112 S.W.2d 318 | Tex. App. | 1938
M. A. Baugham, property owner and taxpayer in the Willacy County Water Control Improvement District No. 1, brought this suit for himself and for the use and benefit of all other property owners of the district. The district and its board of directors were named as defendants. The purpose of the suit, as stated by the appellant in his brief, was to determine the validity of a contract proposed to be entered into between the district and the PWA, an agency of the federal government, for the construction of an irrigation project within said district and for the issuance by the district and purchase by the government of certain improvement bonds for financing the project. The plaintiff sued to enjoin the making of the contract and upon a trial to the court without a jury the suit was denied, and he has appealed.
The Willacy County Water Control Improvement District No. 1 embraced 129,000 acres of land in the counties of Willacy and Hidalgo as a conservation and reclamation district. It was first organized under general law in 1926. In 1929, at a special election, the voters authorized the issuance of bonds of the district in the amount of $7,500,000, and authorized the levying, assessment, and collection of an ad valorem tax on all of the taxable property of the district for the payment of said bonds and interest thereon. By act of the Legislature, chapter
March 1, 1934, the contract in question was entered into with the PWA. Certain changes and amendments were made subsequently and before the filing of this suit. The contract, which is fully pleaded, is quite lengthy. Suffice to say that it provides for the construction of a system of irrigation according to approved plans and specifications at a total cost of $4,853,000. Of that amount the government is to contribute $890,000 and the balance of $3,963,000 is to be contributed by the district by the issuance of bonds of that amount out of the original issue of $7,500,000; said bonds to be purchased by the government. It is also provided that refunding bonds be issued to take up and retire the outstanding interim bonds; said refunding bonds to be subordinate to the bonds purchased by the government. In accordance with the contract the board of directors passed the necessary orders issuing said bonds and levying an ad valorem tax on all of the taxable property of the district for payment of the principal and interest as it accrues. The contract also provides for placing the funds in a special deposit, and for their payment on approved estimates of the government engineer, etc.
Appellant concedes that the district was legally constituted and that the bonds in the amount of $7,500,000 were legally and validly authorized to be issued. He predicates this suit upon a contention that to carry out the contract between the district and the PWA will result in supplying irrigation to only a part of the lands of the district, and that a large part of the lands within the district, including his own, will receive no benefit from the proposed irrigation project, and consequently that the levying of *320 an ad valorem tax upon all the property of the district, for financing the project, is an unfair and discriminatory apportionment of the cost, resulting in illegal discrimination against the plaintiff and other landowners similarly situated.
In that connection the trial court found that the particular project covered by the contract will provide irrigation for 74,700 acres of land; that said acreage was all the land in said district that was cleared and ready for cultivation at the time the contract in question was made. He further found that it was the intention of the district and its board of directors to extend irrigation to the remaining lands of the district, including the plaintiff's, when and as needed, and that the bonds remaining of the issue of $7,500,000 after the issuance and sale of the bonds contemplated by the contract, will be of a par value in excess of the amount required to complete the irrigation system throughout the district. The findings of the trial court are not challenged by any assignment of error.
Plaintiff's contention is grounded upon the erroneous assumption that lands in the district which are not to be irrigated by the project covered by the proposed contract will not be benefited. We do not believe that the carrying out of the proposed improvement as contemplated in the contract will unlawfully discriminate against the plaintiff. True the improvement project contracted for will irrigate only 74,700 acres of the total area of 129,000 acres of land in the district. But that fact alone does not establish that the unirrigated area, including the appellant's land, will not be benefited by the improvement or that the ad valorem tax will not be a fair and equitable distribution of the cost in proportion to the benefits received. The facts are that the remaining lands can be irrigated when cleared and made ready for cultivation, and the district, acting through its board of directors, intends to extend irrigation to all of said lands. Obviously, the lands of the district not intended to be irrigated by the improvements made under the present contract will nevertheless receive a substantial benefit from the construction of the irrigation system. Their availability for irrigation, and their inclusion in the district where an irrigation system is to be placed in operation will naturally and inevitably add to their desirability for farming purposes, and so enhance their value. See Oregon Short Line Railway Co. v. Pioneer Irrigation Dist.,
There is also the further fact, as found by the trial court, that the district and its board of directors have not abandoned the original intention to provide irrigation for all of the lands of the district from the proceeds of the bond issue. Instead, they are merely pursuing a policy of issuing a part of the bonds and building the irrigation system as needed. In the City of Austin v. Valle, Tex. Civ. App.
In the meantime the assessment of taxes on the basis of value may be as fair and equitable distribution of the cost of the improvement as could be devised. On the record before us, we think it may be reasonably inferred that the property throughout the district will be relatively benefited and that the increase in values will be reasonably proportionate to the benefits. And so a tax "imposed according to its relative value will, with fair approximation, represent the benefit and be in just proportion to the benefit, which is the end of the law in such taxation." Dallas County Levee Dist. v. Looney,
There is also a suggestion that the contract is illegal because it lodges large powers in the federal government and its engineer, with reference to the carrying out of the proposed improvement, thereby unlawfully infringing upon the duties and prerogatives of the board of directors, as fixed by law. The contention is overruled. The contract contemplates detailed plans and specifications agreed upon by the governing board of the district. We think the board of directors had ample authority to enter into the contract providing for proper control and supervision over the work by the federal government, as a prerequisite for securing a federal grant, and the cooperation of the federal government in carrying out the project. Such contract is obviously in the public interest, and the power conferred by law upon the board to build the irrigation system for the district clothed it with reasonable discretion with reference to making advantageous contracts for the performance of their duty. Such grants of power should be liberally construed in an endeavor to accomplish the purpose of the grant. Arkansas County v. Coleman-Fulton Pasture,
The judgment of the trial court is affirmed.