also is confirmatory of the District’s position, that the object of the parties was simply to provide the Company with an auxiliary supply of irrigation water, in accordance with the authorization of'the Warren Act, and not to attempt to transfer to the United States the' title to the appropriative rights which the Company held under the laws of Nebraska. This article provides that the United States will impound and store and release into the North Platte river, and furnish from other sources, for the use of the Company, an amount of water which will, “with all the water the Company may be entitled to by reason of any appropriations and all water to which the lands of said Irrigation District are entitled” (italics supplied), aggregate a certain scheduled flow, during the period from April 15th to October 15th of each year, amounting to a total of 180,000 acre feet.

The United States, however, places its reliance upon Article XI of the contract, which provides: “The delivery of the water supply provided for in this contract will be accepted by the Company as in full satisfaction of all its rights to the water of the North Platte River, both natural flow and surplus storage from the Pathfinder Reservoir and other Reservoirs of the Reclamation Service constructed in connection with the North Platte Project.”

But the language of Article XI can hardly be said to be words of express assignment, for, whatever it may have been intended to accomplish, it does not on its face purport to transfer anything directly to the United States. If it can be argued that there is an implied intention to pass title to the Company’s appropriative rights to the United States, such an implication is certainly not a compelling one, in the face of the seemingly opposing recitation in the preamble, and of the nature of the obligation defined in Article I; and, indeed, when the circumstances attending the drafting of the instrument and the actions of the parties under the contract are considered, any such implication would seem to be completely dissolved.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Montana v. Wyoming
563 U.S. 368 (Supreme Court, 2011)
Olander v. State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance
278 F.3d 794 (Eighth Circuit, 2002)
Nebraska Game & Parks Commission v. 25 Corp.
463 N.W.2d 591 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1990)
In Re Application A-16642
463 N.W.2d 591 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1990)
Northport Irrigation District v. Jess
337 N.W.2d 733 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1983)
State Ex Rel. Blome v. Bridgeport Irrigation District
286 N.W.2d 426 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1979)
Opinion No. (1979)
Nebraska Attorney General Reports, 1979
W. H. Tinnon v. Missouri Pacific Railroad Company
282 F.2d 773 (Eighth Circuit, 1960)
Application of Frenchman Valley Irrigation Dist.
91 N.W.2d 415 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1958)
In Re Birdwood Irr. Dist., Water Division No. 1-A
46 N.W.2d 884 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1951)
NEBRASKA v. WYOMING Et Al.
325 U.S. 589 (Supreme Court, 1945)
State Ex Rel. State Game Commission v. Red River Valley Co.
182 P.2d 421 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1945)
Pecos Valley Artesian Conservancy Dist. v. Peters
173 P.2d 490 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1945)
Nebraska v. Wyoming
325 U.S. 589 (Supreme Court, 1945)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
124 F.2d 850, 1941 U.S. App. LEXIS 4512, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-tilley-ca8-1941.