260 F. 270 | D. Idaho | 1919
The plaintiff, a Carey Act corporation, and its assignors, promoted, and, under a contract with the state, constructed, the Salmon River Carey Act project. The law governing projects of this character is to be found in the United States statutes (Act Aug. 18, 1894, c. 301, § 4, 28 Stat. 372, 422 [Comp. St. § 4685] ; Act June 11, 1896, c. 420, § 4, 29 Stat. 413, 434; Act March 3, 1901, c. 853, § 3, 31 Stat. 1133, 1188 [Comp. St. § 4687]; Resolution May 25, 1908, No. 28, 35 Stat. 577 [Comp. St. §' 4688] ; and Act May 27, 1908, c. 200, 35 Stat. 317, 347), and in the laws of Idaho (Const, art. 9, § 7) and the Idaho Revised Codes (sections 149, 150, 1558, and sections 1613 to 1634, inclusive). The defendants are respectively the Governor, the attorney general, the secretary of state, the auditor, and the superintendent of public instruction of the state, who ex officio constitute the state board of land commissioners. As such board they represent the state in all public matters affecting Carey Act projects. With considerable detail the bill charges that, although the plaintiff has substantially completed the project and has performed its contract in so far as is practicable, the defendants arbitrarily neglect to approve the work or accept the system, and, upon the other hand, without reason defer all action in the premises, and harass and injure the plaintiff by threatening litigation and encouraging the settlers to refuse payments under their contracts for water rights.
In a supplemental complaint it is further charged that, in violation of the plaintiff’s rights and greatly to its prejudice, the defendant's intend to make application for patent for only about 35,000 acres of land included in the project, and threaten to relinquish approximately 20,000 acres for which plaintiff has sold water rights, and upon which it claims liens to secure the payment of the purchase price thereof The prayer is somewhat voluminous, but in substance it is that it be decreed that the plaintiff has completed the irrigation system in compliance with the plans and specifications, “in so far as the same are applicable to the conditions now existing under said project, and in so far as” the plaintiff ought under the circumstances to be required to construct the same; further, that, if it be held that the system is unfinished, the deficiencies may be pointed out, to the end that the plaintiff may be able to complete performance; and, further, that it be decreed that the system be turned over to the Salmon River Canal Company, the company organized for the purpose of maintaining and operating the system, and that the plaintiff be relieved from all further liability under its agreement for the construction of the system; and,
It is unnecessary to detail thé numerous issues formally raised by the answers to these pleadings, for the reason that upon final analysis of the record there appear to be but two or three controlling questions, and they can be understood without an elaborate- statement of fact. (The project was also involved in Twin Falls Salmon River Land & Water Co. v. Caldwell et al., 242 Fed. 177, 155 C. C. A. 17; and State v. Twin Falls Salmon River Land & Water Co., 30 Idaho, 63, 166 Pac. 220, to which resort may be had for additional information.) Admittedly the enterprise was improvident, in that it contemplated the reclamation of an area greatly in excess of any possible water supply. The original proposal of the plaintiff’s assignors to the land board was for the reclamation of about 150,000 acres, and the segregation was for approximately that amount. At a comparatively early date, however, the plaintiff seems to have concluded that the area was excessive, and the system was constructed, so the plaintiff alleges, with a capacity sufficient for only 100,000 acres. But even this capacity was in excess of. the available water supply, and hence, it is further averred in the complaint, with the consent of all parties concerned, the acreage was reduced from time to time until, when the suit was commenced water contracts were outstanding for a little more than 60,000 acres. The plaintiff does not here expressly affirm that the supply is sufficient for even that acreage, and, upon the other hand, the defendants, apparently with the support of the Land Department of the United States, contend that there is water enough for only about 35,000 acres.
In view of the plaintiff’s admission that the water supply is grossly inadequate for the enterprise as originally projected, and its failure to tender an issue as to the amount of water actually available, and the further .obvious, if not admitted, fact that the acts and omissions of the state board, of which it here complains, are in the main referable to the contention consistently made by it of the inadequacy of the water supply, we must assume for the purposes of the case that there is sufficient water for only about 35,000 acres, or at least that the defendants reasonably and in good faith so believe. With water right contracts, all apparently of equal dignity, out for 60,000 acres, and with á water supply for only 35,000 acres, with the system incomplete, according to the original plans, and wasteful of water and unnecessarily expensive to maintain by reason of the oversize of the principal conduits for a tract of 35,000 acres, or even 60,000 acres, what was the plain duty of the land board? Tbe plaintiff says: Approve of and ác-cept the system so constructed, authorize its transfer to the settlers, thus relieving it from further responsibility, and apply for a patent for the entire 60,000 acres. The board, upon the other hand, has maintained that the excess of outstanding water contracts is a matter in respect to which' both it and the plaintiff have some obligation, and has apparently been seeking, a basis of equitable adjustment.
