Nothing is accomplished by an unsuccessful attempt to remove an
administrative proceeding into the federal court where the district
court has by its remanding order adjudged that the removal is not
authorized.
Under § 28, Judicial Code, the order of the district court
remanding a proceeding to the state court is final and conclusive;
it is not subject to review either directly or indirectly.
The rule of retention of a cause by the first of two courts of
concurrent jurisdiction to the exclusion of other courts and the
protection of its
Page 241 U. S. 411
jurisdiction by injunction, applies only where there is
substantial identity in the rights asserted and purposes sought in
the several suits; the rule does not apply where the earlier suit
is a mere private effort to restrain encroachments on plaintiff's
individual rights and the later suit is a
quasi-public
proceeding set in motion by a public agency to determine the rights
of all parties in interest.
Where the decision by the state court, that a statutory
proceeding before a state board is preliminary and administrative
and not judicial, is the necessary result of that court's
construction of the statute, this Court accepts it as correct.
A state may, without violating due process of law, require all
claimants to the same water to submit their claims to an
administrative board and to pay a reasonable fee for the expenses
of such board in determining the relative rights of the various
claimants, and an opportunity to be heard is not denied by
accepting
ex parte sworn statements if all testimony is to
be subsequently reviewed by the court in a proceeding wherein
testimony may be taken; nor is it a denial of due process of law to
make the preliminary order of such a board effective pending final
determination by the court, where provision is made for a stay on
giving suitable bond for damages that may accrue; such requirements
are not arbitrary, and are a proper exercise of governmental
protection of the water which in its absence might pass on and be
lost.
The statutes of Oregon, 3 Lord's Laws, chap. 6 and chaps. 82, 86
and 97 of Laws of 1913, establishing proceedings before the state
Water Board for ascertainment and adjudication of the relative
rights of various claimants to the same water, do not deny due
process of law because they require a claimant to assert his right
and to pay fees for its consideration, or because they allow the
board to accept and consider sworn statements taken
ex
parte without opportunity for cross-examination, or because
they allow administrative orders to be followed and given effect
before final action of the courts thereon.
The facts, which involve the Constitutionality, under the
Fourteenth Amendment, of the statute of Oregon relating to
appropriation and distribution of water, and the validity of
proceedings thereunder, are stated in the opinion.
Page 241 U. S. 442
MR. JUSTICE VAN DEVANTER delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a bill in equity to enjoin a proceeding before the State
Water Board of Oregon looking to the ascertainment and adjudication
of the relative rights of the various claimants to the waters of
Silvies River in that state, the grounds upon which such relief is
sought being (a) that it is essential to protect a jurisdiction
previously acquired by the district court, and (b) that the local
statute, 3 Lord's Oregon Laws, title XLIII., c. 6, Laws 1913,
chaps. 82, 86, and 97, authorizing and controlling the proceeding,
is repugnant to the due process of law clause of the Fourteenth
Amendment. An interlocutory injunction was denied by the district
court, three judges sitting, 217 F. 95, and motions to dismiss the
bill, as disclosing no right to relief, were afterwards
sustained.
The plaintiff, a California corporation, owns large tracts of
land along the river, and claims a vested right to use upon these
lands a portion of the waters of the stream for irrigation and
other beneficial purposes. The defendants are the members of the
State Water Board, and a few out of many persons and corporations
claiming similar rights in the waters of the river. The statute
under which the proceeding assailed is being conducted was enacted
in 1909 and amended in 1913, and most of the rights affected by the
proceeding are claimed to have arisen prior to the
Page 241 U. S. 443
statute -- the plaintiff's as much as thirty years before. All
claimants to the waters of the river, including the plaintiff, were
brought into the proceeding by due notice and in conformity with
the statute.
