Plaintiff El Camino Irrigation District was organized April 12, 1921, under the California Irrigation District Act, and comprises 7546.5 acres of land in Tehama County. Its outstanding bonds, issued on November 1, 1926, now amount to $423,000. Defendant El Camino Land Corporation is the owner of about $302,000 of said bоnds. In October, 1935, said defendant brought an action against the district on some of the past due bonds and interest coupons, and a judgment was entered in its favor May 15, 1936, for $40,390.
Upon entry of the judgment said defendant had execution issued, and levied on certain lands previously acquired by the district at sales for delinquent assessments, and deeded to the district after expiration of the redemption period. Of the 7546.5 acres of the district, about 5,500 had already been so transferred, and the rest were in default. The district then brought this action to enjoin the said defendant and defendant sheriff from holding the contemplated sale, on the ground that the lands were not subject to execution. The lower court granted the injunction, and defendants aрpealed.
The economic background of this and certain other related cases has been fully set forth in our opinion in
Provident Land Corp.
v.
Zumwalt et al.,
Sac. No. 5133
(ante,
p. 365 [
Defendant’s argument in favor of execution may be summarized as follows: All property is subject to levy unless expressly made exempt by law, and this is true of public corporations as well as private persons. Property of a public corporation is exempt only where it is held for a public use; where held in a proprietary capacity and not devotеd to public use, it is subject to execution. As applied to irrigation districts, this doctrine would exempt the operative property, e. g., the irrigation works, but not the tax-deeded lands.
Before discussing this contention we may briefly notice the further аrgument that it will be highly beneficial to force sale of these lands to private persons, who will become obligated to pay assessments, whereas now, with title in the district itself, the lands are free from assessments and produce no revenuе. Such a proposition, even if sound, could hardly be deemed sufficient justification for subjecting exempt public lands to execution. But we are bound to observe that there is grave doubt as to whether defendant’s remedy would produce the suggested result.
Amicus curiae
has persuasively argued that if any buyers can be found, which is extremely questionable, they, faced with huge pyramided assessments, will in all likelihood prove as recalcitrant as the old, and will merely hold the land without any payments for thе period of some five cropping seasons until they are again taken over by the district after expiration of the redemption period. The recent history of the districts lends support to this prophecy (see
Provident Land Corp.
v.
Zumwalt, supra),
and we are inclined to believe,
*382
therefore, thаt were it legally possible to execute on these lands, the bondholders as a group would derive little benefit from the procedure. No substantial revenue could be expected, and court costs and expenses of execution would add further amounts to the already staggering burden of indebtedness of the districts. Moreover, to permit successful ■ judgment creditors, whose bonds may not be prior in registration, to be paid by the proceeds of execution sales, would result in an unjustified preference in favor of those who brought the actions and procured the levies. The lower court in the instant case made an express finding to this effect, and the procedure, unless restricted in some manner unknown to us, wоuld operate to violate the rule of priority established by the decisions in this state.
(Bates
v.
McHenry,.
There is a general doctrine, settled by numerous authorities, that land owned by the state or its agencies and held for a public purpose, is not subject to attachment or execution in the absence of an express statute permitting it. It is immaterial that there is no statute expressly exempting such property from execution.
(Westinghouse Elec. & Mfg. Co.
v.
Chambers,
It is true that a few decisions in this state have reсognized the familiar distinction between proprietary and governmental functions and uses, and have declared that property owned by a municipal corporation in its proprietary capacity, and not devoted to nоr held for public use, is not exempt from execution. (See
Marin Water & Power Co.
v.
*383
Sausalito,
When we consider the precise legal question before us it is equally apparent that this decision is not controlling. Defendant has attempted to lump together all public bodies and agencies, and to make the characterization of governmental or proprietary use applicable to all. But the cases make a sharp distinction between municipal corporations, such as the cities in the Kubach Cо. and Marin Water and Power Co. cases, and state agencies such as irrigation or reclamation districts. These latter are agencies of the state whose functions are considered exclusively governmental; their propеrty is state owned, held only for governmental purposes; they own no land in the proprietary sense, within the rule of defendant’s cases. (See
Whiteman
v.
Anderson-Cottonwood Irr. Dist.,
There is another and conclusive answer to the contention of defendants, found in the terms of the Irrigation District Act. Section 29 of the act declares that property acquired by the district shall be held “in
trust
for, and is hereby
dedicated
and set apart to the
uses and purposes set forth in this act”.
We have discussed the meaning and effect of this section in
Provident Land Corp.
v.
Zumwalt, supra,
and it is sufficient to point out here that the statute places these tax-deeded lands in a classification which necessarily makes them exempt from execution. The “uses and purposes” of the act are of course the improvement by irrigation of the lands of the district, governmental purposes undеr the authorities cited above. The lands are expressly “dedicated and set apart” for these purposes. It is impossible, in the face of such language, to say that any such property could be subject to levy on the ground that it was not held for a public use; the statute forecloses any argument on this point. This is recognized in the statement in the Marin Water and Power Co. eases,
supra:
“ . . . property which it holds merely as a proprietor, devoting it to no use of a public character, such as lands acquired or held for other than public purposes
and not in trust for public use,
are subject to execution unless some statutory or constitutional provision forbids it”. Lands held subject to a public trust cannot be subjected to execution. (See
Hart
v.
Burnett,
The view that the irrigation district land is free from execution is further supported by the holding of this court in San Francisco Sav. Union v. Reclamation Dist., supra, the similarity in purpose of reclamation and irrigation districts being well established. In the light of these various decisions and the clear provisions of the California Irrigation District Act, we deem it unnecessary to discuss or distinguish the very few cases from other jurisdictions which defendant cites as persuasive herein.
It follows that the trial court properly enjoined the levy. The judgment is therefore affirmed.
