The city of Coronado, a municipal corporation, appeals from an order vacating a prior order granting it leave to intervene in this action and striking its complaint in intervention from the files.
Section 387 of the Code of Civil Procedure permits intervention “at any time before trial” by “any person, who
In December, 1946, the decree was affirmed by this court, with a slight modification
(Allen
v.
California Water & Tel. Co., 29
Cal.2d 466 [
In March, 1947, 11 years after the commencement of the action and seven years after the trial, the city of Coronado filed its complaint in intervention. Permission so to do was granted by an ex parte order limiting the intervention “to those issues left open by the Supreme Court as between the original parties in said action, ’ ’ and denying to the intervener “the right to raise de novo questions which have been litigated and decided between the original parties hereto. ’ ’
The pleading alleges that the city is wholly dependent upon the purchase of water from defendant for its requirement of 1,500,000 gallons a day; that defendant supplies it from three sources, (1) Purchase from the San Diego Otay system pursuant to a written contract of 1912, which stipulates that in the event of a water shortage the water will be equitably appor
The pleading further alleges that pursuant to the decision of this court, application has been made to take evidence on the amount of the Mexican waters and on the subject of change of conditions since the date of the judgment; that for more than five years defendant has furnished water to Coronado from its Tia Juana development and that by such development and use there has been a dedication of the Tia Juana waters to Coronado; that Coronado has an interest in the matter in litigation because the major portion of its supply comes from Tia Juana Basin sources and if these are shut off, the only source will be the San Diego Otay system, which is also dedicated to other areas and servitudes; that it is of vital importance to Coronado that any other available water be developed and determined, and for that reason, Coronado has an interest in the success of defendant in this action; that since June, 1946, there has been no appreciable run off of waters into the reservoirs comprising the San Diego system and the rainfall has been far below normal and insufficient to replenish the impounded supply.
The prayer of the intervener is that its rights and the right of other parties to Tia Juana Basin waters be declared; that reasonable regulations be made for the use of such waters, with jurisdiction reserved in the court to modify its orders and decrees as the occasion may demand; and that the intervener have any other relief deemed meet and right in equity; together with costs.
It may be assumed without discussion, that the court had power in the first instance to permit the filing of the complaint in intervention by an order granted without notice or service as required by rule XIV of the San Diego Superior Court. However, it appears from a study of the pleading and the record on plaintiffs’ motion to vacate that the court properly concluded that the ex parte order should be set aside and correctly struck the complaint in intervention from the files.
The complaint in intervention was not timely; it was not filed in the trial court “before trial” as that term is used in section 387, Although the modification of the judg
Aside from the statutory limitation upon the time of intervention, it is the general rule that a right to intervene should be asserted within a reasonable time and that the intervener must not be guilty of an unreasonable delay after knowledge of the suit.
(Hibernia etc. Society
v.
Churchill,
Here the city of Coronado has not such an “interest” in the supplemental proceedings under reserved jurisdiction as would give it a right to intervene. ■ It has no direct interest or claim to any of the waters involved in the litigation. Although it alleges a dedication to it of Tia Juana waters based on a five-year use, the record shows that the present injunction suit was filed against defendant in 1936 before any delivery of water had been made by it to Coronado, and that thereafter pumping and delivery of water were permitted subject to the outcome of the litigation. Defendant is in no position to claim and never has asserted the attachment of a public use. The city of Coronado, one of its customers, cannot claim and in fact has no greater right in the waters than has defendant itself. An intervener is bound by the record of the action at the time intervention is sought. (20 Cal.Jur. p. 526, §29;
McNeil
v.
Morgan,
The order is affirmed.
Gibson, C. J., Edmonds, J., Carter, J., Traynor, J., Schauer, J., and Spence, J., concurred.
