Case Name: TRUCKEE-CARSON IRRIGATION DISTRICT ads. McLEAN; TRUCKEE-CARSON IRRIGATION DISTRICT ads. CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILWAY CO.
Court: Supreme Court of Nevada
Jurisdiction: Nevada
Decision Date: 1926-04-05
Citations: 49 Nev. 278
Docket Number: No. 2596
Parties: TRUCKEE-CARSON IRRIGATION DISTRICT ads. McLEAN TRUCKEE-CARSON IRRIGATION DISTRICT ads. CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILWAY CO.
Judges: 
Reporter: Nevada Reports
Volume: 49
Pages: 278–299

Head Matter:
TRUCKEE-CARSON IRRIGATION DISTRICT ads. McLEAN TRUCKEE-CARSON IRRIGATION DISTRICT ads. CENTRAL PACIFIC RAILWAY CO.
No. 2596
April 5, 1926.
245 P. 285.
W. M. Kearney and McCarran & Mashburn, for McLean; Brown & Belford and W. M. Kennedy, for Central Pacific Railway Co., Appellants:
Cooke, French & Stoddard, for Respondent:

Opinion:
OPINION
By the Court,
Sanders, J.:
The Truckee-Carson irrigation district was formed on a federal reclamation project, known as, and called, "Newlands Project," which was among those first selected and authorized under the act of Congress of June 17, 1902, commonly known as "the Reclamation Act," and frequently referred to as the Newlands act, because sponsored by the late United States Senator Newlands of Nevada. 32 Stat. L. 388 (U. S. Comp. Stat. sec. 4700 et seq.).
The Truckee-Carson irrigation district includes within its boundaries about 66,000 acres of irrigable land lying under the Newlands project, approximately 45,000 acres of which are now under irrigation from the government's irrigation works — the Truckee canal and the Lahontan reservoir.
This is a special proceeding brought on petition of the Truckee-Carson irrigation district, seeking the examination, approval, and confirmation of the proceedings for the organization of said district; also for the confirmation and approval of its proceedings relative to the annexation of certain lands to the district; also for the confirmation and approval of the proceedings relative to a proposed contract by the district with the government of the United States for the construction by the government of a general drainage system within the district; and also for the confirmation and approval of apportionment of benefits to accrue from the construction of said drainage works.
The immense record involves two appeals: One, the appeal of Annie McLean and others; the other, that of the Central Pacific Railway Company, a corporation. The appeals involve the same proceedings. They were argued together and submitted for decision, with the request from the attorneys for the district for a speedy decision because of the great public importance of the case and the vast pecuniary interest dependent upon the result. The importance of the case', both with reference to the interesting legal questions and principles involved, and the vast economic and pecuniary interest dependent upon the result, demand the most mature and deliberate consideration of this court. The writer feels that the sensible minded will understand and appreciate that he has been unable to keep abreast with the business of the court and render an opinion within the time deemed reasonable by some of the interested parties. Furthermore, the court is burdened with a record consisting of more than 3,000 pages of testimony, expert and non-expert, and much documentary evidence, all involving research, study, and careful investigation. There is based upon the record a sepárate volume of 470 assignments of error, which refer to the record in such way as necessitated a review of practically all the evidence. There have been injected into the case the long-standing differences and animosities between the water users under the Newlands project and the United States reclamation service, which do not concern this court in the least, but which seem to have been brought into the case to emphasize the position taken by certain protestants that the assessment against their lands is illegal, unfair, and without equity.
On or before the date fixed for the hearing of the petition for confirmation at least 145 interested persons answered the petition, and by their answers sought to have their lands excluded from the district and to enjoin the district from making any apportionment, of benefits or assessments of costs affecting their property for the construction of a general drainage system under a proposed contract between the district and the government of the United States. After a full hearing upon the pleadings and evidence, the trial judge, Hon. C. J. McFadden of the Ninth district, rendered a decree, which decree confirms respectively: (1) The organization of the Truckee-Carson irrigation district in Churchill and Lyon Counties, Nevada; (2) the annexation to said district of 12,672.6 acres of land lying under the Newlands project; (3) the confirmation and approval of a proposed contract of the district with the United States government to construct a drainage system for the district at a cost not to exceed $700,000; (4) the confirmation and approval of the apportionment of benefits to accrue to each tract or legal subdivision of irrigable land within the district from the construction of said proposed drainage system; and (5) adjudging said proposed contract to be valid and such as the board of directors of the district were authorized to enter into. The two appeals are prosecuted from orders denying the respective motions of protestants for a new trial based upon the grounds of the insufficiency of the evidence to support the decision of the court, and that the decision is against law.
