18 N.M. 1 | N.M. | 1913
OPINION OP THE COURT.
On May 27, 1907, the appellee filed its application with the territorial engineer, as authorized by chap. 49, S. L. 1907, to appropriate the waters of the Eayado river and certain tributary streams, for the purpose of irrigating certain lands in Colfax County, New Mexico, in said application described. In August thereafter the territorial engineer ordered notice to be given by appellee of a hearing on said application on October 11th following. Notice was published as required by said act, and the appellant filed with said engineer a protest against the approval of appellee’s application. The territorial engineer, after a hearing had, declined to act upon appellee’s said application, and an appeal was taken from such refusal to act to the Board of Water Commissioners. Hpon a hearing had, the Board of Water commissioners approved the application, with the proviso “that the permit thereunder shall not be exercised to the detriment of any person, firm, corporation or association having prior rights to the use of waters of said stream system.” From the decision of the Board of Water Commissioners, appellant appealed to the District Court of Colfax County, where the cause was heard, as required by the statute, de novo, and upon such hearing the issues were found for appellee and judgment entered in its favor, from which judgment appellant prosecutes this appeal.
The assignments of error filed by appellant are as follows :
“1. That the court below erred in affirming the decision of the Board of Water Commissioners, directing and ordering the State Engineer to approve the application of the appellee herein for the appropriation of water of and from the Bayado river;
“2. That the court below erred in finding and adjudging that the said Board of Water Commissioners had and was possessed of the right, wkrrant, and authority to review the discretion of the said State Engineer in the matter of the approval of permits to appropriate;
‘‘3. That the court below erred in rendering and entering judgment in favor of the said appellee, affirming the said decision of said Board of Water Commissioners.”
Appellee contests the sufficiency of each of. the above assignments of error on the ground that they are too general, indefinite and not sufficiently specific, and each error' relied upon is not stated in a separate paragraph, and further, with respect to the second assignment, that it attempts to raise a question in the appellate court which was not raised nor considered in the district court, and that the assignment, even if good in form, is without merit.
In the-case of Cevada v. Miera, 10 N. M. 62, Chief Justice Mills, speaking for the court, said:
“Five errors are assigned. The first is purely formal. '(The judgment of the court is contrary to the law)’ as it does not point out in what particular such judgment is contrary to the law, and this court has held in the case of Pearce v. Strickler, 54 Pac. 748, (9 N. M. 467) and in Schofield v. Territory, 56 Pac. 303, (9 N. M. 526), that such a general assignment of error is not ground for review.”
In the case of Melini v. Griego, 15 N. M. 455, the Territorial Supreme Court considered the sufficiency of the following assignments of error, viz: “That the said verdict is contrary to the law and the evidence.” “That the said verdict was rendered against the weight of evidence,” and “For many other manifest errors in the trial of this cause, which appear in the record and were prejudicial to the plaintiff,” and said, “It has been repeatedly held by this court that an assignment of error must point out the specific error complained of,” and the court refused to consider them. Similar assignments are also condemned and held insufficient in the following eases: McBae v. Cassan, 15 N. M. 495, 110 Pac. 574; Territory v. Clark, 13 N. M. 59; Candelario v. Miera, 13 N. M. 360; Maxwell v. Tufts, 8 N. M. 396.
The rule, adopted in. this regard, and so consistently adhered to by the Territorial Supreme Court, finds ample and almost universal support in the other states.
An assignment of error that the trial court erred -in entering judgment for one party, or against another, presents no question for review. Wales v. Graves, 72 Conn. 355; 44 Atl. 480; Clark’s Invest. Co. v. Seymour, 19 App. D. C. 89; Hunter v. French, 86 Ind. 320; Wheeler, etc. v. Walker, 41 Mich. 239; City of Houston v. Potter, (Tex.) 91 S. W. 389. And see other cases collected in note 92, 2 Cyc. 997. For the reasons stated we must hold that the first and third assignments of error present no question for review.
