Court Opinion

ID: 3548048
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2016-07-05 23:00:41.714217+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T13:39:02.033202
License: Public Domain

Appellants contend that the statute (sec. 7945 N.C.L.) is plain, simple and unambiguous, and that the burden was upon the applicant, McGregor, to see that his corrected or amended application was actually refiled in the office of the state engineer within sixty days from the date of return endorsed on said application.
If the running of the sixty-day period begins with the receipt of the returned application, as found by the lower court and as contended by respondent, how, and in what manner, can the state engineer endorse the date of return upon the application, when such application is in the hands of the applicant or his agent, and how can he make a record of the same in his office? The statute means, certainly, that the state engineer must endorse the date of return upon the application before it leaves his office, and make a record of same for the purpose of starting the sixty-day period. The state engineer has no way of knowing or determining what day the applicant receives the application, as the statute does not require that it be sent by registered mail, and he would have no application in his office to endorse.
There is a wide difference between the meaning of the words "return" and "receipt," and had the legislature meant sixty days from the time of receipt, the statute would have been so expressed.
We contend that the act of the state engineer of using the United States mails as a means of transporting the returned application is proper in this day and age. *Page 414 
Definitions and judicial interpretations of the word "return" show its meaning to be an actual physical return to the persons to whom it is to be returned — an actual delivery. Webster's New International Dictionary; Harpending v. Haight, 39 Cal. 189; Tuttle v. City of Boston (Mass.), 102 N.E. 350; Hornage v. Imboden (W.Va.), 49 S.E. 1036.
Under other sections of the water code, where notices may be given by mailing, publication or registered mail, the method is specifically stated. It will be noted that section 60 contains no provision for the return by ordinary mail or by registered mail, or in any other fashion.
Judicial determination of the constitutionality of the water code is based primarily upon the fact that the provisions of the act are so carefully drawn as to insure the giving of notice of all the proceedings, and a construction of section 60 permitting the mere mailing of the notice (without express statutory provision therefor) as sufficient to start the sixty-day period running, would be out of line with the following decisions: Ormsby County v. Kearney, 27 Nev. 314, 142 P. 803; Bergman v. Kearney, 241 Fed. 884.
Not only was the application to be returned, but such return was to be accompanied by "advice of the reasons therefor." The word "advice" in this sense has, of course, its common meaning of "notice." such being the case, we have a clear statutory requirement that notice must be given. Accordingly, the sixty-day period for filing the corrected application must commence to run from the date of said return and notice. It is a well-settled rule of law that where a statute requires notice to be given, actual personal notice is required, and the notice must be personally served on the person to be notified. 20 R.C.L. 343.
The state engineer had no authority to prescribe a shorter period than sixty days for the return of the amended application. Yet in this instance he sent a notice requiring the amended or corrected application *Page 415 
to be filed within a period of fifty-nine days from the date the original was mailed from his office.
 OPINION
This proceeding was instituted in the district court by respondent to have annulled and set aside an order of the state engineer made on the 25th day of June, 1934, canceling the former's application to that officer for permission to appropriate waters of Martin creek, in Elko County, Nevada.
The state engineer answered, and, upon the trial, Harold Wm. Merritt was, by order of the court, permitted to appear in said proceeding in support of the position of the state engineer as a person who may have been affected by the former's order or decision. Upon the conclusion of the proceeding, the court rendered judgment annulling and setting aside said order. The judgment also ordered and directed the state engineer forthwith to reinstate respondent's application with a priority as of date of November 1, 1933, and to proceed with the said application as amended or corrected in the manner required by law. The appeal was taken by both the state engineer and Harold Wm. Merritt, intervener.
The facts upon which the judgment was rendered are as follows: The application of respondent to appropriate 1,500 acre-feet of the public waters from Martin creek within the county of Elko, State of Nevada, was filed in the office of the state engineer at Carson City, Nevada, on the 1st day of November, 1933, by his agent, C.F. De Armond, and to which was assigned serial No. 9709. On the 20th day of April, 1934, the state engineer mailed at Carson City, Nevada, addressed to respondent in care of C.F. De Armond, at Elko, Nevada, by registered mail, the said application for correction, with the return date placed thereon by said state engineer, the same being the 20th *Page 416 
day of April, 1934, accompanied by advice of the reason for the return of the application, and therein giving additional information concerning the corrections he desired, and further informing applicant that the amended application and supporting map must be filed in his office on or before the 18th day of June (being 59 days from and after the 20th day of April, 1934), and said notice contained the further advice that, if the application, properly corrected, be returned within 60 days, the same would be refiled, retaining the priority of its original filing. This latter advice did not inform applicant whether the 60-day period started running from the date of the mailing at Carson City, Nevada, on April 20, 1934, or the date of its receipt by applicant. The returned application and accompanying advice were actually received at Elko, Nevada, by registered mail, by one W.H. Settlemeyer, the partner or business associate of the said C.F. DeArmond, on the 24th day of April, 1934.
