In the instant proceeding, respondent, American Falls Reservoir District, by its board of directors, filed its petition in the district court for Twin Falls county, Idaho-, and among other things alleges that it is -a duly organized irrigation district under the laws of the state of Idaho; that its organization -as an irriga
This petition also alleges that about March 25, 1923, said board, by resolution, formulated a general plan for the district’s proposed operations, in which is stated the property it proposes to purchase, the cost of the same and what construction work it proposes to do and how to raise the funds for carrying out said plans; that for the purpose of ascertaining the cost of the construction work, the board caused surveys, examinations and plans to be made which demonstrate the practicability of the same and the proper basis for an estimate of the cost of carrying out such plans; that such surveys, examinations, maps and plans, as estimated, were made under the direction of a competent engineer and certified by him, and were submitted to and approved by the Department of Reclamation; that thereafter the board determined the amount of money necessary to be raised to carry out these plans as formulated to be $2,700,000; that it submitted to the qualified voters of said district the proposals, (1) shall the district issue its bonds for the carrying out of these plans, in the sum of $2,700,000, and (2) shall its board be authorized to enter into an obligation with the United States in the form of a contract for the construction of the American Falls Reservoir and the furnishing, to respondent district, by the United States, for its use and benefit, a proportionate share of the storage capacity-of said reservoir in the amount of 300,000 acre-feet of such reservoir’s total capacity; that the authorization to issue its bonds in the amount of $2,700,000 and for respondent district to contract to purchase from the United States this amount of storage water in the American Falls Reservoir was ratified by 'the qualified voters of the district, at an election duly noticed and held therein, and a decree of the said district court
This petition further alleges that in accordance with said authorization and ratification, by the qualified voters of respondent district, its board of directors entered into a contract with the United States June 15, 1923, for the purchase of a proportionate share of the storage capacity of the American Falls Reservoir in the amount of 300,000 acre-feet and for the payment to the United States of its proportionate amount of the cost of constructing this reservoir. The contract between respondent district and the United States is set forth liaee verba in the record.
It is further alleged that said board apportioned its part of the cost of constructing this reservoir to the lands in the American Falls Reservoir District, about Ajugust 7, 1923, and that such apportionment for benefits was carried out in ten volumes designated “List Volumes numbered 1 to 10, inclusive,” which list appears in this record as exhibit “F” and contains the names of the owners or reputed owners and a legal description of each separate tract or subdivision of land included within the district, the pro rata amount of benefits assessed and of costs apportioned to each tract, which the petition alleges was done in accordance with the requirements of law relating to the apportionment of benefits to lands and the apportionment and distribution of the costs of such works to the lands within the irrigation district.
In August, 1923, respondent district by its petition prayed for a decree of said court confirming the action of respondent board in entering into a contract with the United States June 15, 1923, which reeited all of the proceedings which have been taken in calling an election of the qualified voters of the district, in conducting the election, returning the votes cast at such election and in declaring the result of such election to authorize the board to enter into a contract with the United States, and prayed that the proceedings be confirmed. A decree of said court confirming all of said proceedings was entered therein December 20, 1923.
The irrigation district law requires that the proceedings to create an irrigation district, the formulating of its plans to obtain water for the irrigation of the lands within the district, the apportionment of benefits and the distribution of costs of the same, to the separate tracts, the issuance and sale of bonds for the payment of this cost, the method provided for the levy and collection of taxes or assessments against the lands in the district upon the basis and in proportion to the benefits, for the payment of interest upon its bonds or other obligations, the creating of a sinking fund as provided by C. S., sec. 4359, must all be confirmed by a decree of the district court in the county wherein the district has its principal place of business.
The petition in the- instant proceeding was filed October 18, 1923, and appellant answered it December 21st thereafter. The decree from which this appeal is taken was entered January 23, 1924. From the record in this case, particularly the pleadings and decree, both parties appear to take the position that this appeal presents for review all the proceedings previously had which were adjudicated by the preceding decrees above mentioned. From the foregoing statute and other provisions of the irrigation district law we conclude that a decree of confirmation is conclusive as to all matters embraced in the proceedings had, where no appeal has been taken therefrom, unless such decree is assailed by a direct attack, or the statutory proceedings have not been taken in the manner prescribed by law. The statutes providing for a confirmation of any of the proceedings had do not contemplate that where a petition is presented to the court, for the confirmation of some subsequent action that has been taken by the district, it thereby opens for adjudication the decrees that have been previously entered. It will be observed that this is not an appeal from any of the decrees entered in former proceedings. The decrees of the district court above referred to confirm the proceedings mentioned therein, all of which appear to have been taken as required by law, and such decrees of confirmation appear to be in all respects regular.
