Court Opinion

ID: 8656129
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-24 21:16:07.40283+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:56:43.574736
License: Public Domain

FRICK, J.
The plaintiff brought this action in equity against the defendant, as county treasurer of Uintah county, Utah, to enjoin him from collecting a special tax assessed by. the New Hope Irrigation District on certain real property owned by plaintiff. After making the necessary allegations of inducement, the plaintiff in his complaint among other things alleged :
'‘That the pretended assessment against the plaintiff and his said lands of the said purported tax item given as ‘N Hope,’ as above described, was not and could not be legally made, for the reason that at the time of the pretended organization of said New Hope Irrigation District, and for many years immediately prior thereto, to wit, ever since the year 1906, the plaintiff, as co-owner with others, had constructed a ditch, and had conveyed through said ditch water to his *57said lands as hereinbefore described, and had used said water on the said lands for irrigation and other beneficial purposes. Said water had been obtained under application No. 1090 in the office of the state engineer of the state of Utah, and the said ditch had been constructed and completed to the satisfaction of the said state engineer, and the said state engineer has now finally approved the said application 1090 and this plaintiff, ever since the filing of the said application, has been the owner of said water right for the irrigation of said lands. That said water applied for and obtained under said application is now, and at all times since the same was conveyed on said lands has been, ample and sufficient to properly' irrigate for the raising of agricultural crops of all kinds the whole of said 160 acres of land owned by the plaintiff as aforesaid, and the said lands of this plaintiff are and always have been wholly exempt from the operation of the laws of the state of Utah governing irrigation districts. That the pretended officers of said New Hope Irrigation District have always known of the appropriation of the said water by this plaintiff for his lands as aforesaid, and have- known of the construction and completion of the said irrigation ditch.by the plaintiff as aforesaid.”
The plaintiff further alleged that said irrigation district was not organized for the purpose of purchasing, etc., the irrigation ditch mentioned in plaintiff’s complaint; that the tax in question was void, for the reason that the statute authorizing the irrigation district aforesaid was invalid; and that the defendant threatened to, and would, unless restrained, advertise and sell plaintiff’s said real property.
The defendant appeared in the action, and in answer to the allegations of the complaint which we have hei'etofore set forth averred as follows:
‘‘The defendant denies on information and belief that the plaintiff’s land described in said amended complaint at the time of the organization, of the New Hope Irrigation District was exempt from the operation of the irrigation district laws of the state of Utah under which said irrigation district was organized. Defendant alleges on information and belief that the ditch mentioned * * * was a temporary ditch, and *58that the plaintiff had no vested right in said ditch, and that he was merely licensed to use the said ditch until such time as the system of canals and laterals, which the New Hope Irrigation District was organized to purchase and construct, should be sufficiently completed to be available for carrying water to plaintiff’s said land; that the plaintiff was, at the time of the organization of said’ district, a stockholder in the New Hope Irrigation Company, and that said company was at that time engaged in the construction of permanent canals and laterals for the purpose of irrigating the plaintiff’s land described in said amended complaint, together with other land embraced in the New Hope Irrigation District as now constituted ; and that the New Hope Irrigation District was organized to purchase, complete, and operate the said canals and irrigation works owned by the said New Hope Irrigation Company at the time of the organization of said' district.”
The allegations in the complaint were based upon the proviso contained in section 1 of chapter 74, Laws of Utah 1909, which reads as follows:
“Provided, 'that where ditches, canals, or reservoirs have been constructed before the passage of this act, such ditches, canals, reseiwoirs and franchises, and the lands ' watered thereby, shall be exempt from the operation of this law, except such district shall be formed to purchase, acquire, lease or rent such ditches, canals, reservoirs and their franchises.”
It will be seen' that plaintiff’s allegations were also to the effect that the tax in question was illegal, because the officers of the irrigation district had no power or authority to levy a tax on plaintiff’s land, and that the irrigation district was not organized for the purposes stated in the proviso. The defendant joined issue with the plaintiff upon the foregoing allegations.
1, 2 When the ease came on for trial, the plaintiff offered evidence tending to show that his land came within the proviso before quoted, and hence' was not subject to the tax sought to be imposed upon it. The defendant objected to the proposed evidence, upon the ground that it was “irrelevant and immaterial and inadmissible in this suit, ” etc. This objection was based upon section 14 of chap*59ter 74 aforesaid; which, among other things, provides that when the things in said section enumerated have- been- done, and the evidence thereof filed as there provided, and the— “legality of regularity of the formation or organization whereof [the irrigation district] shall not have been questioned by proceedings in quo warranto instituted in the district court of the county in which such district or the greater portion thereof is situated within one year from the date of such filing, [said district] shall be conclusively deemed to be a legally and regularly organized, established and existing irrigation district- within the meaning of this act; and its due and lawful formation and organization shall not thereafter be questioned in any action, suit or proceeding whether brought under the provisions of this act or otherwise.”
