Butte Cty. Water Users' Ass'n v. R.R. Comm'n
Butte Cty. Water Users' Ass'n v. R.R. Comm'n
Opinion of the Court
This is an application by an association of those consumers of the Sutter Butte Canal Company, who were consumers prior to 1920, to annul an order of the Railroad Commission that, beginning with the year 1920, that company serve with water some fourteen thousand four hundred acres of land not theretofore served by it. The company was organized as, and has always been, a public utility company supplying water for irrigation, and its articles of incorporation empower it to sell and distribute water in the counties of Butte and Sutter. It takes its water from the Feather River near Oroville, in Butte County, and its water rights, which are appropriation rights, are all for water for public sale and distribution. From a comparatively small beginning the system of the company was extended and enlarged gradually as the market for its water grew until in 1919 it was supplying some fifty-five thousand, or slightly more, acres of land, mostly in Butte County. In September of that year the company contracted with the owners of fourteen thousand four hundred acres of land in Sutter County that it would extend its system to supply their lands, and pursuant to this contract the company made the necessary enlargements and extensions of its system, at a cost to it of between two hundred thousand dollars and two hundred and fifty thousand dollars. The making of this contract, the enlargement and extension of the company’s system, and the purpose of the company to serve the fourteen thousand four hundred acres of additional lands were, the commission finds, a mat
The matter was promptly heard and decided by the commission, its order being handed down on April 21, 1920. At that time, of course, it was not possible to know with exactness just what water conditions during the summer to come would be. The commission’s decision finds that the fourteen thousand four hundred acres were within the area which the water company was organized to serve and for serving which it had made its water appropriations; that in a normal year the company’s supply of water was adequate for the needs of the fourteen thousand four hundred acres as well as for those of the lands theretofore served; that at the time the contract between the company
“It would be uneconomical, and would retard the development of this state if an irrigation company were restricted in its delivery of water to only that area for which it would have a sufficient supply in the driest years. A restriction such as this would prevent the cultivation of large areas of land which would otherwise be cultivated and produce a crop a very large proportion of the time. As a matter of fact, years of drought such as this do not ordinarily occur more frequently than from ten to twenty year periods, and it would be unjustly restricting the expansion of the agricultural pursuits of the state if a company were permitted to serve only the area for which it would have available water during years of extreme drought and consequent minimum water supply.
“Applicants applying to a utility for an extension of service, whose applications are accepted in good faith by the utility at a time when it could reasonably expect to*223 have available a sufficient supply of water in addition to that needed for the lands theretofore served, should in justice receive their ratable proportion of the available supply if a shortage occurs, even though that shortage may occur prior to the actual delivery of any water to them.”
After the decision, the old consumers petitioned the commission for a rehearing, and, being refused, commenced the present proceeding before this court for the annulment of the commission’s order. The contentions of the petitioner are three in number. The first, as stated by its counsel, is as follows:
“The orders of the Railroad Commission do not make any provision for the supplying of prior consumers before the fourteen thousand four hundred acres are taken care of. On the contrary, said orders specifically direct the Sutter Butte Canal Company to prorate the available supply in the event of a shortage. The effect of this order is to deprive petitioners of property without due process of law and without compensation.”
Assuming that the owners of the fourteen thousand four hundred acres had entered into relationship with the company as consumers, the ground so stated is not so much an attack on the commission’s order as it is on the validity of a statute adopted by the legislature. It may well be that in advancing this ground of attack petitioner’s counsel do not make the assumption stated, but their position on the point is not, entirely clear, and it will make clearer what we believe to be the real point in the ease, if we make the assumption. Assuming, then, that the owners of the fourteen thousand four hundred acres had entered into relationship with the company as consumers, the contention of the petitioner is that the old consumers of a public utility water company have a vested right to water in preference to new consumers, so that in case of a shortage the water is not to be prorated, but the old consumers take all they require and the new consumers get only what is left. But the act of April 25, 1913 (Stats. 1913, p. 84, Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act 4348a), which places water companies under the jurisdiction of the Railroad Commission, provides in section 6 that “as between consumers who have been voluntarily admitted to participate by the corporation in its supply of water or been required to be supplied by an order
But in the case now before the court, the new consumers of the water company, if they properly .became consumers' at all, became such as regular and not as surplus consumers. They were admitted upon the basis of the company having an adequate supply and engaging regularly to supply them. They were, therefore, on an equal footing with the company’s older consumers, provided the assumption with which we started is true, that they had properly been admitted as consumers. Whether they had been so admitted is, we believe, the real question in the ease. It is directly involved in the second contention of the petitioner.
