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Mr* W* S. House 6 April 2, 1952 Houck v. Little Biver Drainage District, 239 U.S. 254, 6g l * 'e<&. 266, In which the' Supreme Court held a drainage district formed under Missouri laws to be a political subdivision of the state for the purpose of performing prescribed functions of government* Obad v. Puerto Hico Communication Authority* M 'Fed. 3'upp. 34f holding the Fuerto Rico fiommunications Authority, which operated telephone and telegraph service on the island, to be a political subdivision of the Insular Government and exempt from application of the Fair Labor Standards Act* Water District v* County of Orange, 30 Cal, App. (2d) 740,'holding that a water district created under the laws of California was not a municipal corporation withfn the meaning of certain constitutional provisions, but was a public agency exercising governmental functions, such as power of taxation and eminent domain. We should not overlook the fact, however, that there are many decisions holding that public districts of the character of the Las Vegas Water District are not political subdivisions of the-state within the meaning of various types of statutes* An illustrative case is that of Maricopa County Water Conservation District (Ariz *), 49 Pae* (2d) '^4, wEJcE held that the water district there involved was not a political subdivision of the state, although it exercised the taxing power because its purposes were primarily business rather than governmental* In view of the conflict in the decisions there exists the possibility that the Commissioner of Internal Revenue might take the position that the Las Vegas Water District is not a political subdivision within the meaning of the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code and the regulations thereunder above mentioned. Such was the position taken by the Commissioner 3Tn the case of Commissioner v. Shamberg* s Estate, 144 Fed. 2d 99$, certiorari denied, 89 L. ed. 631, involving a deficiency in income