175 P. 602 | Utah | 1918
This is an appeal from a judgment or decree of tbe district court of Millard County, Utah. Tbe proceeding was commenced in said court pursuant to chapter 33, Laws Utab 1917, hereinafter referred to as tbe Irrigation Act, to determine tbe regularity and validity of tbe organization of a certain irrigation district known as the Pahvant irrigation district, which was organized pursuant to tbe provisions of said Irrigation Act in tbe county aforesaid, and to determine the validity of tbe proceedings leading up to and including the issuance of tbe bonds of said irrigation district as provided in said Irrigation Act. Tbe Irrigation Act is very comprehensive and is too long to be inserted here even in substance. It is in part an amendment and in part a re-enactment of chapter 74, Laws Utah 1909, and chapter 101, Laws Utah 1913, with certain additions. It must suffice to say that said chapters and the present Irrigation Act, to a large extent at least, are framed after what is known as the Wright Act, which was adopted in the state of California in 1887, and which, since its adoption, with unimportant changes and additions, has been followed by many of the ■ western states, Utah among the rest. The Irrigation Act in question was passed for the purpose of authorizing the organization of irrigation districts with a view of improving and making productive by means of irrigation large areas of arid lands which cannot be irrigated, improved, and made productive by individual effort.
The Wright Act has repeatedly been before and has been passed on and upheld by the courts of the several states in
The complaint in this proceeding filed in the district court is quite voluminous and sets forth in detail all of the steps that were taken in organizing the irrigation district, including the holding of the several elections provided for by the Irrigation Act, including the election held to vote bonds of said district and which are more particularly in question here. The proceeding and the complaint are predicated on and follow the provisions of sections 50, 51, 52, 53, and 54 of the Irrigation Act. The plaintiffs, hereinafter called respondents, constitute the board of directors of said irrigation district, and the defendants, hereinafter called appellants, are landowners in said district as hereinafter more fully explained. A general demurrer was interposed to the complaint, and an answer thereto was likewise filed, by the appellants. The demurrer was overruled and performs no further function in this proceeding. The answer in part admits, and in certain parts denies, the allegations of the complaint. A stipulation of facts was, however, entered into and filed in the action. The district court made findings of fact based upon the admissions contained in the answer, documentary evidence produced and referred to in the stipulation of facts, and on the facts stipulated. The court also made conclusions of law and entered a decree validating and affirming all of the proceedings of the irrigation district, including the issuance of bonds, from which judgment or decree this appeal is prosecuted.
In the first assignment it is urged that thé irrigation district in question was not legally organized because lands are included therein which belong to the state of Utah. The facts found by the court (which are not in dispute) are that certain persons purchased lands from the state of
“* * # Purchasers of state lands within the proposed district shall be deemed to be the owners of lands within the district for the purpose of becoming petitioners for the organization of such irrigation district, and shall share all the privileges and obligations of private landowners within the district.”
The record shows that the statute was followed in all essential particulars, and that the state lands, purchased as aforesaid, were properly included within and are now legally a part of said district. If it should be held that lands purchased from the state on executory contracts which are not yet fully paid for by the purchasers, and the title to which is still held by the state under the Enabling Act of Congress, cannot legally be included within an irrigation district formed in pursuance of the Irrigation Act, then most of the lands purchased from the state under such contracts would perhaps always have to remain arid and unimproved. One of the purposes of the Irrigation Act is to make it possible for purchasers of state lands and entrymen on the public domain to improve their lands and entries and by means of irrigation make them productive and increase their value, and thus promote their own, as well as the public; welfare.
This objection must be overruled.
It is next contended that the organization of the district is invalid for the reason that certain public lands of the United States were originally included within the boundaries of the' district and were subsequently excluded by the district court without power to do so. It is true that,
This objection must therefore also fail.
It is next contended: (1) That the Irrigation Act does not confer power on any one to determine and assess the benefits to the lands of the several landowners within the irrigation district that would accrue to such lands by reason of the purchase of water to be used to irrigate said lands;
“The board shall generally perform all such acts and have all such powers as shall be necessary fully to carry out the purposes of this act.”
Under this power the board could do anything which was necessary to effectuate the letter, the spirit, and the purposes of the act. There is therefore no lack of power, and from an examination of the record it is made apparent that the board met with no difficulty in ascertaining and apportioning the benefits accruing to the lands within the district nor in assessing those lands as contemplated by the act.
The next ground of objection is likewise untenable. It was clearly and specifically found and determined that the benefits that would accrue to the lands included within the district by the purchase of water and water rights to irrigate those lands (and for the payment of which
The second ground of objection, therefore, cannot prevail.
It is also insisted that the Irrigation Act is invalid because it authorizes the levying of assessments to provide funds to meet anticipated defaults by landowners within the district. To meet such contingencies the Irrigation Act authorizes
This objection cannot be sustained.
It is further insisted that tbe lands beld by the appellant Sevier River Land & Water Company were improperly included within tbe district, and that for that reason tbe organization of tbe district is invalid. This objection, it seems, is urged only by appellant Melville. The lands in question are beld by appellant company under contracts of purchase from tbe state of Utah. We have already pointed out that under a provision of tbe Irrigation Act such lands are properly included within tbe irrigation district. If they are properly included, they are also properly assessable, to tbe extent at least of tbe interest of tbe purchaser. In this arid region it is a matter of common knowledge that lands have but a nominal value until they are made productive by irrigation. Tbe substantial value, therefore, that any land may have within an irrigation district, is added entirely by the means of irrigation. In this case all that was done was to reach tbe value of the lands or tbe interest possessed by the purchaser.
Practically all of the questions that are raised on this appeal have been beld to be untenable in tbe eases to which we have referred at tbe beginning of this opinion and to which further reference is not deemed necessary. That the objections urged on this appeal are without merit is, to our minds, clear. In this case every jurisdictional requirement of the Irrigation Act was carefully followed. True, as is generally the case, there are a few slight irregularities in the proceed
There is, however, one potential and all-pervading fact in this case, which is that, after all of the irregularities had taken place except the one of excluding the public lands to which reference has been made, the owners of the lands lying within the district, with full knowledge of the proceedings, unanimously, and without a dissenting vote, voted that the bonds should issue. The landowners thus, with full knowledge of what had been done, as well as with knowledge of the manner in which it was done, with one voice directed the officers of the district to issue the bonds and to make them a first lien upon the lands within the district. If, under the facts and circumstances thus disclosed, bonds could still be held invalid, it would be next to impossible to so conduct proceedings under any irrigation act as would make them a valid and binding obligation against the district.
In concluding this opinion, we desire to express our appreciation to counsel for both sides for the careful manner in which the record and the briefs of counsel were prepared. The briefs of counsel evidence careful and painstaking research, and the arguments as well as the authorities cited were of great assistance to us in determining the questions presented by the appeal.
From what has been said, it follows that the findings of fact, conclusions of law, and decree of the district court should be, and they accordingly are, in all respects, affirmed, at the cost of the appellants.