The petitioner’s second contention is stated as follows:
“Concededly the only authority which the Railroad Commission has to make an order in a matter of this kind is that contained in sections 5 and 6 of chapter 80 of the Statutes of 1913. The latter part of section 5 reads as follows:
‘ ‘ ‘ The commission shall likewise have the power after hearing upon its own motion or upon complaint, to require any such water company to allow additional consumers to be served when it shall appear that to supply such additional consumers will not injuriously withdraw the supply wholly or in part from those who theretofore had been supplied by such public utility.’
“This, and this alone, constitutes the authority and the power of the Railroad Commission to make the orders which petitioners ask to have set aside. It is respectfully submitted that there is nowhere in the opinion or the orders under review, in the evidence at the hearing, or in any part of the record a determination, a finding or a statement of any kind that the supply of water available to the Sutter Butte Canal Company during the year 1920 and thereafter will be sufficient to allow additional consumers to be served without injuriously withdrawing the supply in part from those who theretofore have been served by said utility. On the contrary, it affirmatively appears in the evidence and upon the face of the Railroad Commission’s opinion, that the old consumers will be injuriously affected by the delivery of water to the fourteen thousand four hundred acres which has not heretofore been supplied with water. In fact, the com*227 mission recognizing from the evidence that this result will undoubtedly follow makes explicit provision for a prorating of the short supply.”
Epitomizing this, it is that the commission’s only authority in this case was to make an order allowing additional consumers to be served only when it appeared that the former consumers would not be injuriously affected thereby, and that it affirmatively appeared, and the commission found, that there was going to be a shortage of the company’s supply during the coming summer, so that it of necessity appeared that the former consumers would be injured by admitting others to share in the supply.
We are not certain that the commission’s finding was really that the company’s supply would not be adequate during the summer to follow for both the new lands and the old. Its finding is that at the intake of the company’s canal there would be enough water available in the critical month of August for from eighty to ninety per cent of the time to irrigate all the lands, and that in addition the company had a permit from the State Water Commission for the diversion of five hundred second-feet from the Feather River at a point about twelve miles below, where a substantial quantity could be obtained. Nor are we certain that if this finding be one that, with the additional right of diversion mentioned, there would be no shortage, it is without support in the evidence. It was a case where the supply in normal years was more than adequate, and where it was sought to foretell, as well as possible the extent to which that supply would fail during the particular summer because of an exceptionally dry winter just coming to an end. It was largely a matter of guessing, and it would be difficult to say that the commission’s guess that the company would have an adequate supply with what it could get by the further diversion it was authorized to make was so unreasonable as to be without support in the evidence. But however this may be, we may grant for purposes of discussion the contention that it did appear at the time the commission made its order that because of the drought the company’s supply would not be fully adequate during the summer for both the new and the old consumers, and that the commission so found. Even so, it does not follow that the commission’s order was without authority.
The facts in the matter are, as we have said, that in September, 1919, the company and the owners of the new lands contracted for service for those lands; that the company thereupon extended its system and the owners prepared their land, both at very considerable expense; and that prior to January 1, 1920, pursuant to the company’s rules, the respective owners had made application to it for water for the ensuing year, and those applications had been accepted, and the owners had paid the company’s charges.
“Whenever the railroad commission, after a hearing had upon its own motion or upon complaint, shall find that any water company which is a public utility operating within this state has reached the limit of its capacity to supply water and that no further consumers of water can be supplied from the system of such utility without injuriously withdrawing the supply wholly or in part from those who have theretofore been supplied by such corpora*230 tion, the railroad commission may order and require that no such corporation shall furnish water to any new or additional consumers until such order is vacated or modified by the said commission. The commission shall likewise have the power after hearing upon its own motion or upon complaint, to require any such water company to allow additional consumers to be served when it shall appear that to supply such additional consumers will not injuriously withdraw the supply wholly or in part from those who theretofore had been supplied by such public utility.”
It may be claimed with some truth that the commission based this finding in part upon the fact that the normal flow of the Feather River available to the water company, that is, the flow in the critical month of August, averaged over a period of years, is sufficient to supply both the company’s old and its new consumers. It may also be claimed, and is in fact claimed, that such an average is not the true
The testimony of the engineer for the commission was that the average flow of the Feather River in August for the period from 1902 to 1913 was 1,681 second-feet. The
As to the other side of the balance sheet, the demands upon the company’s system which it had assumed by January 1, 1920, the testimony was that they would aggregate • 930 second-feet delivered on the lands, and that about one-third should be allowed for loss in transportation, making the amount required to be diverted 1,395 second-feet. Between this amount and the average flow of the river of 1,681 second-feet, there was then a margin or factor of safety of 286 second-feet. In percentages, there was a margin of twenty per cent of the demands upon the system and of seventeen per cent of the average flow. Comparing the amount of demands, 1,395 second-feet, with the flow in the particular years in the period taken to ascertain the average, it appears that with the exception of one year the lowest flow was 1,350 second-feet, or but 36 second-feet below the demands for 1920. This difference could undoubtedly easily be made up by reduction of wastage and by economies. In other words, the situation when the water company accepted the applications of the new consumers was that the demands upon the company’s system could be met from the natural flow of the river for every year but one in the period of eight years prior to the time when the natural flow was augmented by the power company’s storage.