A general outline of the statute, as it has been construed by
the Supreme Court of the state, [
Footnote 1] will serve to simplify the questions to be
considered. It recognizes that, in Oregon, rights to use the waters
of streams for irrigation and other beneficial purposes may be
acquired by appropriation, adopts a comprehensive scheme for
securing an economical, orderly, and equitable distribution of the
waters among those entitled to their use, incidentally prescribes a
mode of determining the relatives rights of the various claimants
to the waters of each stream, and in large measure commits the
administration of the scheme to the State Water Board and officers
acting under the supervision of its members. When one or more users
of water from any stream request it, the board, if finding that the
conditions justify it, is required to set in motion a proceeding
looking to an ascertainment and adjudication of all rights to the
waters of that stream. Every material step in the proceeding is to
be attended with notice and an opportunity to be heard, the
adequacy of which is manifest. In the beginning, each claimant is
required to present to the division superintendent a sworn
statement of his claim, showing its nature, inception, and extent,
and all the particulars upon which it is based. These statements
are to be exposed to public inspection, so that every claimant may
determine whether there is occasion for him to oppose or contest
the claims of others. The state engineer, or a qualified assistant,
is to measure the flow of the stream, the carrying capacity of the
several ditches taking water
Page 241 U. S. 444
therefrom, and the land irrigated or susceptible of irrigation
from each ditch, and also to take such other observations as may be
essential to a proper understanding of the claims involved, a
report of all of which is to be made in writing. Any claimant
desiring to contest the claim of another may present to the
division superintendent a sworn statement showing the grounds of
contest, and obtain a hearing before that officer at which the
parties may present whatever evidence they have, and may secure the
attendance of witnesses by compulsory process. After the evidence
in the contests is taken, it and the sworn statements of the
several claimants, with the report of the engineer's measurements
and observations, are to be laid before the board, the statements
and the report both being regarded as evidence appropriate to be
considered. The board is then to examine all the evidence, make
findings of fact therefrom, enter an order embodying the findings
and provisionally determining the relative rights of the several
claimants, and transmit the evidence and a copy of the order to the
circuit court of the county wherein the stream or some part of it
lies. Exceptions to the board's findings and order may be presented
to the court, and in disposing of them, the court is to follow as
near as may be the practice prevailing in suits in equity. All
parties in interest, including the board, as representing the
state, are to be fully heard. Further evidence may be taken by the
court, or the matter may be remanded with directions that
additional evidence be taken, and that the matter be again
considered by the board, in which event the evidence and a copy of
the further order of the board are to be transmitted to the court
as in the first instance. In short, upon exceptions the court may
reexamine the whole matter, and enter such decree as the law and
the evidence may require, whether it be an affirmance or a
modification of the board's order. And even where no exceptions are
presented, a decree giving effect
Page 241 U. S. 445
to the order is to be entered; that is to say, the matter is not
to be left as if the order, in itself, constituted an effective
adjudication. An appeal from the court's decree may be taken to the
supreme court of the state "as in other cases in equity," except
that the time therefor is substantially shortened. When the rights
involved are adjudicated, the decree is to be "conclusive as to all
prior rights and the rights of all existing claimants," and the
right of each claimant as so settled is to be appropriately entered
and shown upon the records of the board and upon those of the
proper county. Each claimant also is to receive from the board a
certificate setting forth the priority, extent, and purpose of his
right, and, if it be for irrigation purposes, a description of the
land to which it is appurtenant. That the statute is not intended
to take away or impair any vested right to any water or to its use
is expressly declared in its first and seventieth sections, 3
Lord's Oregon Laws, §§ 6594, 6595.
At the time the statute was adopted, and continuously until this
suit was begun, there were pending undetermined in the district
court [
Footnote 2] two suits in
equity brought by the present plaintiff, one against two Oregon
corporations and the other against another corporation of that
state, in each of which suits the relative rights of the parties
thereto in the waters of Silvies River were in controversy. These
rights are reasserted and again brought in controversy in the
proceeding before the board.
When that proceeding was first set in motion, the Pacific Live
Stock Company, the plaintiff in this suit, presented to the board a
petition and bond for the removal of the proceeding, or a part of
it, alleged to involve a separable controversy, to the district
court of the United States,
Page 241 U. S. 446
upon the ground that it was a suit between citizens of different
states. But the attempted removal was not sustained, for the
district court remanded the proceeding, and in that connection held
that, while it was pending before the board, it was essentially
preliminary and administrative, and not a suit at law or in equity
within the meaning of the removal statute. 199 F. 495.
