98 Neb. 141 | Neb. | 1915
A complaint was filed by the McCook Irrigation & Water Power Company before the state railway commission against 18 holders of water-right contracts under its canal, setting forth that the annual maintenance fee due from water-right holders to the company under the contracts was $1 an acre per annum; that complainant has not sufficient income therefrom to enable it to keep up and properly maintain the canal; that an increased charge is necessary and that a charge of $2 an acre would be a reasonable rate, which it is entitled to receive. The prayer is that a hearing may be had and complainant be authorized to charge consumers an annual maintenance fee of $2 an acre, to be made to apply for water furnished for the year 1913.
The respondents filed an answer denying the jurisdiction of the railway commission of the subject-matter of the complaint, which it is said is within the jurisdiction of the courts. The answer also pleads the failure of complainant to furnish sufficient water in the irrigation season of 1913; that it carelessly and negligently allowed the canal to become filled with weeds and debris, and to be obstructed, so that it failed to carry the amount of water to which the respondents’ lands were entitled. It also pleads a number of acts of misconduct on the part of certain directors of the corporation whereby it is alleged they obtained special privileges and advantages, and charges general mismanagement.
A hearing was had, and an order made allowing the complainant to increase its maintenance charges to $2 an acre per annum. The company was also required to set apart each year $4,500 for the operation, maintenance and betterment of the ditch and to place any unexpended portion of this amount in a reserve fund for use in emergen
The principal contention of respondents is that the commission has no authority to make an order releasing complainant from the provisions of the contracts; that the order deprives the defendants of their property without due process of law, and impairs the obligation of their contracts contrary to the provisions of the 'Constitution of Nebraska, the Constitution of the United States, and of the fourteenth amendment thereof. It is also said that the order is not supported by the evidence, and that under the covenants in the water deeds the title to the canal was and should be in its customers, since'the whole amount of available water rights had been sold. These contentions will be considered in different order than presented.
The crucial question is whether, the rate of $1 an acre a year fixed in the contract is a property right with which the state in the exercise of its regulatory power cannot interfere. At the time the canal was built the practice of irrigation in this state was in its infancy, but from the very first the legislature recognized the public interest in the use of water from the streams of the state for irriga
The question involved is an important one, and one as to which there has been some difference of opinion; but we believe the larger and broader view, that most consistent with the spirit in which the law of irrigation should be administered, and that to which courts are more and more tending, is that any contracts entered into between the irrigation company and consumers under the ditch, with reference to the annual rates which should be charged for the use of water, were entered into with the law forming a part of the contract, and were subject to legislative control. Tampa Water Works Co. v. Tampa, 199 U. S. 241, 26 Sup. Ct. Rep. 23; Spring Valley Water Works Co., v. Schottler, 110 U. S. 347, 4 Sup. Ct. Rep. 48; City of Manitowoc v. Manitowoc & Northern Traction Co., 145 Wis. 13; Stanislaus County v. San Joaquin & King’s River Canal & Irrigation Co., 192 U. S, 201, 24 Sup. Ct. Rep. 241; White v. Farmers Highline Canal & Reservoir Co., 22 Colo. 191. An interesting discussion of this topic with cases cited may be found in 2 Wiel, Water Rights in the Western States (3d ed.) secs. 1315-1321.
If the canal company cannot receive sufficient money to keep the canal intact, the water supply must fail. The
Osborne v. San Diego Land & Town Co., 178 U. S. 22, 20 Sup. Ct. Rep. 860, was a case brought by an irrigation company to settle the question whether it had authority to increase its water rates. The case was tried in the United States circuit court and appealed to the supreme court of the United States. The contract provided that the annual rate should be fixed by the company “as allowed by law.” The company had for many years collected $3.50 an acre, and was now seeking to raise the rate to $7. The defendants claimed that the $3.50 rate had been fixed by contract, under the provisions of «. statute which provided that, until the rates “shall have been abrogated by such board of supervisors, as in this act provided, the actual rates established and collected by each of the persons, companies, associations and corporations now furnishing, or that shall hereinafter furnish, appropriated waters for sale, rental or distribution to the inhabitants of any of the counties of this state, shall be deemed and accepted as the legally established rates thereof.” The circuit court held that the question whether an increase to the proposed rate of $7 an acre was reasonable was not open to its decision, and that resort must first be had to the board of supervisors of San Diego county, the only body with power to fix rates. The supreme court affirmed this decree. In the opinion, speaking of the claim that the contract rates thus estab
We are aware that there are cases, in which the point was not directly involved, which seem to indicate that if the question were before it the court would have taken a contrary view to that taken here, but there are at least an equal number of cases, better reasoned, as we view the matter, holding practically in conformity herewith.
Holding the view that the contracts were entered into subject to the right of the state in the exercise of its police power to regulate and fix reasonable rates to be charged for the use of the water, the order of the railway commission does not take property without due process of law, and is not in 'violation of the Constitution of the United States, the fourteenth amendment, or the Constitution of the state of Nebraska.
Many complaints of mismanagement and of undue preferences in the sale of water rights and of other irregularities are made. Por these a remedy exists in equity, and the railway commission is not vested with the power to settle and adjust the property rights involved.
The order of the commissioners is reasonable, and is
Affirmed.