We shall consider first the appeal of Annie McLean and others, and dispose of the appeal of the Central Pacific Railway* Company in the concluding portion of this necessarily lengthy opinion.
The applicable state law is to be found in the Revised Laws of Nevada, 1912 (sections 4723 to 4791, inclusive). This was amended by Act 1915, c. 278, p. 434, and by Act 1917, c. 150, p. 255. In 1919 the legislature enacted a complete substitute irrigation district law in chapter 64, pp. 84 to 115. This act made many changes in the previous law, most of which, however, are of a minor character.
The Truckee-Carson irrigation district was organized in November, 1918, under the provisions of the prior law and amendments, but the district did not take steps to have its organization confirmed by court order, as required by the statute. Aside from the proceedings had for the formation of the district, all its acts and proceedings here involved were had in attempted compliance with the pi-ovisions contained in the substituted act of 1919.
The applicable federal law is to be found in the reclamation act, supra; the act of Congress of February 21, 1911, known as the "Warren Act" (36 Stat. L. 925, sec. 2 [U. S. Comp. St. sec. 4739]), and the act of Congress of August 13,1914, known as the "Reclamation Extension Act" (38 Stat. L. 686 [U. S. Comp. St. sec. 4713a et seq.]).
To avoid prolixity, we have assembled the 470 assignments of error under the main headings: (1) The power of the state and the United States to contract for purposes of cooperation under the state and federal laws for drainage construction; (2) the legality of the assessment, and the fairness and equity in the apportionment of benefits to accrue to protestants' lands from the construction of the proposed drainage system; (3) the jurisdiction of the district court to entertain the proceeding for confirmation of the organization of said district and other matters in connection therewith.
Appellants in their answer assert that the court below was without jurisdiction of the subject matter, because the Nevada irrigation district act of 1919 is unconstitutional. Courts now dispose of this question with the statement that the constitutionality of irrigation district laws has been so thoroughly and universally established that the subj ect need not be elaborated. The several portions of the act here attacked were upheld as being constitutional. In Re Walker River Irrigation District, 195 P. 327, 44 Nev. 321. Counsel - deplore that as a result of that decision Nevada stands alone in holding that an irrigation district is not a municipal corporation in a strict sense, but a public corporation for municipal. purposes; thereby doing violence to our constitutional provisions relative to elections and property qualifications of voters in irrigation districts. It is probable that Idaho, and not Nevada, stands alone among the irrigation district states as to the applicability of constitutional provisions relative to elections held by irrigation districts. For counsels' information we take the liberty of citing Handbook of Irrigation District Laws (King & Burr), p. 20. We again declare the Nevada irrigation district act of 1919 unconstitutional.
It is contended that the court below exceeded its jurisdiction in adjudging the Truckee-Carson irrigation district to be a legally organized and constituted irrigation district because the proceedings for its formation were not had in compliance with the statute. We have reviewed the 30 alleged defects in the organization proceedings, and conclude with the trial court that the proceedings were in all respects in substantial compliance with the statute. Therefore, we see no necessity for incumbering this opinion with answers to extended technical arguments which in many respects misconstrue the applicable law. In one of the cases cited by counsel it is declared that, in so far as proceedings for the organization are concerned, a reasonably liberal rule of construction should be adopted to carry out the wise purpose of the law. People v. Cardiff Irr. Dist., 197 P. 387, 51 Cal. App. 307. Applying this rule to the organization under review, we are satisfied that no interested person was deprived of a single substantial right in the matter of organization, and the trial court did not exceed its jurisdiction in adjudging and finding the Truckee-Carson irrigation district to be a duly organized and constituted irrigation district.