Thereafter the plaintiff presented to the division
superintendent a sworn statement of its claim, accompanied by the
fee prescribed, at the same time protesting that the fee was
extortionate, that the matter should be adjudicated in the federal
court, and that the local statute was repugnant to the Fourteenth
Amendment. More than two hundred other claimants also appeared and
submitted statements of their claims, all being described as higher
up the stream than that of the plaintiff. When the statements were
opened to public inspection, many contests were initiated. Several
of these were against the plaintiff's claim; a large number were by
the plaintiff against other claims, and there were others in which,
it is said, the plaintiff was not directly concerned. It was at
this stage of the proceeding, and before any evidence was taken in
any of the contests, that this suit was brought.
Upon the assumption (1) that the removal proceedings were
effective, (2) that the proceeding before the board is
substantially identical with the pending suits, and (3) that that
proceeding is essentially judicial in its nature, the plaintiff
insists that the continued prosecution of the proceeding before the
board constitutes an inadmissible interference with the district
court's jurisdiction, and that this jurisdiction should be
maintained and protected by an appropriate injunction. [
Footnote 3] The insistence must
Page 241 U. S. 447
be overruled, because the assumption upon which it rests cannot
be indulged.
Nothing was accomplished by the removal proceedings. The
district court did not take jurisdiction under them, but, on the
contrary, by its remanding order, adjudged that they were
unauthorized. That order is not subject to review, either directly
or indirectly, but is final and conclusive. Jud. Code, § 28;
Missouri Pacific Ry. v. Fitzgerald, 160 U.
S. 556,
160 U. S.
580-583;
McLaughlin Bros. v. Hallowell,
228 U. S. 278,
228 U. S. 286.
In so holding, it is not intimated that the result would be
different if the order were now open to review.
See Upshur
County v. Rich, 135 U. S. 467,
135 U. S. 474
et seq., and cases cited.
The rule that, where the same matter is brought before courts of
concurrent jurisdiction, the one first obtaining jurisdiction will
retain it until the controversy is determined, to the entire
exclusion of the other, and will maintain and protect its
jurisdiction by an appropriate injunction, is confined in its
operation to instances where both suits are substantially the same
-- that is to say, where there is substantial identity in the
interests represented, in the rights asserted, and in the purposes
sought.
Buck v.
Colbath, 3 Wall. 334,
70 U. S. 345;
Watson v.
Jones, 13 Wall. 679,
80 U. S. 715;
Rickey Land & Cattle Co. v. Miller & Lux,
218 U. S. 258,
218 U. S. 262.
This is not such an instance. The proceeding sought to be enjoined,
although, in some respects, resembling the prior suits, is
essentially different from them. They are merely private suits
brought to restrain alleged encroachments upon the plaintiff's
water right, and, while requiring an ascertainment of the rights of
the parties in the waters of the river, as between themselves, it
is certain that they do not require any other or further
determination respecting those waters. Unlike them, the proceeding
in question is a
quasi-public proceeding, set in motion by
a public agency of the state. All claimants are required to appear
and prove their claims; no one can refuse without
Page 241 U. S. 448
forfeiting his claim, and all have the same relation to the
proceeding. It is intended to be universal and to result in a
complete ascertainment of all existing rights, to the end, first,
that the waters may be distributed, under public supervision, among
the lawful claimants according to their respective rights without
needless waste or controversy; second, that the rights of all may
be evidenced by appropriate certificates and public records, always
readily accessible, and may not be dependent upon the testimony of
witnesses, with its recognized infirmities and uncertainties; and,
third, that the amount of surplus or unclaimed water, if any, may
be ascertained and rendered available to intending
appropriators.
