156 P. 419 | Idaho | 1916
This action was brought by the plaintiffs to compel the defendant corporation, by writ of mandate, to deliver to the plaintiffs 200 inches of water for the irrigating season of 1914, and for each succeeding year thereafter. The amended complaint was filed in February, 1914, and alleged, among other things, the representative capacity of the plaintiff Lewis and the corporate capacity of the defendant. It then alleged that the defendant and its predecessors in interest were engaged in the business of furnishing and delivering water for irrigation purposes to users under its system, among whom are the plaintiffs; that the plaintiffs are the owners of and entitled to use therefrom 100 inches of water each, to be delivered to them within one-half mile of their lands described as the west half of sec. 21, township 4 south, range 5 east, Boise Meridian. They allege further that the Great Western Beet Sugar Company, a corporation, which was the original predecessor of the defendant, located, in 1902, some 1,000 cubic feet of the waters of Little Camas creek and its tributaries, in Elmore county, and thereafter constructed two reservoirs on these streams of 19,650 acre-feet capacity, besides canals and ditches, to supply its prospective users, and proceeded to sell a large number of rights thereunder, among which are the rights now claimed by plaintiffs; that the Great Western Beet Sugar Company delivered some water through its system during the year 1908 and the following years until about September, 1912; that in 1908 the plaintiffs constructed, as a part of said canal system, a certain lateral to connect with their private
And as a third cause of action they reallege all matters in their first cause of action, with the additional allegation that the defendant threatens to, and will, sell, dispose of and deprive plaintiffs of their said water rights, to the great and irreparable damage of the plaintiffs, unless restrained by the court.
The.prayer is for a writ of mandate to compel the delivery of water, for a decree quieting plaintiffs’ title, and for a writ of injunction restraining the defendant from interfering with their alleged water rights.
The defendant demurred for misjoinder of causes of action and answered denying a sufficient number of material allegations of the complaint to put the plaintiffs upon their proofs, and alleging specially that all of the water carried by their irrigation system has been applied to a beneficial use by consumers of water whose rights are prior to those of plaintiffs.
The demurrer was sustained for misjoinder, and plaintiffs elected to stand upon their application for a writ of mandate.
Upon the trial the plaintiffs submitted their proofs and the court thereupon granted a motion for nonsuit, and plaintiffs bring the case here alleging error in the dismissal of the second and third causes of action and in granting the nonsuit.
At the trial the plaintiffs introduced a deed from the Great Western Beet Sugar Company to one B. E. Sherman and conveyances from ■ Sherman to themselves for the 200 inches of water. Licenses from the state land board to the defendant permitting it to sell water rights for 2,000 acres of land at the rate of 1.75 acre-feet per acre and for 3,250 acres at the rate of 2 acre-feet per acre were also introduced. Plaintiff then offered in evidence a decree of the fourth district court in the case of Thomas Mellen et al. v. Great Western Beet Sugar Company et al., decreeing the rights of water users under the irrigation system of the said Great Western Beet Sugar Company, which system is the one now
The action of the lower court in sustaining the demurrer for misjoinder of causes of action is approved. Sec. 4169, Rev. Codes, provides what causes of action may be united in the same complaint, and the several causes which were attempted to be set up in the complaint in this case are clearly not included in the provisions of that section.
The application for a writ of mandate is a special proceeding, provided for a particular purpose, and should not be united with a cause of action other than that for which the writ was intended. The proceedings are initiated by affidavit, and not by complaint; and while this court has held that an affidavit verified in the form of a complaint will be construed as a proper affidavit to set the proceedings in mo
With reference to the question of nonsuit which is here treated as though it were a motion to dismiss or quash, it is to be observed that the affidavit for the writ does not contain any allegation that the defendant company has under its control in its irrigation system sufficient water to supply the rights of plaintiffs, over and above the amount of water necessary to supply the rights of users therefrom, whose rights are prior in time to those of plaintiffs. While it contains an allegation that the system impounds, and its canals are capable of carrying a sufficient amount to supply a portion of plaintiffs’ rights, this cannot be construed to allege that it means an amount sufficient to supply their rights over and above the rights of prior users. Nor is there any evidence in the record to establish this important requirement, although defendant placed the matter directly in issue by the allegations of its answer. It was held in case of Gerber v. Nampa & Meridian Irr. Dist., 16 Ida. 1, 100 Pac. 80, that “In this class of cases, it is necessary for the plaintiff to aver and prove that the canal company has sufficient water to supply him with the desired amount, and that its canal has sufficient capacity to carry it, over and above the amount of water that prior users are entitled to receive.” (See same case on subsequent appeal in 19 Ida. 765, 116 Pac. 104.)
Besides, the plaintiffs showed affirmatively by their proofs that there had been decreed by the Mellen decree some 9,000 inches of water to users under the system whose rights were prior to plaintiffs’. This was sufficient to supply, perhaps, 12,000, or more, acres of land if furnished at the rate per acre allowed in the licenses from the state land board. The two licenses admitted in evidence authorized the defendant to dispose of rights for only 5,250 acres, and, in the absence of any showing to the contrary, we must presume that these rights were the ones purchased and turned over to the defendant as alleged in the affidavit, and it would appear to be
This court is inclined to approve the rule laid down in Kinney on Irrigation and Water Rights, as found in vol. 3, 2d ed., sec. 1649, p. 3024, which is as follows:
“Before a writ of mandamus will be granted by the court, and the defendant ordered to furnish the plaintiff the water demanded, there must have been found to exist the following essentials: First, that the duty is imposed upon the defendant to furnish the water; second, that the plaintiff has the right to demand the performance of that duty and to be furnished with the water; third, that a legal demand has been made, accompanied with a payment or a tender of the established rates; fourth, that the defendant has the water under its control which it can furnish the plaintiff, without impairing the rights of others previously entitled to the same; and, fifth, that the plaintiff has no plain, speedy, or adequate remedy at law.”
Tested by this rule, there was also a failure to show that a legal demand has been made upon defendant for the delivery of the water, accompanied with a payment or a tender of any reasonable charges therefor. While it may be true that the defendant company had waived the question of demand by a refusal to furnish any water to plaintiffs — a question which the court does not here pass upon — yet there was no tender or offer to pay any expenses or reasonable charges which the defendant may have incurred by reason of furnishing water to plaintiffs. The tender made in the complaint is conditioned that the defendant shall pay an obligation which the plaintiffs claim is due them from the Great West
It is impossible for- this court to determine in this appeal any matter which would be of any benefit to plaintiffs for the years 1914 and 1915. The only determination of the matter that could be favorable to them would result in establishing a permanent right in them requiring the defendant company to deliver the amount of water they require for each succeeding irrigation season hereafter. At the time this proceeding was initiated they had no growing crops on their lands and showed no intention of planting any; and stated that it is their purpose not to put in any crops until their status with relation to the defendant company is determined.
The proceeding to obtain a writ of mandate should not be used to litigate or determine a permanent or perpetual water right, as other actions are provided for by the statute in which such matters may be determined. And plaintiffs therefore have a plain, speedy and adequate remedy at law.
The action of the trial court should be sustained, and it is so ordered. Costs awarded to respondent.