1. Preliminary, tentative opinions of the cost of constructing
projected irrigation works, expressed by government engineers and
officials in official correspondence and in statements at a meeting
of prospective water users, do not constitute the estimate of cost,
or the public notice, required by § 4 of the Reclamation Act,
and, though relied upon by the water users in subjecting their
lands to the project, do not bind or estop the government from
afterwards fixing the construction charges against the lands
pursuant to the statute in accordance with a higher estimate
arrived at in the light of further investigation and experience. P.
262 U. S.
143.
2. The Reclamation Act, § 4, contemplates a precise and
formal public notice, stating the lands irrigable under a project,
the limit of area for each entry, the charges per acre, the number
of annual installments, and the time when payments shall commence.
P.
262 U. S.
144.
3. The determination by the Secretary of the Interior of the
practicability of a project and the making of the construction
contracts are conditions precedent to the estimate of cost and the
public notice under § 4 of the act. P.
262 U. S.
145.
4. The time within which the notice shall be given after the
occurrence of these conditions is left to the sound discretion of
the Secretary, and he may delay the notice while the question of
cost remains in doubt. P.
262 U. S.
145.
Page 262 U. S. 139
5. A contract between the government and a water users'
association provided for payment of the first installment of
charges at the time of completion of proposed works, and reserved
the right of the Secretary of the Interior to make such changes of
the plans "as further investigations and circumstances" might
"dictate to be requisite for the public welfare."
Held
that the works were not to be deemed incomplete either (a) because
a small part of the drainage system was unfinished, the
effectiveness of the system not being thereby detracted from, or
(b) because two of three tracts which the government undertook to
reclaim were eliminated by the Secretary, in the exercise of his
discretion, greater areas having been substituted which more than
counterbalanced any injury that otherwise might have resulted to
complaining water users in the matter of increased assessments. P.
262 U. S.
146.
6. Concurrent findings of fact of the district court and the
circuit court of appeals sustaining a determination of the
Secretary of the Interior that reclamation works had been completed
when public notice was given under § 4 of the Reclamation Act,
must be accepted by this Court in absence of clear error. P.
262 U. S.
146.
275 F. 885 affirmed.
Appeal from a decree of the circuit court of appeals affirming a
decree of the district court which dismissed, upon the merits, a
suit to restrain officials of the Reclamation Service from taking
steps toward the enforcement of charges for construction cost under
the Reclamation Act.
MR. JUSTICE SUTHERLAND delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Yuma County Water Users' Association is a corporation
organized primarily to represent the settlers on the Yuma
irrigation project in Arizona in their dealings with the
government. The other appellants are shareholders and owners of
tracts of land under the project.
Page 262 U. S. 140
On April 8, 1904, the Secretary of the Interior received the
report of a board of consulting engineers, made at his request,
giving alternate estimates of the cost of the project, and
recommending that $3,000,000 be set aside for construction. This
report was followed by a letter from the Director of the Geological
Survey joining in the recommendation and, among other things,
saying:
"In general the reports indicate that, by means of construction
of a dam across Colorado River and other works, it will be possible
to reclaim upwards of 85,000 acres of land at a cost of less than
$40 per acre. . . ."
"The land is extremely fertile in character, the climate is
somewhat tropical, and the products have such value per acre that
it is believed that the cost of $40 per acre is not
prohibitive."
"There are a large number of alternatives to be considered and
difficult problems to be solved, but the matter has developed from
the engineering side to a point where it is possible to consider
the larger features, and to set aside provisionally a sufficient
sum of money to carry out the work, contingent upon satisfactory
arrangements being made with the owners of lands and vested rights
and the complete solution of other matters now pending."
The Secretary, on May 10, 1904, replied, approving the
recommendation. Correspondence ensued between the Water Users'
Association and the officials of the Reclamation Service, and on
May 28, 1904, a meeting between them was had. It does not seem
necessary to give the details of this correspondence or of the
meeting. It suffices to say that, throughout, the officials
declared that, in their opinion, the project would cost at the rate
of about $35 per acre, and the water users joined in the enterprise
under that belief. True, it was stated that this sum might be
increased or lessened as the work progressed, and the opinion was
otherwise qualified; but it was evidently thought that the cost
would not depart
Page 262 U. S. 141
from the figures given to any great extent one way or the other.
Thereupon the landowners subscribed for shares in the association,
binding themselves to pay the cost of the project in proportion to
their interests and pledging their lands as security to that
end.
On May 31, 1906, the association, acting for its shareholders,
entered into an agreement with the government by which it was
stipulated: that the Secretary should determine the number of acres
capable of irrigation under the project; that payments should be
divided into not less than ten equal annual installments, the first
payable at the time of the completion of the works or within a
reasonable time thereafter and after due notice from the Secretary,
and that the cost per acre should be equal throughout the district.
