Petitioner county, a political subdivision of the state, seeks by mandate to compel respondents, an irrigation district, a public corporation of the state, and its directors to discontinue proceedings to include real property within the district’s boundaries.
Respondent district is an irrigation district organized under the laws of this state (see, Wat. Code, div. II). Such districts are organized primarily for establishing a common water supply for irrigating the lands within the district. Respondent district, located in Merced County, owns land in petitioner Mariposa County, upon which some of its water works are situated. That land is not at present within the boundaries of the district. It is now proceeding under the law hereafter mentioned to have that land included within its boundaries or annexed to it. By having the land so included it will no longer, it is claimed, be subject to the general property tax levied by petitioner. (See, Cal. Const., art. XIII, § 1, infra.)
Petitioner contends that the law authorizing the inclusion of that land within the boundaries of the district is invalid in that it will frustrate the purpose of the Constitution (Cal. Const., art. XIII, § 1, infra) to require irrigation districts to pay taxes on land owned by them to the county in which the land is located but which land is not within the boundaries of the district.
At the session of the Legislature (1947) following the decision in the Rock Creek ease certain provisions of the Irrigation District Law were amended in the following respects : (The italicized portion is the material added by the amendment) “No land shall be included within a district unless
either the owner has petitioned for its inclusion or
the board after an inclusion hearing determines that it can be irrigated by means of some of the works of the district or by means of practicable works connecting therewith and will be benefited by the irrigation.” (Wat. Code, § 26901, as amended Stats. 1947, eh. 725.) To the part of the Irrigation District Law dealing with general matters there was added the following: “A district with respect to land owned by it may through its board sign any petition provided for in this division.” (Wat. Code, § 20566.1, as added Stats. 1947, eh. 749.) There are other provisions in that part of the law dealing with who may sign petitions. Plainly the petition
It may be that the above 1947 changes in the Irrigation District Law were made for the purpose of enlarging or clarifying the power of a district to include land already owned by it within its boundaries although such lands are not susceptible of irrigation, such as where they were only available as sources for water supply and works, and in that fashion empowering the district to escape the taxation of such land formerly existing by reason of its location outside of the district under the above quoted constitutional provision. It should be noted, however, that the 1947 amendment of section 26901 of the Water Code may not have been necessary (that is, the provision authorizing the inclusion of land in a district upon consent of the owner, regardless of whether it was suitable for irrigation) except for the change in the Irrigation District Law in 1927. (Stats. 1927, p. 193.) Prior to that time, and when the Constitution was amended in 1914 (Cal. Const., art. XIII, § 1, supra), to withdraw the exemption from taxation from municipal corporations, as to their property outside their boundaries, the Irrigation District Law required that a petition for inclusion of land might be filed by holders of title representing half or more of any body of land “adjacent” to the boundary of the district. (Stats. 1897, p. 254, §§ 85, 86.) That provision does not mean that there had to be more than one property owner involved in the inclusion. The statute as it now reads: “A majority of the holders of title to any tract of land who are also the holders of title to one-half or more of the area of the tract may file in the district office a petition praying that the tract of land be included within the district,” (Wat. Code, § 26876) is substantially the same except contiguity is not required. In the old law there was no requirement for adaptability for irrigation and that was the main change made by the 1927 amendment. Hence it may well be that in 1914 a district’s land lying outside its boundaries could have been included or annexed by inclusion proceedings.
The real issue is whether the 1914 amendment to section 1 of article XIII froze the boundaries of cities, irrigation districts and the like as of 1914 insofar as the taxation of the land of such public organizations is concerned. That
The 1914 amendment should not be given an interpretation which would make it discriminatory. One of the general purposes of section 1 of article XIII is to secure uniformity in taxation.
(Watchtower B. & T. Soc.
v.
County of Los Angeles,
It is urged by petitioner that it has a vested right granted by the Constitution to tax property of irrigation districts and that to authorize the district to include property in its boundary and thus escape taxation without notice or hearing is unconstitutional; and that there is really no hearing, for the petition for inclusion is filed with the board of directors of the district, thus authorizing the district to decide its own matter. That is nothing more than another way of stating the argument first discussed with reference to the interpretation of article XIII, section 1, of the Constitution. Correctly construed the constitutional provision contemplates that very power, that is, the power to annex additional area and thus incidentally achieve tax exemption. The major premise of that provision is that property owned by governmental agencies is not taxable. It is only an exception that makes taxable some of its property. Moreover, petitioner cites no authority, and we have found none, which holds that a county has a vested right to tax district property. Thus it can hardly be doubted that the Legislature could directly enlarge the boundaries of districts insofar as the right by counties to tax is involved.
The 1947 amendment to the Irrigation District Law, contends petitioner, does not authorize a district to include land unless it can be irrigated with water furnished by the district; and further in that connection, that it is not contemplated that the district itself may petition to include its own land. The language of section 26901 of the Water Code, heretofore quoted, is clearly broad enough to embrace a district. It refers to a petition by the “owner” of the land. There is nothing that excludes the district from being such an owner. True, in dealing with the
formation
of a district the land embraced therein must be susceptible of irrigation, but the very failure to place such a limitation on later annexed land, shows an intent not to impose such requirement in that case. There are different factors involved in formation proceedings, such as the justice of not including, and thus burdening with assessments, lands that receive no benefit. When the
owner
petitions for inclusion he consents to the lack of benefits if such is physically the ease. He is in no position to object. In exclusion proceedings the same factors authorize the exclusion of land which cannot be benefited by the irrigation system. Section 26876 of the Water Code provid
The fact that bills (which did not pass) were introduced in the Legislature at the 1947 session when section 26901 was amended, which flatly exempted all district lands from taxation does not alter the interpretation. Plainly one factor involved in their failure of passage was that they were squarely contrary to article XIII, section 1, of the Constitution. The 1947 amendment authorizes inclusion, and there is implicit therein whatever consequences that may flow from having the land in the district.
It is urged that there is an unlawful delegation of power to the district directors to affect county financial affairs in violation of the constitutional clause reading:
‘ ‘
The Legislature shall not delegate to any special commission, . . . any power to make, control, appropriate, supervise or in any way interfere with any county, city, town or municipal improvement, money, property, or effects, whether held in trust or otherwise, or to levy taxes or assessments or perform any municipal function whatever, except that the Legislature shall have power to provide for the supervision, regulation and conduct, in such manner as it may determine, of the affairs of irrigation districts, reclamation districts or drainage districts, organized or existing under any law of this State.” (Cal.
Petitioner claims that permitting the district tp file a petition, authorized by its directors, for inclusion within its boundaries of land owned by it is an executive function, and that its determination of the petition is judicial; that hence it is granted powers to exercise both executive and judicial functions in violation of the separation of powers doctrine. We see no reason why a district could not have been authorized to include its own land within its boundaries merely by resolution of its directors. Presumably the directors will protect the interests of the owners of land in the district, and the district is the only land owner involved in the land to be included. We fail to see where the petitioner county has any grounds to object to this procedure. If it could be done in that way we see no invalidity in pursuing the petition method. Moreover it is settled that the separation of powers provision of the Constitution does not apply to local governments as distinguished from departments of the state government.
It is argued in the brief of amicus curiae that Rock Creek etc. Dist. v. County of Calaveras, supra, holding that the property of irrigation districts lying outside their boundaries is not exempt from taxation, should be overruled. We are satisfied that that decision is sound.
The petition for a peremptory writ of mandate is denied. The alternative writ is discharged.
Gibson, C. J., Shenk, J., Edmonds, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
Petitioner’s application for a rehearing was denied September 27,1948.