There was also evidence justifying the conclusion that instead of 935 second-feet delivered being required to meet the demands for 1920, the amount as called for by the company’s contracts and accepted applications was but 884 second-feet. Allowing a loss of one-third in transportation, this would require a diversion of but 1,326 second-feet, and leave a margin of 355 second-feet between the necessary diversion and the average flow of 1,681 second-feet. There
It is not possible, in view of these figures and this evidence, to say that the commission was not justified in finding that the action of the company in taking on new consumers prior to January 1st, and before the dry character of the winter had become apparent, was reasonable and proper, even assuming that a factor of safety below the average flow of the river should have been allowed. The evidence showed that such a factor existed and in a substantial amount. What the factor should be was a matter of judgment for the company in the first instance, and for the commission in the second. It is a factor that must vary from locality to locality and from system to system. It is necessarily higher in extremely arid localities and in localities where the normal fluctuations in rainfall are high, and it is to be noted that Sutter and Butte Counties are not of this character, and that in both crops can be grown and even orchards maintained without irrigation. It is not possible for us to say that the factor in this case was too small.
It should be said that in computing the water company’s available supply counsel for the petitioner deduct from the figures we have stated six hundred second-feet diverted by the Western Canal Company, or which that company claims the right to divert. But we do not follow them in making such deduction. There is nothing to show that the right of the Sutter Butte Canal Company is not a prior right so far as the natural flow of the river is concerned, and it does appear that it 'was diverting water long before the Western Company. It also appears, inferentially at least, that the water claimed by the latter is water the Great Western Power Company stores in the mountains and releases in the summer; in other words, is water which is not a part of the natural flow in summer. It is for this reason, as we have said, that the high average flow in the years subsequent to 1913, when the reservoir of the power company was completed, was disregarded by the commission’s engineer in computing the average natural flow.
It should also be said, even at the expense of repetition, that the case was presented to the commission and has been presented to us almost entirely as if the question involved
We have discussed the case upon the assumption that the company had the right under the appropriation under which it was diverting water and supplying it to the old consumers to divert the further amount required to supply the new consumers, if the water were there to divert. This right is questioned in argument, but the facts, if they exist, which would negative the right were not shown. It does appear that the appropriation right claimed by the company was for one thousand five hundred second-feet. This was more than enough for both the old and new consumers. If the company did not in fact have the right to this amount or the right to divert a greater amount than it had previously been diverting, that fact should have been shown. The case as presented to the commission by the old consumers was practically one where relief was sought against the company supplying the new consumers on the ground solely that a shortage in the natural supply due to a season of extreme drought was threatened. The commission’s order
The conclusion so reached is decisive of the ease, and renders unnecessary the consideration of the petitioner’s third contention. It is really a contention by way of reply to one made by the company and the Sutter County consumers. The latter claimed that there had been a previous dedication of water for use on the Sutter County lands because water had in a preceding year been delivered to a small portion of them. The commission found that water had been so delivered, and the third contention of the Butte County consumers was that such delivery was not a dedication of water to those lands. But it is evident, in view of what we have said, that it is wholly immaterial whether this contention be correct or not. The owners of the Sutter County lands had nevertheless been properly admitted as consumers by the water company, and this fact required that they be served without preference against them.
Order affirmed.
Lennon, J., Wilbur, J., Sloane, J., Angellotti, C. J., and Lawlor, J., concurred.