Referring to a situation resembling that to which this
proceeding is addressed, the Supreme Court of Maine said in
Warren v. Westbrook Manufacturing Co., 88 Me. 58, 66:
"To make the water power of economic value, the rights to its
sue, and the division of its use according to those rights, should
be determined in advance. This prior determination is evidently
essential to the peaceful and profitable use by the different
parties having rights in a common power. To leave them in their
uncertainty -- to leave one to encroach upon the other -- to leave
each to use as much as he can, and leave the other to sue at law
after the injury -- is to leave the whole subject matter to
possible waste and destruction."
In considering the purpose of the state in authorizing the
proceeding, the Supreme Court of Oregon said in
In re Willow
Creek, 74 Or. 592, 613, 617:
"To accelerate the development of the state, to promote peace
and good order, to minimize the danger of vexatious controversies
wherein the shovel was often used as an instrument of warfare, and
to provide a convenient way for the adjustment and recording of the
rights of the various claimants to the use of the water of a stream
or other source of supply at a reasonable expense, the state
enacted the law of 1909, thereby
Page 241 U. S. 449
to a limited extent calling into requisition its police power. .
. . Water rights, like all other rights, are subject to such
reasonable regulations as are essential to the general welfare,
peace, and good order of the citizens of the state, to the end that
the use of water by one, however absolute and unqualified his right
thereto, shall not be injurious to the equal enjoyment of others
entitled to the equal privilege of using water from the same
source, nor injurious to the rights of the public."
The district court, when making the remanding order, said (199
F. 502):
"The water is the res or subject matter of the controversy. It
is to be divided among the several claimants according to their
respective rights. Each claimant is therefore directly and vitally
interested, not only in establishing the validity and extent of his
own claim, but in having determined all of the other claims."
And that court further said that what was intended was to secure
in an economical and practical way a determination of the rights of
the various claimants to the use of the waters of the stream,
"and thus [to] avoid the uncertainty as to water titles and the
long and vexatious controversies concerning the same which have
heretofore greatly retarded the material development of the
state."
In such a proceeding, the rights of the several claimants are so
closely related that the presence of all is essential to the
accomplishment of its purposes, and it hardly needs statement that
these cannot be attained by mere private suits in which only a few
of the claimants are present, for only their rights as between
themselves could be determined. As against other claimants and the
public, the determination would amount to nothing. And so, upon
applying the test before indicated, it is apparent that the assumed
substantial identity between the proceeding and the pending suits
does not exist.
The supreme court of the state holds that, while the proceeding
is pending before the board, it is merely preliminary
Page 241 U. S. 450
and administrative, not judicial, and as this holding is a
necessary result of that court's construction of the statute, we
accept it as correct. The question was first suggested in
Pacific Livestock Co. v. Cochran, 73 Or. 417, and the
court then said, p. 429:
"It is not necessary here to decide whether the proceeding by
the board to determine water rights is judicial or administrative.
To a large extent, it is administrative, but like many proceedings
of that character, the board must also act in a
quasi-judicial capacity. A determination of the water
rights to a stream finally ends as a report to the circuit court,
and a decree of final determination by that court."
Afterwards the question was both raised and determined in
In
re Willow Creek, 74 Or. 592. The court there reviewed the
several provisions bearing upon the duties and powers of the board,
and said, pp. 610, 612, 614:
"Their duties are executive or administrative in their nature.
In proceedings under the statute, the board is not authorized to
make determinations which are final in character. Their findings
and orders are
prima facie final and binding until changed
in some proper proceeding. The findings of the board are advisory,
rather than authoritative. It is only when the courts of the state
have obtained jurisdiction of the subject matter and of the persons
interested, and rendered a decree in the matter, determining such
rights, that, strictly speaking, an adjudication or final
determination is made. It might be said that the duties of the
water board are
quasi-judicial in their character. Such
duties may be devolved by law on boards whose principal duties are
administrative. . . . The duties of the board of control are
similar to those of a referee appointed by the court. . . . By
proceeding in accordance with the statute, when the matter is
presented to the court for judicial action, it is in an
intelligible form. The water board and state may then be
represented by counsel. "
Page 241 U. S. 451
As an alternative to its first contention, which we hold
untenable, the plaintiff insists that the statute is repugnant to
the due process of law clause of the Fourteenth Amendment, first
because it requires a claimant, at his own expense, to assert and
prove his claim before the board, and to pay an extortionate fee
for having it considered -- all under penalty of forfeiting his
claim if he refuses -- notwithstanding the board acts only
administratively and its findings and order are not conclusive;
second, because it permits the board to accept and act upon the
sworn statements of claimants taken
ex parte and upon the
data set forth in the unsworn report of the engineer, without, as
is asserted, affording any opportunity for showing their true
value, or the want of it, by cross-examination or otherwise; and,
third, because it requires that the board's findings and order,
although only administrative in character, be followed and given
effect in the distribution of the water pending the action of the
circuit court upon them.
