95 Cal. 606 | Cal. | 1892
The object of this action is perpetually to enjoin the defendant from closing a certain waste-gate in his canal during all such times as he may not be using the water flowing in the canal for the purpose of propelling his grist-mill, —the plaintiff claiming a prescriptive right to divert the water from the canal through the waste-gate, for the purpose of irrigating his land, whenever the water is not being used by defendant for the purpose of propelling his mill.
It is alleged in the complaint that about thirty years before the commencement of this action, the grantors of the defendant constructed a canal about one mile in length, through which they diverted water from Warm Creek, and conducted the same to their grist-mill in the county of San Bernardino, for the purpose of propelling the machinery of said mill, but until within a few days before the commencement of this action néver claimed or used the water for any other purpose; that, subject to the right of defendant to use the water for all purposes of running said mill, the plaintiff, during twelve years before the commencement of this action, appropriated, claimed, and used adversely to defendant, for irrigating his land, all the water discharged from said ditch through said waste-gate, at a point about one hundred yards above said mill, “whenever the said mill was not being run or operated.” And also alleged that plaintiff “is the owner of the right to the use and flow oí water from said canal for irrigation, agricultural, and domestic purposes as aforesaid, whenever the same is not needed for running said mill as aforesaid, and of the right to turn said water from said canal at the place of diversion, as hereinbefore stated.” The complaint then proceeds as follows: “That heretofore, to wit, on or about the tenth day of August, 1888, the defendant, without right, and while said mill was not being operated, nor the water of said canal needed or used for operating or running the same, closed the said gates in the side of said canal, and caused the
After further alleging irreparable injury as the consequence of being deprived of the use of said water, the plaintiff prays “that defendant be perpetually enjoined from closing said gate, and from depriving plaintiff of the use. or flow of the water of said canal through said opening, except at such times as said water may be needed and actually used for running and operating said mill.”
The answer of defendant specifically denies each allegation of the complaint, except that defendant’s grantors constructed and owned the canal and mill, and specifically denies any adverse appropriation or user of the water by the plaintiff or his grantors:
Upon certain issues of fact the court found for the plaintiff; and as a conclusion of law, found that plaintiff is the owner of the right to use water “ from said canal through the first waste-gate on the west side of said canal, about one hundred yards above the defendant’s grist-mill, at such times as the accustomed flow of the water in said canal is not used for the propulsion and operation of said grist-mill, or for purposes incidental to or necessary for the propulsion and operation of said grist-mill,” and thereupon awarded the perpetual injunction prayed for.
Defendant’s motion for new trial, made on a statement of the case, was denied, and he has appealed from the judgment, and from the order denying his motion. ;
The cause of action stated in the complaint, if any, is based upon plaintiff’s alleged right to take water from defendant’s canal without defendant’s permission and, against his will; and the burden of proving such right, was upon the plaintiff; since, so far as alleged in the complaint, such right was denied. It is admitted in the-complaint that the vendors of the defendant constructed the canal and appropriated the water of Warm Creek to-run their mill; and it is not claimed and does not appear-that the capacity of the canal is greater than necessary-for that purpose while the rhill is running. But it is. claimed by plaintiff that the mill has not run all the time, and that, while it was not running, the defendant and his grantors had generally turned the water from the canal through a waste-gate about one hundred yards above the mill; and thence returned it to the creek through a ditch dug by themselves for that purpose; and all this appears to be true. But there was no evidence introduced by either party, before or after the motion for nonsuit, tending to prove that the plaintiff or his grantors ever, to the knowledge of defendant or his grantors, raised the waste-gate, or took a drop of. water from the canal, without permission of the owner of the mill. It appears, however, that on some- occasions when the mill was not running, the owners permitted plaintiff and others to raise the waste-gate and take water from the canal; and plaintiff’s intestate — N. H. Ball — testified that on some occasions when the mill was not running, and when he could not find any one of the owners at or near the mill, he had raised the waste-gate and taken water from the canal. He said: “I have never been conceded the right to lift the waste-gate and turn the water away from the mill when the mill used it, by the previous owners or occupants of that
According to Mr. Ball’s testimony, he never claimed the right to take any water from the canal adversely to defendant or his grantors until about seventeen days before the commencement of this action. While he admits their right to use the water as they deemed necessary, and also to determine when its use by them was necessary, he does not state that they had notice that he ever took water from the canal without their consent, but only that he sometimes took it when he could not find any of the owners on or about the premises. He always sought the owners, and when he could find them, asked them whether they had any use for the water, before he took the liberty to raise their waste-gate. His own version of the circumstances under which he raised the waste-gate when the owners were present unmistakeably indicates that he did so only by their consent. His inquiry as to whether they desired to use the water was evidently intended by him, and understood by them, to be a request on his part for permission to use it. Construing his testimony as liberally as possible in his favor, there is nothing in it tending to prove that the defendant or his grantors ever had notice that he claimed the right to take water from their canal without their consent.