Appellant makes numerous assignments of error. We think, however, that only those assignments that relate to questions presented by this record and which were not
Appellant Thrall answers for himself and all other owners and holders of land located in Jerome county within the boundaries of respondent district who are similarly situated, and, among other things, alleges that he is the owner of land within said district, that the same is sufficiently supplied with water by the North Side Canal Company, and has appurtenant thereto a water right evidenced by water stock in said company; denies the corporate existence of respondent district, or that its board of directors was duly and regularly elected; denies that the proceedings for its organization, and the election of its first board of directors, ■were confirmed. The fourth paragraph admits that there was a decree confirming respondent as an irrigation district and the election of a board of directors, by the decree entered March 24, 1923. The answer thereafter denies the organization of respondent district, or the election of its first board, on the ground and for the reason that there was no sufficient petition filed with the county commissioners of Twin Falls county; that no sufficient notice of the presentation of the petition to said board for its organization was given; that no sufficient notice of hearing on said petition before the board of county commissioners was given, and no sufficient notice of the election for the organization of the territory into an irrigation district was given.
This denial is insufficient to put in issue in this proceeding these questions.
The answer admits that respondent’s board formulated the general plans „of its proposed operations; that these plans were submitted to the Department of Reclamation which ap
The affirmative allegations of the answer found in paragraphs (a) to (h), inclusive, are not sufficient to draw in question the matters considered and determined by the former decrees. These objections made to the proceedings taken by respondent district, which have been confirmed, are stated by way of conclusions and are not a direct attack upon these former decrees, but a collateral attack. Paragraph (a) alleges that the petition for the organization of the territory into an irrigation district is insufficient to give the county commissioners of Twin Falls county jurisdiction to create an irrigation district; (b) that no sufficient notice of the presentation of the petition, or hearing upon the same before the county commissioners, was given as provided by law; (c) that no sufficient notice of the election which was held in the district was given as required by the statute. The other objections made are of like tenor and effect. None of them state specifically the facts upon which the pleader relies to show that the commissioners were without jurisdiction or that the notice of presentation of the petition, or of the hearing thereon before the commissioners, was insufficient, or in what respect the notice of election held for the organization of the district was not given as required by statute, or wherein the order of the county commissioners proclaiming the organization of the district is insufficient. These objections as pleaded are conclusions of law and do not tender any issue of fact. The allegation that the plan proposed is contrary to the statute, because it does not provide that the district shall own its own canals, ditches and irrigation system is too general in its terms to put in issue the sufficiency of the plans adopted by respondent board and approved by the Reclamation Department, even if that question could be raised in this proceeding.
It appears that in the present proceeding the confirmation of the action of the board of directors of the American Falls Reservoir District, a corporation, and all other persons acting in that behalf, in the matter of making the assessment of benefits and the apportionment of costs of construction and purchase on account of the construction of the American Falls reservoir, as such apportionment appears and is shown in the ten volumes designated “List Volumes numbered 1 to 10, inclusive,” the same being apportioned and distributed over said tracts and subdivisions of land in proportion to said benefits as shown in said lists, was confirmed by the decree of the court below in this proceeding, and such confirmation appearing in all respects regular, such judgment of confirmation is hereby approved and affirmed.
Respondents contend that irrigation district bonds are a general lien. Distinguished counsel have appeared amici curiae and filed briefs in support of this contention, and some have urged with great earnestness the expediency of having the irrigation district law so construed and suggest what they think will be the evil effect that may follow a contrary view. With this consideration we cannot be concerned. It is the province of courts to declare what the law is, not what in their judgment it should be.
Article 6 of the irrigation district law, among other things, provides that the board of directors of any irrigation district organized under the laws of this state may issue negotiable coupon bonds, to be denominated refunding bonds, for the purpose of refunding any bonded indebtedness of the district, whether due or not due.