The petitioner sought the examination, approval, and confirmation of the proposed contract between the district and the United States for the construction by the government of a drainage system for the district. The statute of 1919 provides that a proposal to enter into such a contract with the United States shall be voted upon and carried by a two-thirds majority vote of the qualified electors (sections 15 and 56). The proposed contract contains the provision that the government of the United States will not proceed with, the construction of the drainage work until the contract has been approved by the voters of the district and the organization of the district confirmed as provided by the statute. An election was called pursuant to the statute by the board of directors of the district for the 6th day of April, 1920, to vote upon this question:
"Shall the Truckee-Carson irrigation district enter into a contract with the United States of America for the construction by the United States of America of a general drainage system within the said irrigation district, at a cost of not to exceed the sum of $700,000.00 without interest; repayment of the moneys expended by the United States of America in said construction, to be made by the Truckee-Carson irrigation district in forty (40) semiannual installments, the first of which shall become due and payable on January 1st of the second calendar year following the calendar year in which the Secretary of the Interior shall announce that said expenditure has been made by the United States of America."
The contract was carried by the necessary two-thirds majority vote of the qualified electors, to wit, 244 votes in favor of the contract and 87 votes against. The main question for decision is: Is the contract valid and such as the board of directors of the district are authorized to enter into. The consideration of this question calls for a review of both the state and federal statutes.
The original act of Congress of June 17, 1902, the "Reclamation Act," seems to contemplate reclamation projects, each of which shall be complete in itself and served by irrigation works constructed for it alone, the cost to be charged against the irrigable land included in the project. No provision is made, and no authority is given, to connect with private or other nongovernmental irrigation projects, or to furnish them with water or enter into cooperative arrangements with them. Some years of experience, however, developed the possibilities of enlarged usefulness in this direction, and Congress later made provision therefor. This was done by the act of February 21, 1911, the "Warren Act." 32 Op. Attys. Gen. p. 43. This act comprises three sections, the second of which provides:
"That in carrying out the provisions of said Reclamation Act and acts amendatory thereof or supplementary thereto, the Secretary of the Interior is authorized, upon such terms as may be agreed upon, to cooperate with irrigation districts, water users associations, corporations, entrymen or water users for the construction or use of such reservoirs, canals, or ditches as may be advantageously used by the government and irrigation districts, water users associations, corporations, entry-men or water users for impounding, delivering and carrying water for irrigation purposes. " U. S. Comp. St. sec. 4739.
The legal foundation and authority for the government to enter into the contract in question must be sought in this legislation. Since the enactment of the Warren act, the policy has been pursued by the reclamation service of securing amendments to state irrigation laws providing for contractual relations between irrigation districts and the United States. The result has been that practically all of the states that have irrigation district laws have authorized districts to cooperate with the United States, and that districts have been organized on many of the federal reclamation projects. Such projects are to be found in Idaho, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oregon, Texas Utah, Washington, and Newlands (Truckee-Carson), Nevada. The project lands organized as irrigation districts were formed largely with the motive of facilitating cooperation with the United States in drainage construction.
The provisions for cooperation with the United States are taken from the individual sections in the previous law, and are combined in consecutive sections in the Statutes of 1919, sections 54 to 65, inclusive. .Section 54 of the act provides as follows:
"In addition to the powers with which irrigation districts are or may be vested under the laws of the state, irrigation districts shall have the following powers: To cooperate and contract with the United States under the federal reclamation act of June 17, 1902, and all acts amendatory thereof or supplementary thereto, or any other act of Congress heretofore or hereafter enacted authorizing or permitting such cooperation, and to cooperate and contract with the State of Nevada, or.for the assumption as principal or guarantor of indebtedness to the United States on account of district lands or for the collection of moneys due to the United States as fiscal agents or otherwise."