From an examination of the things enumerated in the statute which must be made to appear and filed as aforesaid, and in view of the nature of the action, namely, quo warranto, which must be brought within the year, it is obvious that what was intended to be set at rest, unless assailed within a year as aforesaid, were matters pertaining to the formation or- organization of the district only, and not substantive rights which may arise under the proviso we have referred to. Just what questions of fact may thus be settled by the action of the county commissioners in organizing a district cannot and need not now be considered. Moreover, the lands and ditches mentioned in the proviso may lie within the boundaries of the district in whole or in part, but the owner cannot for that reason assail the formation or organization of the district. Nor can Ave see how he can claim exemption from taxation for the benefit of the district .as organized until his land is attempted to be taxed for district purposes. Indeed, his land may not be attempted to be taxed until after the expiration of the year within which, under the statute, the regularity or legality of the organization of the district must be assailed.
Again, the landowner, who asserts Ms rights under the proviso by an action like the one at bar, in no way assails the regularity of the organization or the legal existence of the district.. His action may be determined either Avay; that is, *60Ms land may by the court be held exempt under the proviso, or it may be held not exempt, and yet the organization of the district and its legal existence remain the same as if no action had been commenced. Such is also the logic -of the decision in the case of Lundberg v. Irrigation District, 40 Utah, 83, 119 Pac. 1039, where wc held the act in question not vulnerable to the constitutional objections there urged against it. We there said:
‘‘To avoid any misconception, however, we desire to state that by what we have said we intend to and do pass upon the constitutionality of the law in question only. By anything said or omitted it is not intended to foreclose any landowner from seeking redress in the courts for any legal injury he may suffer by reason of the application of the law in question. If it should develop, therefore, in the application of the law, that certain lands within a certain irrigation district cannot be irrigated or benefited by the irrigation system, which is owned by the district and which is constructed under the law in question, the owner of lands within the district in a proper proceeding, timely commenced, may no doubt have the question determined as to whether his lands are being unjustly assessed or burdened to maintain an irrigation system through which his lands can neither be irrigated nor benefited in any way. All such questions are left open for consideration and adjustment when they properly arise."
3 A mere cursory examination of those parts of the pleadings we have set forth also show that both the plaintiff and the defendant regarded the question of whether plaintiff’s land was exempt under the proviso a question of fact. The plaintiff alleged that it was exempt because of the facts stated, and the defendant denied the allegations in that regard. There can be no doubt that the question is at least one of mixed law and fact,' and hence the court should have found the facts and made conclusions of law thereon, and should have entered judgment accordingly. Instead of that the court determined the whole matter upon a motion for a nonsuit. This constituted, reversible error.
4 Plaintiff’s counsel, however, also contend that the act is unconstitutional because it deprives a person whose rights are 'affected from seeking redress in the courts. This contention, for the reasons already pointed out, cannot prevail. There is no reason why the Legislature may not limit the right to assail the regularity of the forma*61tion or organization of a district, provided a- reasonable time is given within which to bring an action for that purpose. This is practically all that is attempted by the limitation imposed in the act in question. If, however, the act should be construed as it seems to have been by the district court, namely, that it bars all actions, regardless of their nature or purpose, if not commenced within a year, a different question would have been presented, and one which it is not necessary at this time to discuss or determine.
5 The plaintiff has also assigned error because the court excluded evidence offered by him to show that the tax in question was illegal, because irregularly assessed. In view of the allegations of the complaint, we are of the opinion that the court committed no error in that regard. The allegations pointed out no particular act or irregularity which would have been sufficient in and of itself to invalidate the tax. While the record is meager and incomplete, yet sufficent appears that the defendant’s objections and the court’s rulings were based upon the insufficiency of the allegations in that regard. In view of the reversal of the judgment, those defects can possibly be cured by amendment.
For the reasons stated, the judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the district court of Uintah county, with directions to proceed with the case in accordance with the views herein expressed, and to hear the evidence and make findings of fact and conclusions of law upon all proper issues presented by the pleadings and enter judgment accordingly. Appellant to recover costs.
STRAUP, C. J., and McCARTY, J., concur.