C. S., see. 4382, which relates to the levy and collection of taxes for the payment of such refunding bonds, contains the following:
“Such taxes shall be levied and collected in the manner provided by law for the levy and collection of taxes for the payment of interest and principal of original bond issues, and such refunding bonds and the interest thereon shall be paid from the revenue derived from the annual assessment on the land in the district and all the land in the district shall be and remain liable to be assessed for such payment. ’ ’
Chapter 219, Sess. Laws 1921, p. 483, creates a reclamation district bond commission and prescribes its powers and duties, among which are the consideration of irrigation and drainage district bonds, the conditions under which such bonds shall be legal investments for all trust funds, and after requiring a complete investigation to be made on the part of this commission as to the character and value of the property thus bonded and a report of such investigation, provides that the state treasurer shall certify that such bonds are issued in accordance with the act and that they are a legal investment for all trust funds, for the funds of all insurance companies, banks, both commercial and savings, trust companies, surety and bond companies, and any fund which may be invested in county, municipal or school district bonds. That such bonds may be deposited as security for the performance of any act whenever the bonds of- any
Chapter 84, Sess. Laws 1923, p. 96, provides that the board of directors of an irrigation district may, in order to improve its credit or the marketability of its bonds or to reduce the rate of interest thereon, insert in the contracts- of bonds of the district, an agreement to provide for a safety fund by making levies of fiften per cent in excess of the amount which would be required if all taxes were paid without delinquency, until a safety fund of ten per cent of the unpaid bonded or contract indebtedness of the district has been created, and may provide for rates in compliance with such agreement.
Chapter 178, Sess. Laws 1923, p. 276 provides that an irrigation district may by resolution of its board adopt a plan of providing for the collection of the district’s taxes by county officers whenever the county commissioners of any county within which the lands of the district are situate, by unanimous vote concur in and agree to such plan. The act further provides that after a district has adopted this method of collecting its taxes it may not revert to the collection of its taxes without the consent of the purchasers of its bonds or obligations where the plan for collection by county officers has been printed or indorsed upon its bonds, and that after such indorsement the provision for collection of its taxes by the county officers shall be irrevocable until such obligations have been paid.
O'. S., sec. 4387, among other things-, provides that the board shall levy an assessment upon the lands in said district upon the basis and in proportion of the list and ap-portionments of the benefits as provided in C. S., see. 4362, sufficient to raise the annual interest on the outstanding bonds, and at the expiration of ten years after said issue the board must increase said assessments from year to year sufficient to raise a sum to pay the principal of such bonds, and this assessment constitutes a special fund to be called “Bond fund of - Irrigation District.”
This provision of the irrigation district law was first added by see. 2, Sess. Laws 1901, p. 194, then being an amendment to see. 11, Sess. Laws 1899, p. 414.
This section has been frequently amended since its enactment in 1901 but the foregoing provision has been incorporated 'in each amendment in substantially the same language. It shows an intent on the part of the legislature to require the board of directors of an irrigation district, immediately after the election authorizing its creation and the election of the first board, to determine the benefits which will accrue to each tract or subdivision of land from the construction or purchase of such irrigation works and to apportion the cost against each tract or subdivision in proportion to the benefits it derives therefrom, and makes such apportionment the permanent basis of valuation for levying all subsequent assessments thereafter which the district is authorized to levy. That is, this apportionment for benefits, after having been fixed by the board and such apportionment affirmed by decree of the district court, stands as the permanent assessment, and equalization of the value of each separate tract or subdivision, and the basis upon which all subsequent levies, for any purpose, must be made.
Prior to this amendment requiring the apportionment and distribution of the cost of such works to be in proportion to benefits, the method provided by sec. 11, Sess. Laws 1899, p. 326, was probably unconstitutional in that it failed to
From the foregoing provisions, we think that it was the intention of the legislature in the enactment of these various statutes to make the obligations of an irrigation district a general and not a specific lien against all the property of the district.
Plainly, if all the land in the district shall be and remain liable to be assessed for its indebtedness, which proviso is twice expressed in the statute, first in C. S., see. 4369, and relates to the original bond issue, and again repeated in C. S., sec. 43-82, which relates to refunding bonds, none of the lands within the district can be released from any of the district’s indebtedness, except upon payment of the same. This intention is further indicated by the act creating a reclamation district bond commission and providing for the certification of irrigation district bonds, and also the provision requiring county officers to collect the taxes, and the creation of a safety fund.
Appellant contends that the resolution of the board- of directors, to include interest for five years from July 1, 1923, in lieu of paying interest on the bonds to be issued under date of Jnly 1, 1923, by revenue derived from the assessment on the lands in the district, is illegal and void. C. S., sec. 4371, appears to authorize this procedure and was enacted as an amendment to R. C., sec. 2405, by Sess. Laws 1915, p. 119. It provides:
“In any irrigation district now organized or hereafter to be organized, for any portion of the time from the time said bonds begin to bear interest until five years after the irrigation works of such district have been completed and water used in the irrigation of the lands in such district, in lieu of paying the interest on said bonds by revenues derived from the assessments on the lands in the district, the board of directors may pay any part of such interest with the proceeds of the sale of coupon bonds of such district to be issued and sold by them for said purpose.”