A serious fault in this contention is that it does not recognize
the true relation of the proceeding before the board to that before
the court. They are not independent or unrelated, but parts of a
single statutory proceeding, the earlier stages of which are before
the board and the later stages before the court. In notifying
claimants, taking statements of claim, receiving evidence, and
making an advisory report, the board merely paves the way for an
adjudication by the court of all the rights involved. As the
supreme court of the state has said, the board's duties are much
like those of a referee. (
And see Washington ex Rel. Oregon R.
& N. Co. v. Fairchild, 224 U. S. 510,
224 U. S.
526-527.) All the evidence laid before it goes before
the court, where it is to be accorded its proper weight and value.
That the state, consistently with due process of law, may thus
commit the preliminary proceedings to the board and the final
hearing and adjudication to the court is not debatable.
Page 241 U. S. 452
And so the fact that the board acts administratively and that
its report is not conclusive does not prevent a claimant from
receiving the full benefit of submitting his claim and supporting
proof to the board. That he is to do this at his own expense
affords no ground for objection; on the contrary, it is in accord
with the practice in all administrative and judicial proceedings.
The fee alleged to be extortionate is a charge graduated according
to the amount of land irrigated under the claim submitted, and is
fifteen cents per acre for the first hundred acres, five cents per
acre for the next nine hundred acres, and one cent per acre for any
excess over one thousand acres. The purpose with which it is
exacted is explained in the following excerpt from the opinion of
the Supreme Court of the state in
Pacific Livestock Co. v.
Cochran, 73 Or. 417, 429, 430,:
"The board is required to take testimony which consumes the time
of a stenographer paid by the state; to make, through the state
engineer, an examination of the stream and the works diverting
water therefrom, including the measurement of the discharge of the
stream and of the capacity of the various ditches and canals; to
examine and measure the irrigated lands, and to gather such other
data as may be necessary; to reduce the same to writing and make it
a matter of record in the office of the state engineer; to make
maps and plats of the various ditches and of the stream -- all at
the expense of the state. That these services are beneficial to the
claimant and necessary to the preservation of his rights in the
stream and the protection and assurance of his title goes without
saying. . . . It is reasonable to assume that the expense to the
state of the investigation, mapping, taking testimony, and other
acts involved in the determination of the claimant's rights will
equal and in many cases exceed the amount of the fee charged, and
that the method indicated by the act by which the amount is
determined is
Page 241 U. S. 453
eminently fair."
In our opinion, the charge is not extortionate, and its exaction
is not otherwise inconsistent with due process of law.
Upon examining the statute and the decisions of the supreme
court of the state construing and applying it, we are persuaded
that it is not intended that the board shall accept and act upon
anything as evidence that is devoid of evidential value, or in
respect of which the claimants concerned are not given a fair
opportunity to show its true value, or the want of it, in an
appropriate way. On the contrary, the statute discloses a fixed
purpose to secure timely notice to all claimants of every material
step in the proceeding, and full opportunity to be heard in respect
of all that bears upon the validity, extent, and priority of their
claims. And while it is true, according to the concessions at the
bar, that the sworn statements of claim are taken
ex parte
in the first instance, it also is true that they are then opened to
public inspection, that opportunity is given for contesting them,
and that, upon the hearing of the contests, full opportunity is had
for the examination of witnesses, including those making the
statements, and for the production of any evidence appropriate to
be considered. Thus, the fact that the original statements are
taken
ex parte becomes of no moment. And while it is true
that the state engineer's report is accepted as evidence, although
not sworn to by him, it also is true that the measurements and
examinations shown therein are made and reported in the discharge
of his official duties and under the sanction of his oath of
office, and that timely notice of the date when they are to begin
is given to all claimants. The report becomes a public document
accessible to all, and is accepted as
prima facie
evidence, but not as conclusive.