The sections following make provision for the carrying out of the enlarged powers conferred upon the board of directors of the district by section 54. The legal foundation and authority for the contract in question, in so far as the State of Nevada is concerned, must be sought in section 54. The clause of the section, "or for the assumption as principal or guarantor of indebtedness to the United States on account of district lands," is the clause under which irrigation districts formed upon federal projects have made contracts.
The Supreme Court of Idaho has held in several cases that boards of directors of irrigation districts are authorized, upon compliance with sections 2396-2401, Revised Codes, to contract with the United States for the construction, conjunctively, of a drainage system for the purpose of properly draining water-logged land within the jurisdiction of such districts, and that the secretary of the interior, under the acts of Congress above referred to, is authorized to contract with such districts for the joint construction of a proper drainage system. Nampa & Meridian Irr. Dist. v. Petrie, 153 P. 425, 28 Idaho, 227; Hillcrest Irr. Dist. v. Brose, 133 P. 663, 24 Idaho, 376; Pioneer Irr. Dist. v. Stone, 130 P. 382, 23 Idaho, 344. We note that the provisions of the Idaho Codes have practically been incorporated in the Nevada statutes.
We find nothing in either the state or federal statutes to prevent the making of contracts for cooperation with the United States under the reclamation and Warren acts, and our conclusion is that the proposed contract between the Truckee-Carson irrigation district and the United States is validated both by the state and federal laws. In our preliminary examination into the law of this case we were concerned as to whether the "Warren Act" was sufficiently elastic to permit without additional legislation an irrigation district to be formed at the instance of the reclamation service on a federal project for the purpose of drainage construction, but upon further research we have found that the most prominent, relations between, irrigation districts and the federal government have been with the reclamation service. Districts which have had such dealings seem to be subdivided into two classes: First, districts which have contracted with the United States, under the provisions of the Warren act, for the construction of irrigation or drainage works or both; second, districts formed at the instance of the reclamation service on reclamation projects, as substitutes for water users associations, "for the assumption as principal or guarantor of indebtedness" of project lands to the United States with or without bond. Section 54, c. 64, Statutes of Nevada 1919; U. S. Department of Agriculture, Bulletin No. 1177, date September 22, 1923.
We are not concerned with the question raised as to the construction of the proposed contract or its enforceability in its present form. The question put to the lower court was whether the contract was valid and such as the board of directors of the district were authorized to enter into.
The next question for determination is' whether or not the apportionment for benefits and assessments can be sustained. Protestants contend that their lands are not in need of drainage, and that their irrigation does not contribute water which must be carried off or away from the lower lands; that the lands owned and held by protestants are by natural and physical conditions so located and situated as to preclude the possibility of benefits from the construction of the proposed drainage system.
Section 17 of the statute contains this declaration:
"Where drainage works are to be constructed benefits may be apportioned to higher lands not then actually requiring drainage by reason of the fact that their irrigation contributes water which must be carried off or away from the lower lands."
A similar provision is to be found in the statute of Idaho, as amended (Laws 1915, c. 42, p. 123). The Supreme Court of Idaho has upheld the provision. In Re Drainage District No. 1, 161 P. 321, 29 Idaho, 393; Burt et al. v. Farmers' Co-op. Irr. Co., 168 P. 1078, 30 Idaho, 752. The language of our statute is a sufficient basis for a declaration from this court in harmony with the Idaho case, which holds:
"We have-no doubt of the power of the legislature to provide that lands which by reason of artificial irrigation contribute by seepage and saturation to the swampy condition of lower lands shall contribute their just proportion of the cost of the construction of drainage works for the reclamation of such lower lands."
The legislative declaration that highlands may be assessed for drainage of lowlands shows that the lawmaking body considered that the principle of assessments based on benefits called for the recognition of the physical unity of the drainage area, and the partial responsibility of the owners of higher lands for the drainage difficulties.
