23 P.2d 720 | Idaho | 1933
The sole question presented by this appeal is whether or not land acquired by an irrigation district for nonpayment of delinquent assessments levied by said district is exempt from general taxation under the provisions of Const., art. 7, sec. 4, while owned by it. That constitutional provision reads as follows:
"The property of the United States, the state, counties, towns, cities and other municipal corporations and public libraries shall be exempt from taxation."
It is appellant's contention that an irrigation district is a public quasi-municipal corporation and as such included within the classification of "other municipal corporations" as used in said constitutional provision.
In Strickfaden v. Greencreek Highway Dist.,
"Counties may be said to be true public corporations. They are local organizations, which for the purpose of civil administration are invested with a few functions characteristic of a corporate existence. They are legal political subdivisions of *379 the state, created or superimposed by the sovereign power of the state of its own sovereign will, without any particular solicitation or consent of the people within the territory affected." (Citing authorities.)
"Cities, towns and villages may be classified as true municipal corporations, voluntarily organized under the general law at the request and with the concurrent consent of their members, and in addition to the exercise of the functions of self-government, transact matters of a quasi-private or business character not governmental in their nature but rather proprietary or for the acquisition of private gain for the municipality and its citizens." (Citing authorities.)
Many definitions and classifications of irrigation districts have been given and made by this court for the purpose of construing other constitutional and statutory provisions, but it may be conceded that in none of these cases have they been held to be true municipal corporations. They have been held to possess certain attributes common to both political subdivisions of the state, such as counties, and to true municipal corporations, such as cities and towns, thus bringing them, as to such attributes, within the meaning of certain statutory and constitutional provisions.
In Stephenson v. Pioneer Irr. Dist.,
"This court has frequently and variously defined an irrigation district: 'A quasi-public corporation,' LittleWillow Irr. Dist. v. Haynes,
" 'A municipal corporation' (Gem Irr. Dist. v. Van Deusen,
" 'A quasi-public or municipal corporation.' (Yaden v. GemIrr. Dist.,
"The definition most enlightening with regard to the question we are here considering, is found in City of Nampa v. Nampa Meridian Irr. Dist.,
" 'An irrigation district is a public quasi corporation, organized, however, to conduct a business for the private benefit of the owners of lands within its limits. (They are the members of the corporation, control its affairs, and they alone are benefited by its operations.) It is, in the administration of its business, the owner of its system in a proprietary rather than a public capacity, and must assume and bear the burdens of proprietary ownership.'
"It is apparent from the above that this court has classified an irrigation district as more in the class of municipal corporations, than in the class of counties."
In Indian Cove Irr. Dist. v. Prideaux,
"It is settled law that irrigation districts are public corporations, although not strictly municipal in the sense of exercising governmental functions other than those connected with raising revenue to defray the expense of constructing and operating irrigation systems and the conduct of the business of the corporation. (Fallbrook Irr. Dist. v. Bradley,
This court also said in Yaden v. Gem. Irr. Dist.,
"Irrigation districts are creatures of the statutes. They arequasi-public or municipal corporations, and as such have only such power as is given to them by statute, or such as is necessarily implied." (Citing authorities.)
"Under the provisions of C. S., sec. 4350 (now I. C. A., sec.
In Colburn v. Wilson,
". . . . the irrigation district is aquasi-municipal corporation organized for the specific purpose of providing ways and means of irrigating lands within the district and maintaining an irrigation system for that purpose. (Pioneer Irr. Dist. v. Walker,
It follows that the primary purpose of an irrigation district is limited to the conducting of its business for the private benefit of the land owners within the district by the acquisition of water rights and the irrigation of lands within its boundaries; and that the land owners within the district are the members of the corporation, control its affairs, and are primarily benefited by its operations. It is likewise true that irrigation districts have been endowed with certain incidental municipal powers necessary to its proper functioning, such as the election of its officers and directors, the levy of assessments for bond, interest, maintenance and *382 operation and other like authorized purposes, and the equalization and collection of such assessments, which incidental municipal powers have resulted in its classification as a quasi-municipal or municipal corporation in connection with the construction of statutes and constitutional provisions involving the exercise of such municipal powers.
We have carefully analyzed and compared the foregoing authorities and others to similar effect and have reached therefrom the conclusion that an irrigation district is a public corporation having such incidental municipal powers as are necessary to its internal management and the proper conduct of its business. Its primary purpose is the acquisition and operation of an irrigation system as a business enterprise for the benefit of land owners within the district, such property being held in trust for them in a proprietary capacity, while secondarily and incidentally, certain municipal powers have been conferred for its government and regulation, and when this is borne in mind, any seeming confusion in or conflict with the authorities holding that an irrigation district is a municipal or quasi-municipal corporation within the meaning of certain statutes and constitutional provisions disappear.
The rule as to exemption of municipal corporations from taxation would seem to be as stated in 2 Cooley, Taxation, 4th ed., p. 1319, sec. 623:
"An express exemption of property of 'municipal corporations' applies only to municipal corporations proper and not to a corporation composed of shareholders which in its form and controlling features is a business enterprise upon which municipal powers have been incidentally conferred in promotion of its primary purpose. It is also held that an irrigation district . . . . is not a municipal corporation within constitutional or statutory provisions exempting the property of municipal corporations."
To the same effect see Buffalo Rapids Irr. Dist. v. Colleran,
It should further be observed that a grant of exemption from taxation is never presumed and statutes and constitutional provisions relating to exemptions should be strictly construed, and where a doubt arises it should be resolved against the exemption. (Andrews v. North Side Canal Co.,
Const., art. 7, sec. 4, exempts from taxation the property of the United States, the state, counties, towns, cities and other municipal corporations and public libraries. Having specifically exempted the property of cities and towns, which are true municipal corporations, and then provided for the exemption of property of other municipal corporations the rule would seem to be that the exemptions are restricted to include the property of only such other municipal corporations as are of the kinds specifically enumerated, such as, for instance, villages. (36 Cyc. 1119; 12 C. J. 707, sec. 53.)
Appellant cites and relies upon Palo Verde Irr. Dist. v.Jamison, (Cal.)
From what has been said it follows that an irrigation district is not a municipal corporation within the meaning *384 of Const., art. 7, sec. 4, so as to exempt its property from taxation.
Judgment affirmed. Costs awarded to respondent.
Givens, Morgan, Holden and Wernette, JJ., concur.