Reitzer v. Medina Valley Irrigation Co.
Reitzer v. Medina Valley Irrigation Co.
Opinion of the Court
This is a suit by Albert Reit-zer against the Irrigation Company, Thomas B. Palfrey, C. I-I. Kearney, White Caldwell, Willis Ranney, Frank Carson, . Fagan, Elwood, Terley, Kelley, Neil Henson, C. Lama-doux, and “Crusher Bill” to compel them to open the dam on the Medina river, in Medina county, in a way to cause the waters accumulated and to accumulate above it to flow rapidly through it, so “that there will be no danger from water impounded in the reservoir by it of injuring or destroying the land, riparian rights, personal property, and body of plaintiff, as well as the bodies of plaintiff’s family, until the writ of injunction is modified, altered, or dissolved,” and to cause appellees to “desist and refrain from building the dam any higher than it is now, so long as by doing so the dam would be liable to impound waters in the reservoir in such quantities and volume that same would endanger the land, riparian rights, and personal property of plaintiff, as well as the lives and bodies of plaintiff and family.” Attached as exhibits to the petition are two letters, one dated May 7, 1912, and the other June 18, 1912, in which the Irrigation Company admitted that the dam would back the waters over the lands and houses of appellants, and a desire is expressed to pay for the property the damages assessed by disinterested arbitrators; their award to be final. The company also offered to advance enough money to move or replace the improvements on the land and defray other expenses. Appellant pleaded that he owned 253.4 acres of land lying on the Medina river, on which he has a dwelling, outhouses, fences, and other property; that the land lies in such a position that the waters caught and held by the dam would flood it, and that the land is worth more than $100 an acre, and the personal property more than $1,000; that the impounded waters have already covered a portion of appellant’s land. On August 9, 1912, an order was issued, commanding appellees “to open all openings, floodgates, and other exits for water in said dam in such way as not to cause waters of the Medina river to overflow any or all of plaintiffs’ said lands.” On August ,12, 1912, ap-pellees filed a petition for removal of the cause to the District Court of the United States for the Western District of Texas, on the grounds that the amount in controversy- exceeded $3,000, and that the Irriga *381 tion Company was a citizen of the state of Colorado; that the other defendants were officers, employés, and agents of the company, and have no right, title, or interest in the dam. It was also alleged that a suit had been filed by the Irrigation Company in the federal court to condemn the land of the plaintiff. On August 15, .1912, the district judge ordered the cause removed to the federal court. On August 29th the cause was remanded by the federal court to the state district court. In the answer it was alleged that Albert Reitzer had estopped himself by his acts from obtaining the relief sought by him, and the relief prayed for by Reitzer would result in the destruction of the dam and cause damage in not less than $1,000,000. The wife of Reitzer joined in a supplemental petition, in which it was alleged that the land was the homestead of appellants. The cause was heard on October 29, 1912, and it was ordered that the temporary restraining order “be set aside and revoked.”
The following findings of fact, set out in the decree of the district judge, are adopted by this court:
“Albert Reitzer and wife, Adelheid Reit-zer, are residents of Medina county, Tex., and the owners of the property in controversy in this suit, and reside on it as a homestead, as alleged in their petition. The defendant herein, the Medina Valley Irrigation Company, is a corporation duly chartered and incorporated under the laws of the state of Colorado and has a permit from the Secretary of State to do business in this state.
“The said defendant, the Medina Valley Irrigation Company, is the owner of and succeeding to all of the rights and properties of what was known as the Medina Irrigation Company. The transfer by the said Medina Irrigation Company to the Medina Valley Irrigation Company of Colorado was effected on March 21, 1912, and included all of the rights and properties in and to the dam and irrigation properties and premises.
“The said Medina Irrigation Company of Texas and the other individual defendants named in plaintiffs’ petition have not answered herein, and they are not necessary parties to the determination of any matter involved in this suit and have no interest in the matters involved, save and except such as may arise on the part of some of the individual defendants named, arising out of the fact that they are the agents or em-ployés of the Medina Valley Irrigation Company.
“The said Medina Valley Irrigation Company, a corporation duly chartered under the laws of the state of Colorado, did, on July 5, 1912, institute and file in the District Court of the United States, at San Antonio, Tex., a suit or proceeding wherein said corporation is the plaintiff and Albert Reitzer and wife are made the defendants, and wherein it is sought to have the same lands described in plaintiffs’ petition in this case condemned for reservoir and irrigation purposes ; it being alleged in said suit that said lands are of the value of not less than $4,-756. In said-suit in the United States court said Medina Valley Irrigation Company sets up and alleges that it is chartered for irrigation purposes, and for the purpose of building dams, constructing storage reservoirs, for milling and waterworks purposes, and other matters; and, further, that it has the right of eminjent domain under the laws of Texas. On July 12, 1912, citation was duly issued in said cause by the clerk of said court, and served upon Albert Reitzer and wife, Adelheid Reitzer, three weeks prior to the presentation to the district judge of the petition in this cause.”