It is practically conceded that the lands irrigated by the Truckee canal laterals are the highlands and the lands irrigated by the Lahontan reservoir are the lowlands. Undoubtedly the proof shows that the irrigable lands in the district are in urgent need of drainage. The voters of the district have said so by their votes; the reclamation service has so declared through its drainage engineers; expert drainage engineers have so testified; and the secretary of the interior has approved as to form a contract for the expenditure of $700,000 of public moneys, subject to the appropriation by Congress, for the construction of a drainage system for the district. In this situation it would be the height of judicial usurpation — the worst kind of usurpation — for this court to say that the district is not in need of drainage. We have carefully considered the testimony of protestants who protest their unwillingness to have their project lands under the guise of an irrigation district organization held responsible for an indebtedness created at the instance of the reclamation service solely for the benefit of the Newlands reclamation project, and not contemplated by their original settlement under the project. These farmers are of recognized intelligence, industry, and integrity, and they gave such testimony with respect to the use of water upon their lands as makes it appear that they fully appreciate the menace of the rise of ground water, and their own counsel concede that the question of drainage is one which calls for expert testimony. Speaking generally, the problems of seepage and percolating waters, and the concomitant evil, alkali, are among the most difficult in engineering and local operations, as well as in law, on account of the lack of exact knowledge of the causes and effects which influence the course of water beneath the surface of the ground. Handbook of Irrigation District Laws, p. 32. The evidence does not show that protestants' lands are now actually in need of drainage, but, in view of seepage, alkali, the rapid rise of ground water, and the urgent necessity of drainage for the district, it may be that the time is not far distant when they will be in need of drainage. Where large areas are being irrigated, and where .the ground water must travel for a considerable distance through sand, clay, silt, gravel, or mixtures of these, before finding any natural outlet, a general rise in the water plane must occur. Field investigations and studies of the rise of ground water in the case at bar lead to the conclusion that the need for drainage is due to the subsoil formation of more or less impervious material on which irrigation water accumulates or which hinders the movement of underground waters. Report of Bernard A. Etcheverry, drainage engineer, a witness in this case. The rapid rise of ground water is shown in the crop reports made to the reclamation service. In the year 1917 there were 2,166 acres under the Newlands project rendered unfit for cultivation by seepage; in 1918, 2,248 acres; in •1919, 2,847 acres; in 1920, 3,411 acres. Mr. Etcheverry testified that in 1919 the seepage from the main Truckee canal and laterals and from the north and south Carson river divisions totaled 175,992 acre feet, which, expressed otherwise, in cubic contents, signifies 175,000 acres of land covered with water one foot deep. This estimate does not include 26,950 acre feet of seepage from the Lahontan reservoir in the year 1919 or the seepage incident to 134,000 acre feet of water applied to the irrigation of 44,32'4 acres of land in 1919. The testimony of the expert witnesses, taken in connection with the reports of drainage examinations, shows that the irrigation of protestants' land does contribute water which must be carried off or away from the lower land of the district. The actual condition of the other lands of the district refutes the theory of counsel for protestants that th'e natural and physical condition of protestants' lands precludes the possibility of benefits from the construction of the drainage system.
It is contended that the assessment for drainage in this case is a flat rate of $10.15 per acre on all irrigable lands in the district contrary to the sections of the statute governing the apportionment of benefits and assessments which provide that the assessment must be made in accordance with the benefits which will accrue to each of the tracts or subdivisions of land from the construction of the drainage system. We agree with counsel that an assessment for drainage, based on a flat rate, and not upon actual benefits accruing to the land, is invalid. Nampa & Meridian Irr. Dist. v. Petrie, 223 P. 531, 38 Idaho, 529. But on rehearing in that case the court' states:
"So, also, if the benefits derived - by different tracts from the construction of irrigation or drainage works are equal, the assessment may be the same."
We are of opinion that the board of directors of the district in apportioning the benefits considered that the benefits derived by the irrigable lands from the construction of the drainage system were equal.
It is contended that the Truckee-Carson irrigation district was organized as an irrigation district; therefore this court has no authority to make a drainage district out of an irrigation district. Our answer to this contention is found in the section of the statute which provides that drainage works may be covered by contract with the United States upon such projects as are assisted or undertaken by the federal government. Section 54 of the statute is equivalent to a legislative determination that an irrigation district should and may be used for drainage purposes to forestall or remedy unfortunate conditions; in other words, to protect the irrigation project from suicide or natural death.