In re Willow Creek, 74
Or. 592, 628. Of the occasion for such a report, the supreme court
of the state says in that case, p. 613:
"In a proceeding
Page 241 U. S. 454
before the board, provision is made for an impartial examination
and measurement of the water in a stream, of the ditches and
canals, and of the land susceptible of irrigation, and for the
gathering of other essential data by the state engineer, including
the preparation of maps, all to be made a matter of record in the
office of the state engineer, as a foundation for such hearing and
to facilitate a proper understanding of the rights of the parties
interested. Under the old procedure such information was often
omitted. When measurements were made by the various parties to a
suit, they were nearly always made by different methods, and were
conflicting. The other evidence in regard thereto, being mere
estimates, rendered a determination extremely difficult for the
court and of questionable accuracy and value when made."
Considering the nature of the report, and that claimants may
oppose it with other evidence, it is plain that its use as evidence
is not violative of due process,
Meeker v. Lehigh Valley R.
Co., 236 U. S. 412,
236 U. S.
430.
The provision that the water shall be distributed in conformity
with the board's order pending the adjudication by the court has
the sanction of many precedents in the legislation of Congress and
of the several states, notably in the provision in the Interstate
Commerce Act directing that the orders of the commission shall be
effective from a date shortly after they are made unless their
operation be restrained by injunction. These legislative
precedents, while not controlling, are entitled to much weight,
especially as they have been widely accepted as valid. Although
containing no provision for an injunction, the statute under
consideration permits the same result to be reached in another way,
for it declares that the operation of the board's order "may be
stayed in whole or in part" by giving a bond in such amount as the
judge of the court in which the proceeding is pending may
prescribe, conditioned for the payment of such damages
Page 241 U. S. 455
as may accrue by reason of the stay. It is not, therefore, as if
the requirement were absolute. As has been seen, the order is made
only after adequate notice and full opportunity to be heard, and,
when made is, with reason, deemed
prima facie correct. It
relates to flowing water to the use of which there are conflicting
claims. Unless diverted and used, the water will pass on and be
lost. No claimant is in possession, and all assert a right to take
from the common source. In this situation, we think it is within
the power of the state to require that, pending the final
adjudication, the water shall be distributed according to the
board's order unless a suitable bond be given to stay its
operation. Such a requirement is not arbitrary, does not take from
one and give to another, and is not otherwise offensive to a right
conception of due process.
Detroit & Mackinac Ry. v.
Michigan Railroad Commission, 240 U.
S. 564;
Wadley Southern Ry. v. Georgia,
235 U. S. 651,
235 U. S. 660;
Montezuma Canal v. Smithville Canal, 218 U.
S. 371,
218 U. S.
385.
Decree affirmed.
[
Footnote 1]
See Wattles v. Baker County, 59 Or. 255;
Pringle
Falls Power Co. v. Patterson, 65 Or. 474, 484;
Claypool v.
O'Neill, 65 Or. 511;
Pacific Livestock Co. v.
Cochran, 73 Or. 417;
In re Willow Creek, 74 Or. 592;
In re North Powder River, 75 Or. 83.
[
Footnote 2]
The suits were begun in the circuit court, and, when it was
abolished, were transferred to the district court.
[
Footnote 3]
See Rev.Stat. § 720;
Taylor v.
Taintor, 16 Wall. 366,
83 U. S. 370;
French v. Hay,
22 Wall. 250,
89 U. S. 253;
Rickey Land & Cattle Co. v. Miller & Lux,
218 U. S. 258,
218 U. S. 262;
Chesapeake & Ohio Ry. v. Cockrell, 232 U.
S. 146,
232 U. S.
154.