And the association agrees
"that it will promptly collect or require prompt payment in such
manner as the Secretary of the Interior may direct, and hereby
guarantees the payments for that part of the cost of the irrigation
works, which shall be apportioned by the Secretary of the Interior
to its shareholders. . . ."
The contract is silent as to the amount of the cost, and nowhere
suggests that it had already been fixed.
It does not appear that a definite plan of construction was
determined upon until after the meeting in 1904; the report of the
engineers contains no estimate in respect of the works as they were
finally constructed, and no construction contract was made until
June, 1905. In the process of construction, great and unexpected
difficulties were encountered. The contractors, finding themselves
unable to proceed, abandoned their contract, and the government was
forced to take upon itself the burden of completing the work. The
ultimate cost was more than double what had been anticipated. The
project was finally completed, as found by both lower courts, on
April 6, 1917, and on that date public notice was given
Page 262 U. S. 142
by the Secretary, imposing upon the water users a construction
charge of $75 per acre. This notice complies with the provisions of
§ 4 of the Reclamation Act, 32 Stat. 388, 389, c. 1093,
printed in the margin.
*
Appellants (plaintiffs) brought suit in the United States
District Court for the District of Arizona to enjoin the
defendants, who were officials of the Reclamation Service, from
putting into operation the determination of the Secretary so as to
exact a greater sum than $5.28 per acre. The court, after a trial,
found in favor of the government and dismissed the bill, and its
action was affirmed by the circuit court of appeals (275 F. 885),
from whose decree the case comes here by appeal.
The pleadings are voluminous, much testimony was taken at the
trial, and a large number of errors have been assigned. After
eliminating from consideration those matters which are clearly
immaterial or without merit, two questions remain. They are:
Page 262 U. S. 143
(1) Whether the report, correspondence, and statements made in
1904 constituted an estimate of the cost of the project and a
public notice under the terms of § 4, and, if not, whether the
notice of 1917 may be so regarded?
(2) Whether the project was completed on April 6, 1917, within
the meaning of the contract of 1906?
First. It is contended by appellants that the report of the
engineers, the correspondence among the officials and with the
Water Users' Association and the statements made at the meeting in
1904, taken together, constitute an estimate of cost binding on the
government, and, though informal, a compliance with § 4 as to
public notice. That it was the firm belief of the government
officials that the cost of the project would not greatly, if at
all, exceed $35 and acre, and that their opinion to that effect was
given to the Water Users' Association, by the documents and
statements referred to, does not admit of doubt. It seems clear
that the water users relied upon these expressions of opinion, and
it may be assumed that, if they had known in the beginning that the
cost was to be as much as $75 per acre, they would not have gone
forward with the enterprise. But however confidently these opinions
were expressed, and however much they may have influenced the water
users, the attendant circumstances, the language employed, and the
statutory requirements all preclude the idea that they constitute
an estimate of the cost as contemplated by the statute. No element
of fraud or bad faith is shown or suggested. The Reclamation Act
sets aside all money received from the sale and disposal of public
lands in certain states and territories named for the reclamation
of the arid lands therein, and this fund is to be kept intact as
nearly as possible by collecting from the water users under each
project the estimated cost of the construction thereof.
See
Swigart v. Baker, 229 U. S. 187,
229 U. S. 197.
The extent to which the fund will be preserved obviously will
depend
Page 262 U. S. 144
upon the accuracy of the estimate, and this, in turn, will
depend upon the care exercised in securing information upon which
to base it. Investigation as to the feasibility of any project,
opinions of experts, and collection of data relating to the
question of cost must precede such an estimate, and § 4,
moreover, requires that the charges against water users shall not
be assessed until after construction contracts shall have been
made, the evident purpose being to put the Secretary in possession
of the data furnished by the contracts themselves before he acts in
that respect. Prior to the making of the construction contracts,
opinions expressed by engineers or officials may be estimates in
one sense; but they are tentative and preliminary, and cannot be
regarded as constituting the required statutory estimate, though
contributing to the basic facts upon which it is made.
See
Payette-Boise Water Users' Assn. v. Cole, 263 F. 734, 738-739.
The statute contemplates a precise and formal public notice which
must state the lands irrigable under the project, the limit of area
for each entry, the charges to be made per acre, the number of
annual installments, and the time when the payments, shall
commence. The opinions, correspondence, and statements relied upon
do not fulfill the statutory requirements, and we must hold that
the government is neither bound nor estopped by them.
Utah
Power & Light Co. v. United States, 243 U.
S. 389,
243 U. S.
408-409;
Pine River Logging Co. v. United
States, 186 U. S. 279,
186 U. S. 291;
Whiteside et al. v. United States, 93 U. S.