Now, bearing in mind the constitutional provision and the general principle that the jurisdiction of courts of equity cannot be invoked to interfere with administrative officers, while exercising a discretion with which they are clothed by law, we pass to consider the specific contention made by the plaintiff.
First, the supplemental bill: It appears that in the fall of 1917, after a joint investigation by the defendants and a representative of the General Land Office, the Commissioner of the General Land Office, having found that there was water available for only 35,000 acres,
The contention that the General Land Office is bound to issue patent for unreclaimed and irreclaimable desert lands, merely because, upon the ex parte representations of the promoters of the project and the state engineer and the state land board, such lands have been segregated for the purpose of reclamation, is thought to be wholly devoid of merit. It would be quite as reasonable to hold that when, under the terms of the Desert Land Act, the Land Office accepts the citizen’s application to enter desert lands, the government is estopped from requiring as a condition precedent to the issuance of patent proof that the entryman is possessed of a water right sufficient in fact for the irrigation and reclamation of the land, merely because, under the regulations, there is attached to the application a map showing the source of the water supply and the proposed plan of irrigation. The primary purpose of the Carey Act was, not to enable the government to divest itself of title to its desert lands, but to secure their irrigation and reclamation; reclamation is the only consideration for the donation or grant, and is a condition precedent to the exercise of the power to grant. The authority conferred upon the Secretary of the Interior to convey is expressly limited to desert lands, which the state shall have caused to be—
“irrigated, reclaimed, occupied, and not less than twenty acres of each hundred and sixty acre tract cultivated by actual settlers * * * as thoroughly as is required of citizens who may enter under the [said] desert land law.”
“TLe existence of this lien depends primarily upon the completion of the construction works and the delivery of water through the works by the construction company, as stipulated in its contracts with both the state and the entryman.” Adams v. Twin Falls Oakley Land & Water Co., 29 Idaho, 371, 161 Pac. 325.
Again, by the amendment of March 3, 1901 (31 Stat. 1133, 1188), it is provided that, if the state fails within ten years after segregation to cause the whole or any part of the segregated tract to be irrigated and reclaimed, the Secretary may, in his discretion, extend the time for a period of not exceeding five years, or restore such reclaimed land to the public domain. The contract prescribed by the Interior Department, and presumably entered into in this case between the Secretary of the Interior and the state, is in strict accord with these requirements, and binds the Secretary to issue patents only when “an ample supply of water is actually furnished” for the tract for which patent is sought. It must be manifest, therefore, that the land board here could not hope to succeed in an application for a patent for the 60,000 acres without representing that an ample supply of water has actually been furnished for that area, and if the view they entertain of the facts is correct such a representation would be false and fraudulent. The plaintiff’s interest in the land consists of the liens it claims to hold upon the several tracts to cover the purchase price of water rights which it has sold. But the authority of the state, and hence the plaintiff’s authority to-create a lien, is expressly limited to “reclaimed” lands. In the absence of such a restriction the government might, by the simple process of creating such liens upon desert lands and foreclosing them, be divested of the title to large tracts of the public do
What ground for complaint, then; has the plaintiff touching the proposed action of the state land board ? If it has a lien only for the aggregate acreage for which it has supplied ample water, and if, as is apparently admitted, it can suggest no better plan for contracting the project than that adopted by the board, there remains only the question whether the board is in error in assuming that the wáter supply is adequate for- only 35,000 acres. But, as already suggested, the plaintiff does not here tender an issue upon that point, and besides, in so far as it is involved in the patent proceedings, it is a question which is exclusively for the United States Land Department and not for the courts. Twin Falls Salmon River Land & Water Co. v. Caldwell, 242 Fed. 177, 155 C. C. A. 17. If the plaintiff believes that it can show a larger acreage entitled to patent, it should seek to intervene in the Land Office and make its showing. There is no suggestion that it has sought such privilege and been refused. The defendants, apparently acting in good faith, made tire application for as large an acreage as they thought the facts warrant, and there is no reason to assume that they would object to the intervention, or that leave would be withheld by the Land Office.
In view of tírese considerations, I am inclined to think that the supplemental bill is not only without equity, but that the relief sought by it is within the inhibition of the Eleventh Amendment to the federal Constitution. Perhaps to avoid ■ the possibility of misunderstanding it should be expressly stated that in reaching this conclusion I do not pass upon the question of the power of the state board or of the Secretary of the Interior, over the objection of settlers upon the excluded lands, to reduce the area of the project in the manner proposed.- To such an issue the settlers would be indispensable parties. I hold only that upon the record here the plaintiff is not in a position to complain. Suppose that all the excluded settlers were to assent to the plan, what grievance would tire plaintiff have? If, as we have, determined, its lien is limited to the acreage for which it can furnish an ample supply of water, the proposed adjustment would be most favorable to it, for admittedly under no other plan could the available water be made to serve so large an area.
