31 Colo. 1 | Colo. | 1903
delivered the opinion of the court.
The several questions which plaintiffs in error seek to have determined in the first two causes grow out of the action of the lower court had in the Hess ease, after the original and amended decrees were rendered in that action. They were docketed separately, hut have been consolidated in this court. According to the title of the third cause, it appears there are two, when, in fact, there is but one, which is the Hess case, and is the same cause as the first, in which proceedings were had on the petition of The Fort Lyon Canal Company, of which plaintiffs in error complain. The several causes are so intimately associated, and as the questions presented for consideration in the second and third causes grow out of the first, and relate to the successive steps taken by defendants in error towards obtaining the ultimate relief to which the plaintiffs in the Hess case claim to be entitled, they can best be disposed of in one opinion. For convenience The La Junta and Lamar Canal Company will be designated the £ £ old company; ’ ’ The New La Junta and Lamar Canal Company as the “new company,” and the Fort Lyon Canal Company as the “Fort Lyon company.”
The main matters of which plaintiffs in error complain in the first two cases are the action of the court in directing the receiver to take possession of the property in controversy, entering orders with re
The corporation known as The Arkansas River Land, Reservoir and Canal Company and the old company were successively the owners of a canal and' irrigation system. The Hess case, which was commenced on behalf of himself and others similarly situated, was instituted against the old company, to compel a specific performance of the contract contained, in the water deeds evidencing the water rights owned by them in the canal and appurtenances belonging to, that company. This contract provided, in substance, that on the happening of certain contingencies, the title to the canal and appurtenances should pass to the owners of such water rights and vest in a new corporation for their benefit. The water right owners were to be the owners of the stock in this corporation, distributed among them in the proportion that such water rights bore to the whole number. The judgment in this action was in favor of the plaintiffs, and a decree was entered directing the old company to execute and deliver a deed of conveyance to its canals, reservoirs and other property rights held in connection therewith to such new corporation as the owners of water rights in the poperty so conveyed might organize for the purpose of operating and managing it. Prior to this judgment, the court had appointed a receiver to take charge of and manage the property pending the litigation. From this judgment the company appealed to the court of appeals, where it was
On the hearing of these several matters it appears substantially from the testimony introduced that the new company had taken no steps to take care of the receiver’s indebtedness; in fact, this may be inferred from the position which it assumed in resisting the applications made by interested parties for this purpose. The application of the storage company and the hearing thereon was had in the winter. The canal at this time was in need of repair, but the new company, although it had been in possession of the property for several months, had taken no steps in this direction. The water right owners were not in a financial condition to bear the expense of making these repairs themselves, nor did the new company have any funds to meet such expenses. The contract with the storage company, provided that the latter, in consideration of the privileges granted, should repair the canal before the opening of the next irrigating season. It also appeared the new company would make no objection to this contract or the management of the property provided certain indebtedness incurred by the old company, secured by mortgage on the property, was discharged. After the foregoing matters had been'disposed of, and something over a year after the date the new company had been placed in possession of the property, the water right owners held a meeting and directed certain of their number to organize a company the object of which was to take possession of the property and manage it in the interest of those who, according to the contract contained in their several deeds, and the decree of the court thereon, were its real owners. This action
On behalf of the old and new companies, plaintiffs in error here, it is contended that the court erred in the first two causes in directing the receiver to execute certificates of indebtedness, and to join with the new company in executing a mortgage to secure such indebtedness; in subsequently directing the receiver to execute such mortgage; in authorizing the receiver to again take possession of the property to the exclusion of the new company; in directing the receiver to enter into a contract with the storage company; and that the action of the court invalidated the indebtedness of the old company secured by mortgage upon the property and took from the new company property in which the water right owners had no interest.
The main proposition advanced in support of the claim that the above action of the court was erroneous, is, that the court was without authority to make the several orders objected to in so far as the new company was concerned, because no action was pending against it, or to which it was a party; that in none of these proceedings application was made for the appointment of a receiver for the new company; that the court’s authority over -the property had terminated when it made an order executing the mandate of the court of appeals; and that the original appointment of the receiver only contemplated his
The purpose of the Hess suit was to enforce the specific performance of a contract entered into between the old company and its predecessor, whereby it was provided that on the happening of certain contingencies the property in controversy should vest in the water right owners. The result of that action was a decree in favor of such water right owners, whereby it was determined that they were, in fact, the real owners of the property, and entitled to its management and control. The provision of tire decree relative to the formation of a corporation in which such property should vest for the benefit of the water right owners was set aside by the court of appeals. When the cause was remanded to the district court, the decree with respect to the organization of a corporation to operate the property for the benefit of the owners was amended. The old company accepted the situation and acquiesced in the judgment of the court, that the property, in fact, belonged to the water right owners. The officers of that corporation organized the new company, which was given possession of the property under and by virtue of the terms of the decree which called for its organization. When it assumed such possession (which it did at the instance of the old company) it thereby became the instrument of the court through which the plaintiffs in the Hess ease were to obtain and enjoy the rights which they had been decreed. The power of the court over the subject-matter of controversy was not exhausted until the objects of the suit had been attained. For this purpose, the property was still in the custody of the court and the new company subject to its orders; so that when it refused to assume or discharge the receiver’s indebtedness, or take the proper and necessary steps looking towards utilization of the property
The claim that the contract with the storage company, the mortgage by the receiver, and the possession which was given him took property from the new company in which the water right owners had no interest, seems to be based upon the judgment of .the court of appeals, in The La Junta and Lamar Canal Co. v. Hess, 6 Colo. App. 497, heretofore referred to, where it is claimed by counsel for plaintiffs in error the court of appeals decreed that the King reservoir was no part of the irrigation system or property in controversy. The judgment of the court of appeals is not susceptible of any such construction. In the first place, that question was not before the court, and secondly, what was said with respect to the King reservoir not being considered a part of the system was solely in connection with the questions of the estimated capacity of the canal, and that for this purpose it could not be considered as' a part of the system.
The errors assigned in the third cause of action
The remaining questions are, was such action justified, and can plaintiffs in error complain? The Fort Lyon company was organized by the water, right owners, the real parties in interest. It appears from the testimony that the management of the new company was at least favorable to the payment of an indebtedness which, it is claimed, was a lien upon the property, and which the water right owners repudiated. The new company was their trustee, and yet it asserted that the King reservoir did not belong to them. This was antagonistic to their interests. They had been decreed the owners of the property in controversy, and entitled to its management and control, and yet by the action of the new company they were practically as far removed from enjoying the property which they had been awarded, as before the Hess action was brought. They certainly had the right to have the property managed by those who would fully protect their interests, and when their trustee neglected or refused to do so, it was properly removed at their instance. The object of the action in which the several orders have been made of which plaintiffs in
Affirmed.