It is contended that the court erred in confirming by its decree a stipulation entered into at bar between the attorneys for the irrigation district and the Central Pacific Railway Company excluding the company's right of way lands from the district. We do not think the court exceeded its jurisdiction, power, or authority in confirming the stipulation.
This brings us to the consideration of the separate appeal of the Central Pacific Railway Company. Pending the organization proceedings before the board of county commissioners of Churchill County the Central Pacific Railway Company petitioned to have included in the district 1,587 acres of its contiguous land. As other lands in the district, the soil and topographic conditions have been and are limiting factors in the improvement of these lands. They are low-lying lands, containing a high percentage of alkali, and, like other areas in the district, are sandy, porous, of varying composition, rough, and easily wind blown. The roughness and irregularity make leveling for irrigation expensive and the lands hard to subdue. A statute designed to assist the irrigation farmers under the Newlands project in leveling their lands was once before this court for review. State v. Churchill County, 185 P. 459, 43 Nev. 290.
In this instance the board of directors of the district levied an assessment of from $10.15 per acre down to $4.91 per acre against the lands in question to pay the cost of the proposed drainage system. The company protested the assessment and the board appointed a committee to make an investigation of the lands, and subsequently, by resolution, reduced the prior apportionment of benefits to $4.29 per acre. The company now contends that the entire acreage, except 126 acres, is not susceptible of irrigation, because of the high alkali content and exceeding roughness, and that the lands cannot with profit be subdued, and any assessment of benefits to accrue from the construction of a drainage system cannot possibly result in benefit to the lands. Furthermore, it is contended that the board of directors applied a different rule of assessment to the company's lands from that applied to other lands, and that the assessment is arbitrary and discriminatory, and, also, that the lands are without a water right. We do not understand upon what theory it can be successfully asserted that the apportionment of benefits denies the company the equal protection of the laws or deprives it of due process of law.
Counsel insist that the proof shows that the lands, with the exception of 126 acres thereof, are not susceptible of irrigation, and in support of this contention rely upon the testimony of the company's engineer and the testimony of one of the protestants in this case. We concede that, if we were dealing with a question of the cost and maintenance of an irrigation system, and the company's lands were charged with an assessment for its maintenance and protection, when in fact the land was not, and could not be, benefited by irrigation; we should decide that a legal fraud would result from the assessment. Northern Pacific Railway Company v. Walla Walla County, 116 Wash. 684, 200 P. 586. But, on the other hand, the owner of irrigable land within an irrigation district must respond to assessments where water is made available for his use, though the water is not used. Otis Orchards Co. v. Otis Orchards Irr. Dist. No. 1 et al., 215 P. 23, 124 Wash, 510. It is conceded or must be conceded, that the question of whether land is susceptible of irrigation or not is one of fact, and likewise is a question of benefits. We might dispose of counsels' argument by saying that the evidence bearing upon the question of the irrigability of the land in question was submitted to the trial court upon evidence in which there is a substantial conflict, and that under the rule we are in no position to disturb the assessment. But, as pointed out in the opinion on rehearing in Nampa & Meridian Irr. Dist. v. Petrie, 223 P. 531, 38 Idaho, 529, where the assessment is for the drainage project, it must be based on benefits derived from it, and not on benefits derived from irrigation. Therefore, whether the land in question was susceptible of irrigation or not is not controlling. We are not called upon in this case to determine just what may be considered in determining whether or not land benefits from the consideration of a drainage project. The rule is 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. As a general rule, the benefit contemplated by the statute does result in an increase in the value of the land. There may be some cases where there is an actual benefit, though it is not possible to prove an actual increase in value. It is sufficient if an actual benefit' accrues. Nampa & Meridian Irr. Dist. v. Petrie, supra, on rehearing. As to the question of benefits the trial court was the exclusive judge, and, not having misapplied any principle in arriving at the confirmation of the apportionment of benefits to accrue to the company's land from the construction of the drainage system, upon conflicting evidence we are not in position to disturb the court's findings and grant the company a new trial.
July 30, 1926.
The respective orders denying protestants' motions for a new trial are affirmed.