The plans provided for the construction of works or the payment of the cost of the same when such works are being constructed by a third party and assessing such cost against each separate tract or subdivision according to benefits upon principle does not greatly differ from that provided for the payment of general obligations issued by public corporations of the state, created solely for governmental purposes, such as counties, cities, towns and villages, for the construction of public improvements that are for the benefit of the entire municipal subdivision. An irrigation district is a public or a quasi-public corporation. (Pioneer Irr. Dist. v. Walker, 20 Ida. 605, 119 Pac. 304; City of Nampa v. Nampa Irr. Dist., 19 Ida. 779, 115 Pac. 979; Hertle v. Ball, 9 Ida. 193, 72 Pac. 953; Boise Irr. & Land Co. v. Stewart, 10 Ida. 38, 77 Pac. 25, 321; In re Bonds of Madera Irr. Dist., 92 Cal. 296, 27 Am. St. 106, 28 Pac. 272, 14 L. R. A. 755.) The method of levying taxes by an irrigation district to meet its obligations differs from that provided for the class of municipalities mentioned in one important respect. Corporations created solely for governmental purposes, unless otherwise provided, are supported by a general tax upon all
The charters of cities and towns usually provide for the creation of special improvement districts therein, such as paving, sewers, sidewalks and the like, where' the costs of such improvements are made a lien against each particular lot or subdivision and are not a general lien against all of the property. This is because the law authorizing the indebtedness for such improvements expressly so provides.
Upon the question of whether the bonds of an irrigation district are a general or special lien upon the property of the district the adjudicated eases are not in harmony. This, in a measure, is due to differences in the statutes of the several states relating to irrigation districts and the manner of creating obligations' with which to acquire water for the lands within the districts.
In Interstate Trust Co. v. Montezuma Valley Irr. Dist., 66 Colo. 219, 181 Pac. 123, it is held that irrigation district taxes under the irrigation district law of that state are only
In Nelson v. Board of Commissioners of Davis County, 62 Utah, 218, 218 Pac. 952, it is held that a tax levied against property in an irrigation district, to meet its expenses and pay interest and sinking fund, is controlled by benefits received, and the owner cannot be assessed for a pro rata share of delinquencies of other owners in previous years except to the extent of fifteen per cent, which the county commissioners are authorized to add to the levy for that purpose.
In Norris v. Montezuma Valley Irr. Dist., 248 Fed. 369, 160 C. C. A. 379, the court in construing the same law holds that the statutory obligation of a municipal or quasi-municipal corporation to pay its debt or to fix a rate of levy necessary to provide the amount of money required to pay its debt is not satisfied by an assessment and rate of levy sufficient to pay the debt if the taxes are collected, but requires that there be a sufficient assessment levy, and collection of taxes as levied, to pay the debt, and that this requirement is not violative of the constitutional provision that all taxation shall be uniform upon the same class of subjects.
In Condit v. Johnson, 158 Iowa, 477, 139 N. W. 477, that court in construing the Colorado statutes relating to the issuance of irrigation district bonds and the assessment on the lands of the district to pay such encumbrances holds that the Ren created thereby is not a specific but a general lien against all the lands within the district.
It will be noted that there is a wide difference between the method pointed out by the statute for the payment of special district improvement bonds such as paving, sewer, sidewalk and the like, wherein the amount of such bonds is specifically segregated and apportioned to each separate subdivision, and the owner of any land within such district has the option to pay the entire assessment against his property and upon doing so to have it released from further liability under such bond issue. No similar provision is found in the irrigation district law, but on the contrary it is expressly provided that “all the land in the district shall be and remain liable to be assessed for such payment. ’ ’
The validity of the various provisions of the statute considered and relied on, as supporting the views herein expressed, has not been raised by any of the numerous counsel that have appeared in this action. "We have arrived at the conclusions above stated upon the assumption that these laws are not in conflict with any provision of our constitution. Counsel for appellant refers to Elliott v. McCrea, 23 Ida. 524, 130 Pac. 785, wherein it is held that the assessment of benefits provided for by chapter 16, L. ’13, p. 58, is not a tax within the purview and meaning of sec. 5, art. 7 of the constitution, and under that act, where no benefits accrue no assessments can be made. We think that case is distinguishable from the case at bar and that the conclusions here reached are not in conflict with the holding in that case.
The judgment of the court below as here modified is affirmed. Neither party to recover costs on this appeal.