The facts show, in addition, that Reitzer knew, in April or May, 1911, before work began on the dam, that it would cause water to flood his land. He not only knew that, but assisted in building the dam and negotiated for a settlement in the fall of 1911. The dam is a mile from the nearest point on Reitzer’s land. He swore: “I always knew, if the dam was completed, it was going to take my land; that the object of the dam was to cover my land with the lake of water. I didn’t object to it, because I always thought they would pay me for my land, and I would give it to them and let them have it. The trouble between us now is that they are not offering me as much as I want for the land. If they paid me all I want for the land, I would move out now. I never objected to them building that dam. I wanted them to pay me money and buy my land, and that is what I want right now.” The Irrigation Company offered to pay Reitzer $4,756.95 for the land that would be submerged. No objection was ever made by Reitzer to the building of the dam, which caused an expenditure of nearly $1,000,000.
The right to compensation for land, before it is appropriated under the power of eminent domain, is one which, like a vast number of rights, may be waived. The owner may waive prepayment; and acquiescence in the taking, without insisting upon prepayment, has beeh held to amount to such waiver. Lewis, Em. Dom. § 455; Lewis v. Seattle, 5 Wash. 741, 32 Pac. 794; Road Co. v. Orr, 67 N. H. 541, 41 Atl. 665; United States v. Great Falls Mfg. Co., 112 U. S. 645, 5 Sup. Ct. 306, 28 L. Ed. 846; High on Inj. 618.
There is no allegation of insolvency of the corporation,' and appellant has an adequate legal remedy for the flooding of his land and the destruction of his property; and, after leading the corporation to make vast expenditures of money, he cannot destroy such property with the aid of a court of equity. As said by High in his work on Injunctions (section 643): “And where the owner of land over which a railroad has been constructed has stood quietly by and neglected to insist upon compensation at the time his land was taken, and has waited until the road was in full operation before asserting his rights, he will not be permitted to restrain its operation; his only remedy being to have his damages assessed and enforced against the railroad.” A number of authorities are cited to sustain the language used by the writer, in one of which (Goodwin v. Railway, 18 Ohio St. 169, 98 Am. Dec. 95) it is said: “Consid--erations of public policy, as well as recognized principles of justice between parties, re *383 quire that we should hold in such cases that the property cannot be reclaimed, and that there only remains to him a right of compensation. The injunction in the present case might have been sought at the first known attempt, or even threat, to despoil the canal, or to construct the railroad upon its line. The omission to do so is an implied assent. The work being completed, the public, as well as those directly interested in the road as stockholders and creditors, have a right to insist on the application of the rule that he who will not speak when he should will not be allowed to speak when he would.”
In the ease of Roberts v. Northern P. R. R. Co., 158 U. S. 1, 15 Sup. Ct. 756, 39 L. Ed. 873, it was said: “So, too, it has been frequently held that if a landowner, knowing that a railroad company has entered upon his land, and is engaged in constructing its road without having complied with the statute requiring either payment by agreement or proceedings to condemn, remains inactive and permits them to go on and expend large sums in the work, he will be estopped from maintaining either trespass or ejectment for the entry, and will be regarded as having acquiesced therein, and be restricted to a suit for damages.”
In the case of Penn Mutual Life Ins. Co. v. City of Austin, 168 U. S. 685, 18 Sup. Ct. 223, 42 L. Ed. 626, it was held: “The requirement of diligence, and the loss of the right to invoke the arm of a court of equity in case of laches, is' particularly applicable where the subject-matter of the controversy is a public work. In a case of this nature, where a public expenditure has been made, or a public work undertaken, and where one having full opportunity to prevent its accomplishment has stood by and seen the public work proceed, a court of equity will more readily consider laches.” The laches referred to is not a matter of time, but is principally a question of the injustice of permitting one to sit by until money has been largely expended, and then seek, through an equitable remedy, to destroy the sums invested.
