Wilbur v. Burley Irrigation District

58 F.2d 871, 61 App. D.C. 145, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4776
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedApril 11, 1932
DocketNo. 5395
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 58 F.2d 871 (Wilbur v. Burley Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wilbur v. Burley Irrigation District, 58 F.2d 871, 61 App. D.C. 145, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4776 (D.C. Cir. 1932).

Opinion

VAN ORSDEL, Associate Justice.

This appeal is by the Secretary of the Interior from a final decree of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia, granting plaintiff (appellee) an injunction permanently enjoining and restraining the Secretary from reconsidering or rehearing the matter of the ratio of ownership and participation of the Burley irrigation district and the Minidoka irrigation district in the power profits past or future from what is known as the Minidoka irrigation project on the Snake river in the state of Idaho.

The Minidoka project is an irrigation plant established and built by the United States under the Reclamation Act of June 17, 1902; 32 Stat. 388. Two units or divisions of the project are involved in this suit. What is known as the gravity division, comprising 71,000 acres, lies almost entirely on the north side of the Snake river, and constitutes the Minidoka irrigation district. What is known as the pumping division, comprising 49,000 acres, lies on the south side of the Snake river, and constitutes the Burley irrigation district. The respective districts are quasi municipal corporations organized under the laws of the state of Idaho.

In 1904 the Minidoka dam was erected across the channel of the Snake river; the construction being completed in 1906. Water has been 'supplied to the lands in the gravity division, or the Minidoka district, since 1907. Before water could be distributed to the Burley district, power had to be furnished for the pumping of the water. Accordingly, in 1908, the government began construction of an electric power plant at the dam. The first power units were completed in 1909, and since then water has been supplied to the lands of the Burley district.

In 1915, Secretary Lane appointed a board of review to report on the cost of the Minidoka project, in which three items were chiefly involved: (1) The water supply for irrigation; (2) the diversion dam; (3) the power plant. The board found that the cost of the Minidoka dam was $676,575.37, of which $404,662.93, or 59.2 per cent., should be charged to the Minidoka irrigation district, and $271,912.44, or 40.8 per cent., should be charged to the Burley district. The cost of the power house and power equipment was $455,317.40; of which $20,-033.96, or 4.4 per cent., should be charged to the Minidoka district, and $435,283.44, or 95.6 per cent., should be charged to the Burley district.

The board also determined a division of the water supply on the basis of 66.5 per cent, to the Minidoka district and 33.5 per cent, to the Burley district; and charged to the Minidoka district 59.2 per cent, of the [872]*872cost of the dam, and to the Burley district 40.8 per cent, of the cost. It thus appears that it cost the Burley district 40.8 per cent, of the cost of the dam to divert 33.5 per cent, of the water.

This board also reported upon a cost of the division of the power plant between the respective districts. It found that in the division of the power the pumping unit or the Burley district would consume 7,500 kilowatts, and that the gravity unit, or the Minidoka district, would consume 350 kilowatts, and upon this basis it was recommended that the cost of the power plant be charged 95.6 per cent, to the Burley district and 4.4 per cent, to the Minidoka district.

The board likewise recommended that the price per acre for entry upon irrigable lands in the Burley district be fixed at $56.45 per acre on lands not belonging to the United States, and for entries on public lands at $57.50 per acre.

On November 3, 1915, Secretary Lane, after approval of the foregoing report of the central board of review, gave publie notice of the conditions upon which entry might be made on these lands, fixing the charges for irrigable acre as above stated. Water right applications were made by settlers for the irrigable lands within the Burley district at the price fixed in the publie notice. These applications were upon forms prescribed by the Secretary. The applications were duly accepted, entries were made by the settlers who went upon the lands, proceeded to irrigate, and improve the same and have been so doing until the present hour.

Under the provisions of the reclamation act, the Secretary of the Interior was authorized, when the proper time arrived in the development of an irrigation project to contract with the district under the project to take over the complete management, control, and ownership of the project. Pursuant to section 5 of the act of Congress of August 13, 1914, 38'Stat. 687 (43 USCA §§ 492, 499), the operation of the gravity unit was taken over by the Minidoka irrigation district on January 1, 1917.

A contract was entered into between Secretary Work and the Burley district on March 15, 1926, under which the district took over the operation, management, and control of the pumping unit. Under this contract, the profits to be derived from the various features of the project as between the Burley and the Minidoka districts were referred to the Secretary for decision, and, after a public hearing, at which both districts were represented, a decision determining a division of the profits from (a) the sale of electrical energy, (b) the rental of grazing lands, and (c) the sale of town lots, was determined. The apportionment of the profits from the sale of electrical energy was retained by the Secretary, as fixed originally by the central board of review and approved by Secretary Lane.

Thereafter the Minidoka district and the Burley district applied to the Secretary for an apportioning and crediting of the accumulated profits from the operation of the power plant as provided in subsection I of section 4 of the Act of December 5,1924 (43 USCA § 501) as follows: “That whenever the water users take over the care, operation, and maintenance of a project, or a division of a project, the total accumulated net profits, as determined by the Secretary, derived from the operation of project power plants, leasing of project grazing and farm lands, and the sale or use of town sites shall be credited to the construction charge of the project, or a division thereof, and thereafter the net profits from such sources may be used by the water users to be credited annually, first, on account of project construction charge, second, on account of project operation and maintenance charge, and, third, as the water users may direct. No distribution to individual water users shall be made out of any such profits before all obligations to the Government shall have been fully paid.”

After due investigation and a hearing, at which both the Burley and Minidoka companies were represented, Secretary Work, on March 14, 1927, rendered a decision apportioning credits of the power profits between the two districts on the basis of 95.6 per cent, to the Burley district, and 4.4 per cent, to the Minidoka district.

The contract provided, with respect to credits' under subsections I and J of the Act of December 5,1924 (43 USCA §§ 501, 526), as follows: “The net profits realized from the various sources named in said Subsections I and J after the date provided in this contract for the taking over of the operation and maintenance of the transferred works by the district, to wit, after April 1, 1926, will be announced and determined each year by the Secretary in a written statement to 'be sent to the district over the signature of the Secretary.”

Secretary Work, in his decision apportioning the power profits between the Burley district and the Minidoka district, said: “As the matter now stands, to state it simply, [873]

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Related

Burley Irr. Dist. v. Ickes
116 F.2d 529 (D.C. Circuit, 1940)

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Bluebook (online)
58 F.2d 871, 61 App. D.C. 145, 1932 U.S. App. LEXIS 4776, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wilbur-v-burley-irrigation-district-cadc-1932.