On December 1, 1913, the board of county commissioners of Grant county entered an order declaring certain territory situated in that county duly organized as an irrigation district, under the name and style of Quincy Valley Irrigation District. The district was organized pursuant to the provisions of Chapter VII of Title XLVIII of Rem. & Bal. Code, and the acts amendatory thereof. Thereafter a board of directors of such district was elected, which
Thereafter, and on January 13, 1914, the board of directors of the district commenced a special proceeding in the superior court of Grant county, under the provisions of §§ 6489-6494 of the act before cited, for the purpose of having the sufficiency of the proceedings had in the formation of the district and in the issuance of bonds “judicially examined, approved, and confirmed.” The petition filed by the directors for such purpose set forth the entire proceedings in substantial detail, and particularly set forth the facts showing the proceedings had for the issuance of the bonds, and prayed that the court fix a time and place for hearing the same, direct that notice thereof be given as required by law, and that at such hearing the proceeding be judicially examined, approved, and confirmed.
At the time the petition was filed, the court fixed a day for the hearing thereof and directed that notice be given in the manner and for the time required by the statute. Notice was so given, and on the day appointed for the hearing, the appellant E. M. Scott appeared and demurred to the petition on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to con
The first contention of the appellant, if we correctly gather it from his argument, is that the bond issue is too large, and that the special tax which it will be necessary to levy, in order to pay the accuring interest and principal upon the bonds, will confiscate his property. But we think the record is not sufficiently complete to enable us to determine this question. Had the appellant answered the petition and made the matter an issue, it is possible that, under the provisions of § 6493 of Rem. & Bal. Code (P. C. 271 § 155), he could have had it inquired into by the court. But he rested on the record as made by the petitioners, and this record shows that the board of directors of the district in their estimate, and the electors approving the estimate, determined that the sums proposed to be raised were reasonable and did not exceed the requirements of the district. Because of want of al
He next contends that the petition filed in the superior court is fatally defective because it does not in itself contain a description of the boundaries of the irrigation district. But while the petition did not set forth the description, it contained a direct reference to the order of the board of county commissioners in which the description is found. This we think sufficient. It would, no doubt, conduce to convenience as a matter of reference for the petition to contain a description of the boundaries of the district, but the petition is not indefinite or uncertain because of the omission. It is a rule of logic, as well as a maxim of equity, that “that is certain which can be made certain,” and no difficulty arises from an attempt to make certain the boundaries to which the petition refers.
The petition as filed, after reciting certain of the proceedings had by the board of county commissioners in the formation of the district, further recites “and notices of the said election were posted in three public places in each election precinct in Quincy Valley Irrigation District, a convenient number of which election precincts had been established and confirmed by the board of county commissioners of Grant county in their order of November 3, 1913, which is filed with the county auditor of Grant county.” It is urged that this is not a sufficient allegation of the establishment of such precincts by the board of county commissioners to permit the introduction of proof of the fact at the hearing before the superior court, and that the petition is fatally defective because of a want of a sufficient allegation in this respect. But while the petition may have been subject to a motion to make it more definite and certain for want of a more positive allegation in this regard, it is clearly sufficient as against a general demurrer.
It is objected, also, that the petition is fatally defective in that it fails to allege that the estimate of the amount of
The petition for the organization of the irrigating district was presented and heard at a special meeting of the board of county commissioners of Grant county, called especially for that purpose. The statute as it was originally enacted required a petition for the organization of an irrigating district to be presented at a regular meeting of such board (Rem. & Bal. Code, § 6417; P. C. 271 § 3). By the act of March 22, 1913, (Laws 1913, p. 558; 3 Rem. & Bal. Code, § 6417), the statute was amended in this particular, and the board of county commissioners in the present instance acted under the amended act. The appellant concedes their action was regular, if the amendment is valid, but he insists that the amendment is invalid for want of a sufficient title. The act is entitled: “An act relating to the organization and government of irrigation districts, and amending sections” etc., enumerating certain sections of Remington and Ballinger’s Code. But, without following the argument of the appellant, we are clear that the title is sufficient, under the rule of the cases of State v. Scott, 32 Wash. 279, 73 Pac. 365, and Whitfield v. Davies, 78 Wash. 256, 138 Pac. 883.
Other objections are made to the proceedings, but we do not find that they merit special consideration. The record shows that the proceedings had with reference to the formation of the district, and the subsequent proceedings with ref
Crow, C. J., Parker, Mount, and Morris, JJ., concur.