224 P. 85 | Idaho | 1924
— Respondent petitioned for a writ of mandamus in the district court alleging that appellant is a corporation engaged in carrying water by means of ditches and canals to its stockholders, that petitioner is the owner of a certain tract of land which requires water for irrigation, the owner of a water right, and also the owner of a certain certificate of stock of appellant which entitles him to have water for irrigation carried to his land in appellant’s canal, the Canyon Hill Ditch, and that appellant wrongfully failed and refused to carry said water through said ditch. In its answer appellant denies respondent’s right to have the water carried through said canal but admits that his stock entitles him to require appellant to deliver the water at the most convenient point on his land for irrigation. By way of affirmative matter appellant alleges that, in order to deliver said water to respondent’s land from said canal, it is necessary to place cheeks in the ditch because the land is higher than the ditch, which interferes with the efficient delivery of water to other stockholders. It alleges that its officers under orders of the board of directors procured the right to carry respondent’s water through another canal belonging to the Newman Ditch Co. to a point 1,200 feet east of petitioner’s land and to construct a ditch from 'that point to the place on said land from which it has been irrigated. It alleges that the Newman Ditch Company’s canal is higher than appellant’s and using it will obviate the diffi
Due consideration should he had for the property rights of respondent. On the other hand, due consideration should be had for the necessities of the appellant, and it should be allowed to conduct its business in such a way as to efficiently serve all its stockholders, so far as this can be done without interfering with respondent’s legal rights. The only authority to which we have been cited which throws much light upon the question presented is Candelaria v. Vallejos, 13 N. M. 146, 81 Pac. 589. In that case a number of water users had jointly constructed and used an irrigating ditch for years with the result that they became tenants in common. Later on, for administrative purposes, the legislature made all such mutual ditch companies corporations with certain specified powers and duties. The corporation was thus an involuntary one, not a voluntary one. It was held that each of the stockholders continued to own an undivided interest in the diteh and that the corporation could not, without the consent of the individual stockholder, change the course of this ditch, even though such change would perhaps result in greater efficiency. In order to make this authority applicable to the present case it must appear that respondent has a right to have the water carried through the Canyon Hill ditch. He alleges in his petition that such is the case. On the other hand, this is denied in the answer, appellant contending that the stock simply gives respondent the right to the delivery of so much water. If the facts be as alleged by petitioner, respondent has an absolute right to have his water delivered through the Canyon Hill ditch, and the judgment is correct. He could not be deprived of such a right merely because the company