98 Wash. 412 | Wash. | 1917
The purpose of this action is to recover damages for the failure of the defendant to furnish the plaintiffs the amount of water, during the irrigation season for the year 1915, which they claimed they were entitled to. The cause was tried to the court and a jury, and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs in the sum of $615. From this judgment, the defendant appeals.
The facts are these: The appellant is a corporation organized under Rem. Code, § 6416, and the succeeding sections of the chapter which pertain to the organization of irrigation districts. The respondents are the owners of land within the district. During the irrigation season for 1915, the respondents claim that they did not receive the amount of water which they were entitled to under their contract with, or deed from, the appellant, and as a result thereof, their fruit trees and crops were damaged. As above stated, the cause was tried to a jury. The record contains no exceptions to the charge of the trial court to the jury, or to the refusal to give requested instructions. The instructions given, therefore, become the law of the case and are not here for review. This rule is so well established that the assembling of the cases is unnecessary.
The appellant’s principal contention, apparently, is that a corporation organized under the above-mentioned statute cannot be sued in an action seeking to recover damages for the failure to supply the amount of water which such corporation contracted to furnish. In the case of Board of
In Boehmer v. Big Rock Irr. Dist., 117 Cal. 19, 48 Pac. 908, the supreme court of California, construing a statute in identical terms, held that the district was subject to an action to the same extent as it would have been had the statute used the more common expression “to sue and be sued.” It was there said:
*415 “This language is quite as effective to subject the district to an action as the more common expression ‘to sue and' be sued.’ ”
In Hewitt v. San Jacinto & P. V. Irr. Dist., 124. Cal. 186, 56 Pac. 893, the plaintiff sought to recover damages to crops and trees because the district had not supplied the amount of water it had contracted to, and damages were sustained thereby. It was there held that the plaintiff was entitled to a judgment for the amount of damages which were the result of the defendant’s fault in failing to supply water. There can be no good reason why an irrigation district, when it contracts to supply water for irrigation purposes and fails to furnish the amount of water covered by the contract, should not be subject to an action for damages for the loss which the water user has sustained by reason of the district’s fault. The case of Cooney v. Town of Hartland, 95 Ill. 516, cited by the appellant, is not applicable to the situation here presented.
The appellant also claims that, since the deed or contract under which the respondents claim was not executed until the 31st day of May, 1915, and was acknowledged’ by the respondents on the 1st of July, and by the appellant on the 6th of July, 1915, and since this deed or contract specifies the amount of water “during the irrigation season commencing on the first day of April of each year hereafter and ending on the last day of October,” the appellant was not required to supply water during the year 1915. The objection to this contention is that the parties to the instrument construed it otherwise. The respondents had
The judgment will be affirmed.
Ellis, C. J., Mount, Chadwick, and Morris, JJ., concur.