223 P. 531 | Idaho | 1923
Lead Opinion
— Respondent is an irrigation district. Appellants are owners of certain lands of the district. The district entered into a contract with the United States government for three main purposes: (1) to build a drainage system for the district, (2) to furnish full water rights for about 40,000 acres of dry land in the district and (3) to furnish a supplemental supply of stored water from the Arrowrock reservoir to be used upon some lands within the district. The validity of this contract and all proceedings in connection therewith was confirmed by a decree of the district court, affirmed by this court in Nampa & Meridian Irr. Dist. v. Petrie, 28 Ida. 227, 153 Pac. 425. Thereafter the board of directors of the district determined the benefits to the several tracts of land from the construction of the irrigation „ and drainage works and assessed them accordingly. Upon proceedings had in the district court for confirmation of the assessment-roll, certain modifications were made in the findings and assessment-roll, and the apportionment of benefits and assessments as so modified was confirmed. From this decree appellants prosecute this appeal. The principal assignments of error relied upon by J. G-. Petrie and other appellants represented by Messrs. Eldridge and Morgan are that the court erred in approving and confirming the apportionment of benefits, (1) because it did not make proper allowance for water rights already owned by the appellants, and, in the ease of appellant Blucher, did not make sufficient allowance for damages to his waste water right caused by respondent’s irrigation and drainage system,
We conclude that the evidence is sufficient to support the finding of the court as to the benefits accruing to the land of all appellants from the water right furnished by the contract in question, and to support the assessment and decree based thereon. If it should be conceded that appellant Blu cher’s use of the subterranean waters as shown by the evidence gave him a valid water right, nevertheless the additional water right furnished for his land under the contract would be a sufficient benefit to the land to justify the assessment made. We conclude, however, that he had no right to insist the water-table be kept at the existing level in order to permit him to use the underground waters. There is no proof that he secured water from a natural subterranean stream. The evidence tends to show that he secured it from water collected beneath the surface of the ground due to seepage and percolation. To hold that any land owner has a legal right to have such a water-table remain at a given height would absolutely defeat drainage in any case, and is not required by either the letter or spirit of our constitutional and statutory provisions in regard to water rights.
As to the contentions peculiar to the appeal of Mr. Haga we conclude that the court erred in dividing his water right into two parts and making the water procured under the contract in question appurtenant to part of the land, and the old water right appurtenant to the rest. In support of this action of the court respondent relies upon certain lan
The most serious question is whether or not the apportionment for benefits and assessment for drainage can be sustained. The assessment for drainage is a flat rate of $7 per acre on all lands in the district. This was done on the theory that the cost of the drainage can be charged to operating expense and prorated among the land owners of the district like any other operating expense. Respondent relies upon the following decisions of this court: Bissett v. Pioneer Irr. Dist., 21 Ida. 98, 120 Pac. 461; Pioneer Irr. Dist. v. Stone, 23 Ida. 344, 130 Pac. 382; Nampa & Meridian Irr. Dist. v. Petrie, 28 Ida. 227, 153 Pac. 425. The statement in the first named case that an irrigation district is under an obligation to take care of seepage and overflow and protect the lands is pure dictum. If it means that an irrigation district is absolutely liable for injury caused by seepage water in the absence of negligence on its part, it is squarely in conflict with the rule long established in this and 'all the
‘ ‘ 5. Where a contract is entered into between an irrigation district and the United States, providing, among other things, that arid lands within the jurisdiction of the irrigation district, in order to secure a full water right from a government project, shall be assessed not to exceed $75 per acre, such contract is subject to the laws of this state governing irrigation districts and to the apportionment of benefits thereunder, and the fixed charge to be assessed against the lands of any particular land owner within such irrigation district for such water right will be finally determined by the district court of the judicial district within which said irrigation district is located, as provided by secs. 2400-2403, Rev. Codes.
“6. The same rule and the same procedure, as indicated in paragraph 5, is to be followed in the assessment of benefits with reference to the sale of partial water rights to supplement water rights already existing, and also with reference to the assessment of benefits incident to the construction of a drainage system within an irrigation district. ’ ’
If respondent were organized as a drainage district, a more equitable method' of assessing the cost of the drainage system could be adopted, to wit, assessing the wet lands according to benefit and the dry lands according to contribution. The section of the drainage law authorizing assessment for contribution, C. S., sec. 4506, was not in existence when respondent was organized and the contract made. Moreover respondent has never been organized as a drainage district, but is purely an irrigation district. The irrigation district law contains no provision for assessing land on the ground of contribution. The authority to create the two sorts of districts is granted by entirely different and separate statutes, and the proceedings for the creation of the two 'are separate and different in many particulars. This court has no authority to make a drainage district out of an irrigation district by mere judicial fiat. If the land comprised within respondent irrigation district could be, and should be, now organized into a drainage district by complying with the drainage statute, the drainage project already constructed could be taken over under C. S., see. 4538, and assessments made for contribution as well as for benefits. As to whether that can be done at this stage of the proceedings we express no opinion, as the matter is not squarely before us and has not been presented by counsel.
That portion of the judgment which relates to the assessment of appellant ITaga’s land for irrigation purposes is ordered modified in accordance with the views herein expressed. That portion of the judgment which relates to the assessment of the lands for drainage purposes is reversed. If it is desired to again assess the land within the district for drainage purposes under the present organization, it is or
(March 6, 1924.)
Rehearing
ON REHEARING.
— On the original hearing respondents justified the flat assessment for drainage purposes on the theory that the expense of drainage was part of the maintenance or operating cost. This theory we could not approve. On rehearing respondents took the position that the assessments for drainage were based upon the benefits accruing to the lands from irrigation. In other words, if a tract of land derives .a certain benefit from the water furnished by the district for its irrigation, it derives the same benefit from the drainage project built by the district for the drainage of the wet lands. It is apparent,' as we said in the original opinion, that the assessments are not based on the benefits derived from drainage. With this new theory of respondents we are not in accord. When the statute provides that land within an improvement district may be assessed for the cost of the improvement in accordance with benefits derived, it means benefits derived from the improvement. Where the assessment is for the drainage project it must be based on benefits derived from it, and not on benefits derived from irrigation.
We are not called upon in this case to decide just what may be considered in determining whether or not land benefits from the construction of a drainage project, and we do not pretend to do so. We have simply laid down the general rule that an assessment for a drainage project based upon benefits must, like an assessment for any other public improvement, be based upon benefits, immediately accruing or which will clearly accrue, from the construction of the work.
With these matters clarified, we adhere to the original opinion.