Mr. Ball further testified that, after having used the waste water more than six years, he posted a written notice on the waste-gate, stating that he claimed “ all the waste water flowing from the mill-race,” and claiming “ the right to divert said water at a point at the waste-gate of said mill-race, .... and to conduct the same through a ditch and ditches to reservoirs, and to and
This notice was posted March 5, 1883, and Mr. Ball testified: “ I do not know what became of that paper. . . . . I should judge that it remained there a few months until the weather took it away, as far as I know.” After posting this notice, plaintiff took and used the water as he had done during six years before, and not differently; and he always diverted the water from defendant’s “millrace,” at a point more than three hundred feet below the waste-gate. There is no evidence that defendant’s grantors ever saw the notice, except the fact that it was posted; and according to Mr. Ball’s testimony, it was destroyed before defendant purchased the property. But conceding that defendant and his grantors saw it, they were thereby notified only that plaintiff claimed “ the waste water from the ‘ mill-race,’ to be diverted and used as it had been diverted and used by plaintiff during six years before.” The “ mill-race ” mentioned in the notice is the ditch dug by defendant’s grantors to conduct the waste water from their waste-gate to the creek. Possibly the notice might have had the effect of giving plaintiff a right to all water discharged through the waste-gate and there abandoned by the defendant as waste water; but it contained nothing indicating that plaintiff claimed a right, under any circumstances, to divert water from defendant’s canal without his permission.
Plaintiff acquired no right to open defendant’s canal and take water from it, without defendant’s consent, in consequence of the mere fact that defendant was not using the water at the time plaintiff took it. Such an opening of and taking water from defendant’s canal was a trespass ab initio until after it had been openly and notoriously repeated and continued during a period of five years; and indeed, this seems to be the theory of the complaint. The motion for nonsuit raised the question whether or not the evidence substantially tends to prove that the trespass had been so committed and continued for a period of five years; and as above shown, it
The burden of proving uninterrupted user, with knowledge of the owner, is on the party claiming by prescription. (American Co. v. Bradford, 27 Cal. 361.) Interruption of adverse user, however slight, prevents acquisition of title by prescription. (Cave v. Crafts, 53 Cal. 135; Alta Land Co. v. Hancock, 85 Cal. 219; 20 Am. St. Rep. 217.) The use of water by permission of the owner is not adverse. (Feliz v. Los Angeles, 58 Cal. 74.)
The plaintiff, having failed to prove any right by prescription, can only have such right as he or his grantors acquired by appropriation of such waste water as defendant may elect to discharge through his waste-gate, which right does not include the right to take water from defendant’s canal without his consent. (Brown v. Mullen, 65 Cal. 89). In this connection, it is to be observed that there is a plain and substantial distinction between the wrongful taking of water from the ditch or reservoir of another and the wrongful diversion of it from a natural stream before it enters the ditch or reservoir (Heyneman v. Blake, 19 Cal. 579; Parks Canal & M. Co. v. Hoyt, 57 Cal. 44), corresponding with the common-law distinction between trespass vi et armis or de bonis asportatis and trespass on the case. For the purpose of diverting water from Warm Creek, it would not have been necessary to break defendant’s canal, nor in any mode to take from it the water therein contained, which, being in defendant’s possession and under his control, had become his personal property. Had the plaintiff claimed the right to divert water from Warm Creek, instead of the right to divert the water from defendant’s canal, probably the relative rights of the parties might have been
2. But there is no finding upon the issue as to adverse user; and counsel for appellant contend that for this reason the decision is against law.
The only answer to this point by respondent’s counsel is, that inasmuch as the record does not show that findings were not waived, it must be presumed that they were waived.
But where, as in this case, the record contains written findings of fact and law, the presumption contended for has never been indulged. In this case the judgment roll contains what purport to be findings of fact and law under the following recitals: “This case having been heretofore tried and submitted upon the pleadings, evidence, and briefs of counsel, the court finds the following facts.”
Following this are four paragraphs of findings of fact; and under the heading “ Conclusions of law ” are four paragraphs of conclusions of law.
Under these circumstances, I think there is no pre
I think the judgment and order should be reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
Haynes, C., and Belcher, C., concurred.
For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.
De Haven, J., McFarland, J., Sharpstein, J.
Hearing in Bank denied.