West Coast Life Insurance v. Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District

50 Cal. App. 2d 204
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 26, 1942
DocketCiv. No. 6698
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 50 Cal. App. 2d 204 (West Coast Life Insurance v. Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
West Coast Life Insurance v. Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District, 50 Cal. App. 2d 204 (Cal. Ct. App. 1942).

Opinion

TUTTLE, J.

This action was brought to cancel a contract executed by defendant district, and defendant H. C. Stovall. Findings were made in favor of defendants upon all issues, and judgment was entered accordingly. The appeal is from the judgment.

The litigation arises out of the affairs of the Williams Improvement District situated within the boundaries of the Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District, and organized under the Statutes of 1927 (Statutes of 1927, p. 1415, Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1937, Act 3877a) authorizing such organization to meet the situation of any tract or contiguous tracts of land within any irrigation district and susceptible of irrigation by a system of laterals, ditches and pipes or requiring a system of pumps for the irrigation thereof separate and apart from the main irrigation system of said district.

Section 10 of the act reads as follows:

“Said board of directors and all other officers of said irrigation district shall have all the rights, powers and privileges concerning said improvement district, and lands thereof and the proceedings herein provided for, as such board may have concerning the irrigation district, of which it is a part, and including the right of said district to condemn lands and to acquire, own and hold property within said improvement districts.”

Under the statute, the Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District, through its directors, had the supervision and control of the [206]*206Williams Improvement District and exercised the same powers as conferred upon them by the Irrigation District Act.

Plaintiff is the owner and holder of certain obligations of the improvement district, known as warrants, which were issued by the irrigation district, which agreed to pay them. Such warrants matured January 1, 1932. They were unpaid when this action was commenced.

On April 2, 1936, the district was the owner, through tax sales, of practically all the land within the boundaries of Williams Improvement District, legally entitled, “Improvement District Number One of Glenn-Colusa Irrigation District.” The price was $28,061.08, the amount of delinquent assessments, penalties and costs. The district was the sole bidder at such sales. On said date the irrigation district, through its board of directors, entered into a contract with defendant Stovall for the sale of said lands. Title to said land was to remain in the district until the full purchase price was paid and all conditions of the contract performed by Stovall. The total acreage sold was about 4000. By the terms of Stovall’s contract he was given the right to purchase three thousand nine hundred sixty-five and 11/100 acres of lands in the district for the sum of $22,216.48. There was no cash payment. The first payment of $3,500 was to be evidenced by the promissory note of the buyer due August 1, 1936, with interest at the rate of five per cent per annum. The balance of the purchase price was payable in semiannual installments of $935.82 with five per cent interest, payable on or before the first day of January and the first day of July in each consecutive year, commencing January 1, 1937. The contract also provided for: Payment by Stovall of all delinquent state taxes, which the evidence shows amounted to $17,000; payment by Stovall annually of “an amount equal to the amount which would be levied by the Irrigation District as assessments on such land for that year if legal title thereof were in buyer”; payment by Stovall annually or semi-annually of “all State and County taxes, levied upon said property during the 10 year term of this agreement”; payment guaranteed by Stovall of all tolls and charges “for water furnished by seller during the term of this agreement to any or all of the land, regardless of the person to whom such water is furnished”; payment by Stovall of an annual stand-by charge of $1,800 in the event [207]*207a single acre under lift No. 2 uses irrigation water; $1,080 in the event of operating lift No. 1 only.

The complaint, while it does not directly charge fraud, in effect makes such charge. It alleges:

' ‘ That said contract was entered into by said District without any notice whatever, and without inviting any bids or offers from any person other than the said H. C. Stovall; that said contract was not entered into by said District in such a manner as that a sale of said lands could be effected within a reasonable time at the fair market value thereof, and upon such terms as would serve to protect and benefit the interests of said District, the said landowners and contract-holders, and the plaintiff herein and other owners and holders of warrants issued by said District and unpaid; that said District did not give any information or publicity, or announce its intention to sell said lands prior to the making of said contract; that the said District and the directors thereof and the said defendant Stovall entered into said contract for the purpose of preventing any person other than the said Stovall from, buying or offering to buy any or all of said lands at the market value thereof, or at a price higher than that fixed by the terms of said contract; that the prices fixed by said contract will not be sufficient to pay the amounts due the plaintiff herein on the principal and interest of the warrants hereinabove alleged and if said sale is consummated, the said plaintiff will suffer great and irreparable injury; that said contract was made for the purpose and with the intent to hinder, delay and defraud the plaintiff herein in collecting or attempting to collect the amounts due and to become due on said warrants.” (Italics ours.)

It thus appears that the action is based upon the premise that there was no notice of the intended sale to Stovall, and the contract was therefore entered into for the purpose of preventing any person, other than Stovall, from buying said lands. It is also alleged that the value of said lands, when the contract was executed, was $150,000. A copy of the contract is made a part of the complaint, so that, in addition to the foregoing, it may be said that plaintiff relies upon inadequacy of price to support its theory of recovery. The charge that the contract was executed to hinder, delay and defraud plaintiff is not alluded to in the briefs, and it may [208]*208be fairly stated that the action is not regarded by the parties as what is commonly known as “a creditor’s suit,” under the provisions of part II, subdivision II, division IV of the Civil Code.

We have before us the sole question of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain findings which are adverse to plaintiff upon all the issues made. At the outset we may observe that there is nothing in the record to show actual fraud upon the part of the district, its directors or officers. Out of fairness to appellant, we might add that it does not accentuate that issue. Rather, it relies upon (1) a breach of trust upon the part of the district and its officers, and (2), upon a lack of statutory authority to enter into such contract.

It is contended by appellant that the district had no power to enter into a contract of sale. The extent of statutory direction for the sale of district-owned tax deeded lands, is found in section 29 of the California Irrigation District Act, reading in part as follows:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Cal. App. 2d 204, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/west-coast-life-insurance-v-glenn-colusa-irrigation-district-calctapp-1942.