Valencia Water Co. v. Neilson
Valencia Water Co. v. Neilson
Opinion of the Court
OPINION OP THE COURT.
Appellant was an applicant for appropriation of water under application No. 35 in the office of the state engineer, in which it sought to appropriate certain waters of Bluewater Creek. Its application was allowed, and some work done, various extensions of time applied for and granted, and some time prior to August 2, 1917, it made a further application for extension of time. Appellees were applicants for permit to appropriate waters of said creek under applications Nos. 1,036,1,037,1,038, 1,039, and 1,041. The appellees objected to the extension of time applied for, and asked that said extension be refused and their permits to appropriate granted. The state engineer granted the extension asked for under permit 35, and refused the applications of appellees. From this order an appeal was taken to the board of water commissioners, where the applications were consolidated for the purpose of the hearing. The board heard the evidence, and on the 12th day of January, 1918, entered its order denying the application of appellant for the extension of time, and granting and approving appellees’ applications for permits to appropriate. In February thereafter, and presumably within 30 days, appellant filed notice of appeal with the board of water commissioners, and possibly a bond; this fact not clearly appearing. If the appeal was evgr allowed by the board, and the bond approved, such fact has not been made to appear here.
In October, 1919, appellees here filed in the office of the clerk of the district court of Valencia county, that being the county in which the appropriation was sought, an affidavit by Francis E. Wood, an attorney at law, reciting the facts as to the judgment and decision of the board of water commissioners, the notice of appeal, and that affiant was advised that a bond was filed, and that no further steps had been taken, and a motion was filed, asking the court of Valencia county to dismiss the appeal. Over the objection of appellant, the court docketed the appeal and dismissed it, because of the failure of appellant to perfect the said appeal, or to docket the same in the district court within six months from the time same was granted, or, as the district court put it, the appellant had allowed two terms of the district court to pass since the appeal was allowed without docketing the same in said court. From this order of dismissal, appellant has appealed to this court, and has discussed questions which, in view of our conclusion, are of no importance.
“Notice of such appeal shall be served upon the state engineer and all parties interested within thirty days after notice of such decision, act or refusal to act, and unless such appeal is taken within said time, the action of the state engineer shall be final and conclusive.”
Section 5723 provides that the decision of the board shall be final, subject to appeal to the district court of the district where such work or point of desired appropriation is situated—
“to be taken within sixty days from the date of said decision, upon notice served in the manner and within the time in this article provided for service of notice of appeal from decisions or acts of the state engineer, and upon filing a cost bond in such sum as the board may fix with two or more sureties,” etc.
The language thus far quoted is somewhat confusing, but we believe it was the intention of the Legislature to require notice of the appeal to be given within 30 days from the decision; the filing of the cost bond, which it will be observed is essential, in order to effect an appeal, to be within 60 days; and the perfecting of the appeal by procuring and filing the transcript within such time, provided the board of water commissioners meet and allow an appeal, which action is seemingly required by the provision of the statute hereafter quoted. If said board has acted promptly,. and has allowed the appeal, then it would be the duty of the appellant to file the transcript within 60 days. We quote further from the statute:
“If for any good reason said board should fail to meet and act upon any such appeal within 90 days after the filing of notice thereof with the clerk of said board, the case may be taken before the district court of the district wherein the work done or point of desired appropriation in controversy is situated upon petition and by writ of certiorari directed to said board and served upon the clerk thereof.”
From this it would appear that it was essential that the board shall meet and enter an order allowing the appeal, and that this should be done within 3 months from the date of the entry of the order appealed from; that failure upon the part of the board to so meet and allow the appeal would render the notice of appeal and bond functus officio, and the remedy of the party desiring the appeal would be by certiorari. In other words, it was the intention of the Legislature that prompt action on said appeal should be had and if this could not be procured, by reason of the failure of the board to meet and act, then the matter should be taken before the proper district court by writ of certiorari, in which event, of course, the district court would be able to secure prompt action.
For this reason the appeal to this court will be dismissed; and it is so ordered.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- VALENCIA WATER CO. v. NEILSON
- Cited By
- 10 cases
- Status
- Published
- Syllabus
- SYLLABUS BY THE COURT. 1. An appellate court will not decide abstract, hypothetical, or moot questions, disconnected from the granting of actual relief, or from the determination of which no practical relief can follow. P. 31 2. Section 5723, Code 1915, construed. Held, that an interested party, dissatisfied with the decision of the board of water commissioners upon any matter appealed to it apd from the state engineer, may appeal from such decision of the board by filing a notice of appeal with the board and serving same upon all parties interested within 30 days after such decision by the said board; that the board of water commissioners fixes the amount of the bond to be given by the appellant, and is required to enter an order allowing the appeal. If such order is entered in time, it is the duty of the appellant to procure and file a transcript, or the record of all proceedings with reference to the controversy, in the office of the clerk of the district court to which the appeal is taken within 60 days. If by reason of the nonaction of the board this cannot be done within such time, the appeal might be perfected at any time within three months. If the board fails to meet and act within three months, then the notice of the appeal and bond become functus officio, and the decision of such board -can be reviewed only upon petition and by writ of certiorari, directed to said board and served upon the clerk thereof. A district court has no jurisdiction to entertain an appeal, where the same has not been allowed by said board within three months from the date of the decision appealed from, and purported action by the district court in docketing and dismissing an appeal not so allowed was without jurisdiction. P. 31 3. An appellate court has no jurisdiction of an appeal in a matter as to which the lower court was without jurisdiction. P. 33