Concurring Opinion
If the petitioners had shown that the water company had originally, by its declarations to proposed consumers, or by acts evincing to them an intention to that effect, held out that it proposed to use its water supply, so far as was necessary, for irrigation and other uses upon a definite area or district of farming land, embracing the lands of such consumers, including the petitioners, and that in pursuance of this purpose it had constructed a system of canals extending to said lands and no further, and had obtained consumers in that district on the faith of such purpose, and thereafter supplied them with water through said canals, I think it is clear, both from the Civil Code (sec. 552), from our decisions on the subject, and from considerations of sound public policy and justice, that such consumers would have a right to insist on the continuance of the supply to their lands, that such right would be paramount to that of consumers in any newly formed district to which the water company might afterward undertake to supply water, and that such new users would be
But as I understand the case, the petitioners did not attempt to show such conditions. Their theory appears to he that the water company did construct its canals to the region in which their lands are situated and by means thereof did supply water to their lands, and that inasmuch as this canal system was thus maintained and this water so supplied for a number of years without taking on new consumers, except for lands lying “under said canals,” as the phrase goes, and without extending its canals to distinctly new territory, the water of the company must now be deemed to have been dedicated exclusively to the use of these first consumers and to lands lying “under said canals,” so far as may be necessary for beneficial uses on said lands, and that consumers in other territories can have no right except to the surplus.
These facts do not establish the exclusive dedication so claimed. They do not show the intent to confine the service of water to the first users alone, and they are entirely consistent with the existence of the intent on the part of the company to continue the extending of their system and the service of a part of their original supply to other users in other territory.
The evidence shows that the rights of the original users of the water included among the petitioners, for the most part at least, were obtained under contracts with the Sutter Butte Canal Company to serve water to particular tracts of land belonging to particular consumers for- the term of the corporate existence of said company and at specified rates per acre for each year, and that these agreements contained a clause whereby the canal company reserved the right to “contract for the delivery of a thousand cubic feet of water per second,” and provided that when its water supply became less than one thousand cubic feet per second, each user should be entitled only to a proportional share thereof. They also declared that the water right thereby created should be appurtenant to the land described. By these contracts the company agreed to deliver water at the rate of a constant flow of one second-foot for every 160 acres of
The reservation by the aforesaid contracts, giving the company the right to make like contracts for supplying at least one thousand second-feet of water and to compel the land owners to prorate the water when less than that quantity was available, shows that the original proposal of the company was that the company would devote a water supply amounting to one thousand second-feet, constant flow, to all land owners who applied for water for irrigation of their land, under such contracts, until the water so contracted for amounted to that quantity, that the water used should not exceed the rate of three second-foot for each quarter-
I am of the opinion that if the company had thus disposed of this entire supply, it would have amounted to a dedication of that quantity of water to public use for irrigation exclusively upon the lands described in the several contracts, and that neither the company nor the Railroad Commission could enlarge the dedication or expand the territory entitled thereto, so as to give to other lands an equal right to receive water out of that one thousand second-feet in common with the lands described in such contracts. The land so described would be entitled to preference in such use and other lands could rightfully receive water only from the surplus remaining after the rightful users had taken the quantity they had respectively contracted for so far as it was required for beneficial uses on their lands. (Civ. Code, sec. 552; Merrill v. Southside Irr. Co., 112 Cal. 435, [44 Pac. 720]; Palmer v. Railroad Com., 167 Cal. 174, [138 Pac. 997]; Del Mar etc. Co. v. Eshleman, 167 Cal. 681, [140 Pac. 591, 948]; South Pasadena, v. Pasadena etc. Co., 152 Cal. 588, [93 Pac. 490]; Thayer v. California Dev. Co., 164 Cal. 135, [128 Pac. 21] ; Riverside Land Co. v. Jarvis, 174 Cal. 321, 322, 324, [163 Pac. 54]; Fallbrook Irr. Dist. v. Bradley, 164 U. S. 161, 162, [41 L. Ed. 369, 17 Sup. Ct. Rep. 56, see, also, Rose’s U. S. Notes].)
But here it does not appear that the company had yet dedicated the whole of this one thousand second-feet at the time it proposed to supply the additional fourteen thousand
I wish to say further that the mere fact that the notice of appropriation under which the water company originally diverted the water from the Feather River named the counties of Sutter and Butte as the places of use has, in my opinion, no significance whatever with respect to the question of the dedication of the water to any particular use or place. The facts in that respect are not essentially different from those considered in Palmer v. Railroad Com., 167 Cal. 174, [138 Pac. 997]; wherein it was held that the dedication of the water taken under appropriation notices designating the place of use by similar indefinite statements would be manifested only by the actual taking of the water and supplying it to particular tracts or districts of land, and that the appropriation notices did not constitute such dedication. I mention this because from the proceedings before the Railroad Commission it appears to have been assumed that these clauses in the appropriation notices constituted a dedication of the water to public use upon all the land embraced in the two counties named.
For these reasons I concur in the conclusion that the Railroad Commission acted within its powers in making the order here sought to be reviewed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- BUTTE COUNTY WATER USERS' ASSOCIATION (a Corporation) v. RAILROAD COMMISSION OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
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- Published