Turning now, to the original bill: While it is to be conceded that there have been great delays, the circumstances do not warrant the charge of arbitrary or willful inaction. It is to be noted that a majority of the defendants came into office in January, 1917, and, as I understand, the plaintiff does not contend that any applications it has made since that time have failed of reasonably prompt attention. Nor can it be held that the defendants have acted in any spirit of ill will toward the plaintiff, or have shown a disposition to. disregard its rights. The outstanding fact of the whole business is that the shortage of water has given rise to problems seemingly insoluble. From proceedings taken in this court, and from published reports of proceedings had in the state courts, notice is taken of the fact that numerous questions have arisen of the most perplexing character, some of which, notwith
There are strong equities in favor of the settlers, and strong equities in favor of the holders of securities. Any plan to contract the irrigable area so that it will be commensurate with the actual water supply involves hardships to some of the settlers, and to any basis of classification serious objection may be raised. The improved tracts are scattered over the project, some of them isolated, with the result that, if only such lands are retained, the distribution of water will be attended with great loss from seepage and evaporation. If precedence be accorded the water contracts in the order in which they were negotiated, the holdings will he scattered, and some of the improved tracts excluded. If a comparatively compact body of land be retained, some of the first rights sold and some of the highly improved tracts must be abandoned. Besides, the extent of the irrigation service which may be reasonably expected from the system has not yet been authoritatively determined. And here again there is the question of a competent tribunal. Doubtless for certain purposes a court of competent jurisdiction may adjudicate the question, but will such an adjudication be binding upon the Land Department ? That department must necessarily determine the question in disposing of patent applications, but is such determination binding upon the courts in the litigation of controversies not directly affecting title to the lands? Beset with the conflicting appeals of opposing interests, and confronted with such a maze of uncertainty, the board may very well have hesitated and deferred decisive action, with the hope that time would bring a solution.
The plaintiff complains of inconsistency on the part of the board, in that, while contending that the water supply was inadequate for outstanding contracts, it instituted legal proceedings in the state courts to compel the plaintiff to sell additional rights for state lands. But it was not- improper for it to seek a judicial determination of the rights of the state, whose interests they as state officers were bound to protect. There were large tracts of state land in the project, which it had been agreed would receive water, and in view of the shortage of water the status of these lands involved, not only debatable, but extremely close, questions of law, and in presenting them to the Supreme Court of the state in appropriate proceedings the defendants were clearly in the line of official duty, although they at the same time believed and were taking the position that the contracts outstanding were greatly in excess of the water supply.
To support the contention that it relied upon the state engineer’s report it produces the deposition of one witness who in terms testifies that “full reliance was placed upon the report”; but manifestly such testimony is incompetent to establish the fact. While the witness had some relation (not clearly defined) to the promotion of the project, so far as appears he was never an officer or other representative of the plaintiff, and no corporate records or files were produced disclosing the action of the board of directors or their reasons therefor. How could he know the mental operations of the plaintiff’s officers ? Plainly in such testimony we have nothing more than the present personal opinion of the witness, the correctness of which, it may be added, is highly improbable. If for a moment we consider the magnitude of the proposed investment, and the fact that its return was necessarily conditioned upon the success of the enterprise, it would be a strain upon' our credulity to believe that it was made upon the strength of a brief report of the state engineer in general terms to the effect that the project was feasible. But, if a contrary view were taken, could the fact that such report was relied upon avail the plaintiff anything in the present proceeding? If so, upon what theory of law and to what extent? It must be borne in mind that, under the Carey Act statutes of the state, neither the state nor its land board or engineer takes the initiative. The state does not malee representations to'promoters or capitalists to induce them to undertake a Carey Act project. The initiative is taken by the promoter, and the representations are made by and not to him.
In the instant case Sprague and his associates presented a written proposal to the land board, in which they represented that they had for some time been engaged in making surveys and estimates upon the project under consideration, and expressed their desire to “construct irrigation works which will cover and irrigate and render fit for farming and the'growing of crops adapted to the climate” an area of approximately 150,000 acres. They requested the board to have the lands segregated from the public domain, and represented that if the application met with approval they would cause a corporation to be organized for the purpose of undertaking the work. As was their duty under the law, the land board referred the proposal to the
Having in mind the great delays which have already intervened both before the land board and here, and taking notice th$t the defendants’ term of office is about to expire, I have concluded .to withhold the entry of a decree dismissing the bill in its entirety and to grant leave to plaintiff, after the expiration of 75 days from the date hereof, to take the necessary steps to have the defendants’ successors in office substituted and to file a second supplemental bill, exhibiting the proceedings which it may have taken in the meantime to procure a determina
If the plaintiff desires an order or interlocutory decree in harmony with this suggestion, it should promptly prepare and present it for signature; otherwise, it should present a decree of dismissal.