The authorities, state and federal, áre reviewed in New York v. Pine, 185 U. S. 93, 22 Sup. Ct. 592, 46 L. Ed. 820, and the court held in consonance with the quotations herein made. Authorities on the subject are overwhelming. In the Pine Case the Supreme Court conservatively says: “These views do not justify the conclusion that a court of equity assumes a general right to ignore or supersede statutory provisions for the ascertainment of the amount of compensation in cases of condemnation. They simply mean that a failure to pursue statutory remedies is not always fatal to the rights of the party in possession, and that sometimes, if full and adequate compensation is made to the plaintiff, the possession of the defendant will not be disturbed.” In the case now at bar the Irrigation Company is willing and anxious to pay for the land, and if appellants sought to recover their damages they would be decreed by the district court, and an injunction awarded in case they were not paid. Or, if appellants sought such relief, the district court, under its ample powers, could require the Irrigation Company to give a sufficient bond to secure appellants in their damages, whether they were ascertained by the federal court or in any other way. The court has ample power to protect appellants in all their rights by the exercise of legal remedies, and appellants are in no position to invoke the equitable remedy of injunction at this time. Whenever the time arrives, the courts of Texas will be prompt to exert all of their powers, legal and equitable, to protect appellants in their rights to their property.
It is held in the federal case' cited that an original suit for condemnation can be-instituted in a federal court, when there is diverse citizenship, although there is no provision in the laws of the state for the exercise of any such power, and yet with re *384 markable Inconsistency it is declared that tbe only authority for condemning the property of the citizen must come from the state. The authority of the state alone to condemn private property is accorded to it, but the procedure to so condemn provided by it can and will be ignored. We think the dissenting opinion of Justice Holmes is correct in holding “that if a state authorizes a taking to be accomplished by certain machinery the United States have no constitutional right to intervene and to substitute other machinery, because the state has chosen to use its law courts rather than a legislative committee, and thus to give to the exercise of its sovereign power the external form of a suit at law. * * * The exercise of that power depends wholly on the state, may be limited as the state chooses, and cannot be carried further than the state has authorized in terms.” The proposition seems- too clear to admit of argument; and, while an opinion on this matter is not absolutely demanded by the facts of this case, we do not feel disposed to have this court placed in the position of even acquiescing by silence in a decision deemed by us to be a direct attack upon the sovereignty of this state. This is not intended as any reflection upon the conscientious district judge who tried this cause; nor is it condemnatory of any anticipated action that may be taken by any District Court of the United States in obedience to its superior, from which it must receive the law. But we must firmly and forcibly protest against the invasion of state rights and the unconstitutional taking of the citizen’s property, which has been sanctioned by a temporary majority, we trust, of the Supreme Court of the United States.
Under the facts in this case, we think it clear that Albert Reitzer has no equities upon which to base the right to the remedy of injunction, but he has waived such right, and he has a legal remedy in a suit for damages that is full and adequate in redressing any wrongs that he has suffered or will suffer. He has no right to destroy a mighty enterprise authorized by the laws of the state, which he has allowed to be completed and carried to its final consummation, merely to collect what he may deem compensation for property, in whose taking he has not only acquiesced, 'but assisted. He clearly indicates in his testimony that he is not seeking the preservation of his property, but the sale of it at a high value.
In this case the Irrigation Company did not seek to purchase the land of a married woman, -but sought to and did obtain it by consent under the statutes authorizing condemnation of land; and her land was subject to the right of eminent domain, which is superior to homestead or any other rights appertaining to real estate. It is true that in the Grandjean Case the married woman had accepted the compensation for her land; but acceptance was merely a circumstance tending to show consent to the taking, and any other acts tending to show consent would be just as binding. Grace v. Walker, 95 Tex. 39, 64 S. W. 930, 65 S. W. 482.
It is too heavy a ’tax on credulity to entertain the proposition that Mrs. Reitzer, living *385 within a mile of the stupendous dam, that was doubtless the wonder of the rural community in which she lived, did not know what its effect would be; and it would be an insult to her intelligence to believe that she could remain in such proximity to the dam- without learning of the vast accumulation of water it would cause, with its probable effect on her land. She has not been deprived of her homestead yet, for that depends on compensation; but we hold that she has not placed herself in a position to use an injunction as- an engine of destruction of property, but must now be content with obtaining the market value of her property.
The Irrigation Company does not, and could not if it would, claim the land of appellants through any conveyance by them, oral or otherwise, but it claims through the right of eminent domain, with which it is clothed by the laws.of Texas; and, having taken possession of the land by consent, its possession will be fully rounded out and rendered complete and exclusive by payment of the compensation. It follows that the cases on estoppel of married women, referred to by appellants, have no application whatever in eases in which the right of eminent domain is exercised.
We conclude there was no error in refusing the restraining orders sought by appellants, and consequently the judgment of the district court is affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- Reitzer Et Ux. v. Medina Valley Irrigation Co. [Fn&8224]
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- 6 cases
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- Published