Sections 27 and 28, chap. 49, of the irrigation code of 1907 read as follows:
“Sec. 27. Hpon the receipt of the proofs of publication, accompanied by the proper fees, the Territorial Engineér shall determine from the evidence presented by the parties interested, from such surveys of the.water supply as may be available, and from the records, whether there, is unappropriated water available for the benefit of the applicant. If so, he shall endorse his approval on the application, which shall thereupon become a permit to appropriate water and shall state in such approval the time within which the construction shall be completed, not exceeding five years from the date of approval, and the time within which water shall be applied to a beneficial use, not exceeding four years in addition thereto; Provided, That the Territorial Engineer may, in his discretion ,approve any application for a less amount of water, or may vary the periods of annual use, and the permit to appropriate the water shall be regarded as limited accordingly.
“Sec. 28. If, in the opinion of the Territorial Engineer, there is no unappropriated water available, he shall reject such application. He shall decline to order the publication of notice of any application which does not comply with the requirements of the law and the rules and regulations thereunder. He may also refuse to consider or approve an application or t.O' order the publication of notice thereof, if, in his opinion, the approval thereof would be contrary to the public interest.”
Sec. 62 of the same act creates a Board of Water Commissioners, and provides for the appointment of the members thereof by the Governor. Sec. 63 is in part as follows:
“It shall be the duty of said board to hear and determine appeals from the actions and decisions of the Territorial Engineer in all matters affecting the rights, priorities and interests of water users and owners of, or parties desiring to construct canals, reservoirs, or other works for the conveyance, storage or appropriation of waters in this territory. Any applicant or other party dissatisfied with any decision, act or refusal to act of the Territorial Engineer may take an appeal to said board.”
The remainder of the section provides for the procedure required to get the cause before the board for hearing. Sec. 65, in so far as material, to the question under discussion, reads as follows:
“The decisions of said board, upon any such appeal, shall be filed in the office of the Territorial Engineer, who shall thereafter act in accordance with such decision. The decision of said board shall be final, subject to appeal to the District Court of tlie district wherein such work, or point of desired appropriation, is situated,” etc.
Section G6 provides for certifying to the District Court, in causes appealed, the record of all proceedings in the matter by the Board of Water Commissioners, and also provides for a hearing de novo in the District Court, “except that evidence which may have been taken in the hearing before the Territorial Engineer, and said board and transcribed, may be considered as original evidence in the District Court.”
The act in question, as shown by the above excerpts, clearly shows that in each instance, where a hearing is provided for, or required, the same shall be de novo, or an original hearing, where the engineer, Board of Water Commissioners or the court hears such competent proof as may be offered by the parties interested in the proceeding and forms his or its own independent judgment relative to the issues involved. The Board of Water Commissioners does not, nor is it called upon, to review the discretion of the engineer. Bpon appeal to it, it determines for itself, the question as to whether the application should be approved or rejected. It is not bound, controlled or necessarily influenced, in any way, by the action of the engineer. It hears, or may hear, additional evidence, and upon the record and such evidence as is properly before it, it decides the question presented. Likewise in the District Court, the hearing is de novo. The court may consider such evidence as has been introduced before the board and engineer, and transcribed and filed with it, but it also hears additional evidence, and is not called upon to determine whether the engineer or the Board of Water Commissioners erred in the action taken and order entered, but must form its own conclusion and enter such judgment, as the proof warrants and the law requires. It does not review the discretion of the engineer or the board, but determines, as in this case it was required by the issue presented, whether appellee’s application to appropriate water should be granted. The court, in order to form a conclusion upon the issues, was necessarily required to determine, for itself, whether there was unappropriated water available; whether the approval of the application would be contrary to the public interest, and all other questions which the engineer was required, in the first instance, to determine. In such case the question recurs anew, as to whether the application shall be granted. This being true, the second assignment of error must fail, because it is not well taken.
Appellant, having presented no available error for review, the appeal will be dismissed, and, it is so ordered.