On June 18, 1934, the said C.F. De Armond, as the agent of respondent, deposited in the United States mail at Elko, Nevada, the amended application accompanied by a map, as required by the state engineer. The same was delivered to and filed in the office of the state engineer on the 20th day of June, 1934, 61 days from and after the 20th day of April, 1934, the date upon which the same was mailed at Carson City, Nevada, by the state engineer. Under date of June 25, 1934, the state engineer, by and through H.W. Reppert, assistant state engineer, by letter addressed to respondent in care of C.F. DeArmond, at Elko, Nevada, advised respondent as follows: "Your application No. 9709, which was filed with this office on November 1, 1933, has been cancelled by this office for the reason that the amended application, with supporting map, was not re-filed with this office within the statutory period of sixty days."
On the last-mentioned date the state engineer, in like manner, made a similar notation of cancelation upon the said original application and a similar record in the office of the state engineer. Under date of April 23, *Page 417 
1934, appellant Harold Wm. Merritt filed his application in the office of the state engineer for said waters of said Martin creek, and which application was assigned serial No. 9742.
Appellants assign as error misconstruction by the trial court of the provisions of section 7945 N.C.L., being section 60 of the water code, in annulling and setting aside the order of the state engineer. The section reads: "Upon receipt of an application, which shall be upon a blank form to be prescribed by the state engineer, and supplied the applicant without charge, it shall be the duty of the state engineer to make an endorsement thereon of the date of its receipt, and to keep a record of the same. If upon examination the application is found to be defective, it shall be returned for correction or completion with advice of the reasons therefor, and the date of the return thereof shall be endorsed upon the application and made a record of his office. No application shall lose its priority of filing on account of such defects; provided, the application, properly corrected and accompanied by such maps and drawings as may be required, is filed in the office of the state engineer within sixty (60) days from the date of said return to applicant. Any application returned for correction, or completion, not refiled in proper form within the said sixty days shall be canceled. All applications which shall comply with the provisions of the act shall be recorded in a suitable book kept for that purpose."
As noted in the foregoing statement of facts, respondent's amended application was filed 61 days after the return date endorsed on the application and 57 days after the defective application was received.
The question presented for determination is whether the time for filing an amended application begins to run from the return date endorsed on the application by the state engineer or from the date it is received by the applicant or his authorized agent. The court concluded that it begins to run from the date of receipt. Hence the judgment for respondent. *Page 418
1. Respondent contends that the intention of the legislature that the time shall begin to run from the date of receipt is manifested by the word "return" employed in the section, which, it is argued, can be satisfied only by an actual, physical delivery of the defective application, accompanied by the advice mentioned in the section, to the applicant or his agent. In support of this argument we are referred to the definition of the word "return" as found in Webster's New International Dictionary as follows: "To bring, carry, put, or send, back."
We think the intention that the time for filing an amended application shall start to run from the date endorsed on the defective application, even though it is prior to the date of receipt, is plainly indicated by all the language of the section.
Let us requote a part thereof having an immediate bearing upon the question: "If upon examination the application is found to be defective, it shall be returned for correction or completion with the advice of the reason therefor, and the date of the return thereof shall be endorsed upon the application and made a record of his office."
Practical effect was given to this language by the method employed by the state engineer in delivering the defective application to respondent. The date was endorsed upon it, a record thereof made in his office, and the document at once started on the way to respondent through the United States mail, an agency reasonably adapted to bring it to him without delay. This method of delivery is not inhibited by the statute; it enables the state engineer to perform the duties of his office in a convenient, orderly, and reasonable manner; and it seems to be a logical deduction that it is within the scope of the statute.
On the contrary, to give to said word "return" the meaning of actual physical delivery to an applicant would involve a strained procedure in order to comply with the mandate that the date thereof be endorsed upon the defective application by the state engineer. *Page 419 
To do this it would be necessary to hand it to the applicant, perhaps, in a remote part of the state, at the same time endorsing the date of delivery upon it, or, to comply literally with the idea of a complete return, get the defective application back from him, make such endorsement, redeliver it, and thereafter make a record of the transaction in the office of the state engineer. We are satisfied that no such procedure is contemplated by the statute, at least exclusively. The word "return" is to be harmonized with the other parts of the section.
2. It is a cardinal rule of construction that a statute should be construed so as to give effect, if possible, to all its parts. Garson v. Steamboat Canal Co., 43 Nev. 298, 185 P. 801,1119. And to effect this it is often necessary to restrict or extend the ordinary and usual meaning of words. 59 C.J. 978.
We are referred to the cases of Harpending v. Haight, 39 Cal. 189, 2 Am. Rep. 432, and Tuttle v. City of Boston, 215 Mass. 57,102 N.E. 350, for a construction of the word "return" in harmony with respondent's contention. These cases are not in point, because it is plain that the constitutions involved contemplated an actual physical delivery.
Respondent contends that the section is one providing for notice, and refers us to the rule stated in 20 R.C.L. 343. The statute is not of that character. It is itself notice to all applicants of how an application to appropriate the public waters of the state may be made effective.
3. Complaint is made of the state engineer having included in his advice the erroneous statement that the amended application and supporting map must be filed in his office on or before the 18th day of June, 1934 (being 59 days from and after the 20th day of April, 1934). It is not apparent how the respondent was misled by this statement, as he did not deposit his amended application in the post office at Elko, Nevada, addressed to the state engineer until June 18, 1934. The advice this officer is required to give does *Page 420 
not include informing an applicant of the time within which he may legally file an amended application.
The judgment should be reversed.
It is so ordered.