247,
93 U. S.
256-257;
The Floyd
Acceptances, 7 Wall. 666,
74 U. S. 676;
Filor v. United
States, 9 Wall. 45,
76 U. S. 49;
Hart v. United States, 95 U. S. 316;
Lee v. Munro,
7 Cranch 366. Moreover, the contract of 1906, made subsequently,
expressly provides for payment on the part of the water users "for
that part of the cost of the irrigation works which shall be
apportioned by the Secretary of the Interior to its shareholders."
Plainly this looked forward to
Page 262 U. S. 145
future action on his part, and did not rest upon any action
already taken.
Following the provisions requiring the Secretary to determine
the practicability of the project and to make construction
contracts, the words are "and thereupon he shall give public
notice," etc. The word "thereupon" is construed by appellants as an
adverb of time, meaning immediately thereafter. But this is only
one of its uses. It is employed more frequently to express the
relation of cause or of condition precedent. It is in the latter
sense that it is used here, and its meaning is that the
determination as to the practicability of the project and the
making of contracts are precedent conditions to the estimate of
cost and public notice.
See Porphyry Paving Co. v. Ancker,
104 Cal. 340, 342. The notice must follow the coming into existence
of the conditions. The time thereafter within which it shall be
given is left, and from the nature of the matter must be left, to
the discretion of the Secretary, and whether that discretion has
been unreasonably exercised will depend upon the circumstances of
each case. Here, it is made plain that performance of the
construction contract became impossible, and the same was
abandoned. Acting upon its judgment, which, so far as the record
shows, was not unreasonable, the government then itself undertook
the completion of the work. Physical conditions not originally
foreseen were encountered presenting difficulties and requiring
increased expenditures of great magnitude. It does not appear that
these expenditures were made unnecessarily or improvidently, nor is
there anything in the record to indicate that the work was not done
with reasonable expedition. The uncertainties arising from the
newly discovered conditions, the abandonment of the construction
work by the contractors, the changes which were necessitated in the
original plans, and the unexpected turn of events in other respects
left the question of cost in such doubt as to justify
withholding
Page 262 U. S. 146
the public notice until it could rest on more definite
information. The delay, it is true, was long continued, but, under
all the circumstances, we cannot say as a matter of law that it was
undue, or that the Secretary's discretion in respect of time was
unreasonably exercised.
Second. The contract of May 31, 1906, provides that the first
installment shall be payable at the time of the completion of the
proposed works, and appellants contend that, in two respects, they
were not completed on April 6, 1917, when the public notice was
given: (1) that complete drainage for one of the tracts was not
provided, and (2) that only one of three tracts which the
government promised to reclaim was reclaimed.
As to the first point, it is sufficient to say that the
testimony shows that the contemplated drainage was substantially
completed, and fails to show that the small portion left undone
detracted in any way from the effectiveness of the system.
As to the second point, the original plans disclose that it was
the intention to reclaim the three tracts mentioned, but the
Secretary reserved the right to make such changes "as further
investigations and circumstances may dictate to be requisite for
the public welfare." The elimination, therefore, of the two tracts
was within his discretion. Moreover, while these tracts were not
reclaimed, other lands of greater area were added to the project
which much more than counterbalanced any injury to the water users
here concerned that might otherwise have resulted from the
omission. The Secretary determined that the project had been
completed when the public notice was given, and both lower courts
concurred in the same finding. These findings will be accepted here
in the absence of clear error, which the record before us does not
show.
Bodkin v. Edwards, 255 U. S. 221;
Brewer-Elliott Oil & Gas Co. v. United States,
260 U. S. 77.
The decree of the court of appeals is
Affirmed.
*
"Sec. 4. That, upon the determination by the Secretary of the
Interior that any irrigation project is practicable, he may cause
to be let contracts for the construction of the same, in such
portions or sections as it may be practicable to construct and
complete as parts of the whole project, providing the necessary
funds for such portions or sections are available in the
reclamation fund, and thereupon he shall give public notice of the
lands irrigable under such project, and limit of area per entry,
which limit shall represent the acreage which, in the opinion of
the Secretary, may be reasonably required for the support of a
family upon the lands in question; also of the charges which shall
be made per acre upon the said entries, and upon lands in private
ownership which may be irrigated by the waters of the said
irrigation project, and the number of annual installments, not
exceeding ten, in which such charges shall be paid and the time
when such payments shall commence. The said charges shall be
determined with a view of returning to the reclamation fund the
estimated cost of construction of the project, and shall be
apportioned equitably:
Provided, that in all construction
work, eight hours shall constitute a day's work, and no Mongolian
labor shall be employed thereon."