79 F. 665 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Southern California | 1897
A suit precisely similar to that above entitled, brought by Virginia Kippey against, the same defendants in the superior court of San Diego county, Cal., was by that, court transferred to this court on the motion of the receiver of the property of the San Diego Land & Town Company, appointed by this court September 30, 1895. The suit by Mrs. Kippey was brought in the state court to test tlie same questions involved in a suit first instituted in this court by its receiver, to which O. II. Kippey, the husband of Virginia Kippey, was made a party defendant as 1 he owner and irrigator of the land to which .Mrs. Kippey now asserts title. The suit by the receiver was commenced in this court on till' 6th day of January, 1896. The precise nature of that suit Is fully stall'd in the opinion just filed therein, granting, among other things, the complainant’s motion to malee Virginia Kippey, wife of O. II. Kippey, and Ella B. Ward, wife of M. L. Ward, defendants thereto, and also denying the motion made on behalf of Mrs. Kippey to remand her suit to the state court from which it was brought. 79 Fed. 657. In the subsequent suit brought by
As will be seen from the opinions heretofore filed by this court, the real subject of controversy between the parties to all of these suits is the asserted right on the part of the San Diego Land & Town Company, a Kansas corporation, to establish the rates at which it will furnish water to consumers for the purpose of irrigation, in the absence of any action on the part of the board of supervisors of the county in which the property is situated. Prior to the bringing in the state court of either the suit of Mrs. Rippey or of Mrs. Ward, to wit, on the 14th of September, 1896, this court, in an opinion filed at the time, and reported in 76 Fed. 319 (Lanning v. Osborne), sustained that asserted right by the receiver of the property of the land and town company. In the subsequent suit brought by Mrs. Ward in the superior court of San Diego county against the land and town company, the receiver, and one of his employés in the distribution of the water, that court, on demurrer filed by the defendants to the bill, held directly contrary to the prior ruling of this court upon the same question, and to the effect that the receiver of this court, in the management and control of the property of the land and town company, which passed into the hands and administration of this court long prior to the institution of Mrs. Ward’s suit, is legally and equitably bound to furnish Mrs. Ward with water from the land and town company’s water system, for irrigation, at the annual rate of $3.50 per acre. It may be that the superior- court of San Diego county is entirely right in its views in respect to the legal and equitable rights of the respective parties to the controversy, and that this court, in its previous ruling in respect to the same questions, was entirely wrong. If so, there is- an easy and an appropriate way, by appeal, for the correction of any error into which this court may have fallen, or may fall, in the administration of the property with which it is charged, and in respect to the rights of any and all persons thereto, or therein. While it always has been, and always will be, the purpose and desire of this court not to assume or draw to itself jurisdiction over any subject-matter or party not clearly within its jurisdiction, it can never hesitate to assert and maintain its rightful and proper jurisdiction over either subject-matter or parties. Conflicts between courts of co-ordinate jurisdiction, under our mixed system of government, may easily occur by a failure on. the part of either court to carefully observe the line of demarkation; but care on the part of each will always avoid such conflicts, which are so unseemly, and always so much to be regretted. The
I see nothing of merit in the suggestion of counsel for Mrs. Ward that this court, in the administration of the property in question through its receiver, is undertaking to exercise a part of the public powers of the state of California. That the property in question, in the hands of the receiver, as -well as when operated by the San Diego Land & Town Company, is, and was then, charged with a public use, is, I think, made sufficiently plain in the opinion of the court rendered in the ease entitled Lanning v. Osborne, 76 Fed. 319. The court administering the property administers it subject (o that use, and in accordance with the laws of the state regulating it, just as it administers, through a receiver, the property of a railroad or other public or quasi public corporation whose properly is subject to such a use, and to regulation by the state. For errors, if any, committed by the court in the administration of such property, aggrieved parties have appropriate remedies by resort to superior courts.
The motion made on behalf of Ella B. Ward to this court, where a certified copy of the record of her suit in the state court to and including the proceedings on the petition for removal was entered December 18, 1896, to remand it to the stain court, is denied, and an order will be entered restraining her and each of her attorneys from the furlher prosecution of that suit in the superior court of San Diego county, Cal., until the further order of this court.