Bledsoe v. Decrow

64 P. 397 | Cal. | 1901

This action was brought by plaintiffs for the purpose of having it adjudged that they are the owners of the right to take and divert, at the point described in the complaint, the waters of the Mojave River to the extent of six hundred inches, measured under a four-inch pressure, and that defendants have no right, title, or interest to said six hundred inches.

The defendants, by their different answers, claimed by prior appropriation certain portions of the waters of said river. The court filed findings of fact, upon which judgment was entered for plaintiffs for the amount of water claimed, with certain exceptions and reservations. It was found that defendants Julius E. Meyer, Jr., Henry Meyer, Charles Meyer, and Julius Meyer, Sen., are the owners, as against the plaintiffs, of the right to 175 inches of the waters of said river, to be taken at the point designated in their answer. This finding is not attacked, and there is no appeal by plaintiffs as to said defendants Meyer, and no appeal by them.

The court found that defendants Davidson, Bemis, and Lane have a prior and superior right to divert, at the intake of their ditch where it is now situated, 230 inches, measured under a four-inch pressure; that defendants Decrow and Van Horn have a prior right to divert from said river, at the intake of their ditch where it is now situated, 400 inches, measured under a four-inch pressure. The plaintiffs made a motion for a new trial as to said defendants Davidson, Bemis, Lane, Decrow, and Van Horn, upon the ground, among others, of insufficiency of the evidence to justify the decision.

The motion was granted, and this appeal is from the said order. The rule is well settled that a motion for a new trial on the ground of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict, or other decision, is addressed to the sound legal discretion of the court, and that an order granting a new *314 trial on this ground will not be reversed on appeal, unless it appears that there was a manifest abuse of such discretion.(Bjorman v. Fort Bragg Redwood Co., 92 Cal. 501, and cases cited.) We cannot say there was such abuse of discretion in this case. The case was one of great importance. The credibility of the witnesses, the expert testimony applied to the locality, the surroundings, and local influences, were all matters upon which the judge of the court below was much more competent to pass than we could be, from a mere examination of the record.

In the order the court inserted certain conditions, and provided that in case defendants complied with the conditions named in the order, the motion would be denied. It is claimed that the court had no right to insert the conditions, — that they were not justified in law, and that the order, for this reason, was void. To this view we cannot accede. The plaintiffs made the motion for a new trial upon the reasons therein stated, and if the motion was granted for any valid reason, it would not become void because certain conditions not warranted in law were stated as terms upon which defendants could avoid the order. The appellants made no attempt to comply with the conditions, and hence are not in a position to claim the order was void on account of such conditions. But as the case will have to be retried, it may be well to express our views as to the conditional order. The order provided that if defendants Decrow and Van Horn would stipulate or consent that plaintiffs take judgment that they are entitled to the prior right to perpetually divert from the river at any point above plaintiffs' land the full flow thereof to the extent of 1,150 inches, provided they perpetually deliver to said defendants Decrow and Van Horn, free of charge to them, the full amount of 90 inches of water at a certain point where there is now a measuring-box on said Decrow and Snodderly ditch, but that plaintiffs shall have eighteen months after the entry of such judgment in which to construct conduits through which to deliver said 90 inches of water; that in case defendants should so consent to take said 90 inches instead of 400 inches, then and in that case the new trial would be denied.

As against the defendants Davidson, Lane, and Bemis, the order provided that in place of the 230 inches continuous flow given them by the judgment they might stipulate to take 1,150 inches for the first three day of every fifteen days, commencing March 1, 1899, provided they at all times should *315 allow to flow down the river sufficient water to enable plaintiff to deliver 90 inches at the measuring-box of defendants Decrow and Van Horn. If the stipulation should be made as above set forth, then the order would be made denying a new trial as to Decrow and Van Horn.

We do not think the court had the right to have plaintiffs give defendants, or either of them, less water than the evidence shows they are entitled to. The court may have been correctly of the opinion that in taking the water from the river, and conducting it through open ditches, a large part of it was wasted by evaporation, or percolation through the lands over which the ditches run, and that 90 inches furnished Decrow and Van Horn would be fully as much as would ultimately reach their lands through the ditch. It may have correctly concluded that defendants Davidson, Bemis, and Lane would be benefited more by using 1,150 inches the first three days in every fifteen than by a continuous use of 230 inches. But it is not for the court to prescribe such conditions. The findings should state correctly the rights of defendants; and if they are the owners of part of the waters of the Mojave River by prior appropriation, the finding should show the correct number of inches so appropriated. The rights of the parties, as against each other, should be definitely settled. In a partition suit the court might be convinced that it would be best for one of the parties to give him a definite rental, either in money or part of the crops, but the court could not do this in lieu of the rights of the party to his land. In this case, if the defendants waste water in conducting it through their ditches, it may be that by pipes or otherwise they can hereafter save it, and thus have the full benefit of all they own. The appropriation must be for some useful or beneficial purpose. It may be conducted through ditches, flumes, or pipes. It may even be turned into the channel of another stream, mingled with its waters, and then reclaimed, so long as the amount of water appropriated by another is not diminished. If defendants have appropriated more water than they use for beneficial purposes, or if they willfully waste it, the court has power to give proper relief, but to allow the plaintiffs to give to defendants a certain number of inches in lieu of the amount they have the right to as prior appropriators, would be to introduce a new rule as to water rights in this state. *316

The specifications as to the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the findings resulted in getting all the evidence in the record. Counsel for appellant, in their brief, say: "They also specify that the evidence was insufficient to justify the finding of fact as to the appropriation of water by the defendants in 1879 and the quantity and continuance thereof, and the location of ditches and the intake thereof."

The specification seems to have informed defendants' attorneys as to the respects wherein the evidence was alleged to be insufficient.

We advise that the order be affirmed.

Haynes, C., and Gray, C., concurred.

For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the order is affirmed. Van Dyke, J., Garoutte, J., Harrison, J.

midpage