268 P. 374 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1928
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *430 This cause is before us upon the application of the petitioner praying that an order be issued by this court directed to the Superior Court of the County of Siskiyou and the Honorable Charles J. Luttrell as judge thereof, requiring him to show cause why a writ of prohibition should not be granted prohibiting said court and the judge thereof from proceeding with the hearing of a certain matter or action now pending in said court wherein the department of public works of the state of California, through the division of water rights thereof, has filed in said court its determination of the water rights of the Shasta River and its tributaries in the county of Siskiyou.
While the petition filed herein sets forth at great length a number of specifications why said order should be issued and said writ granted, only four of said specifications are set forth and urged upon our attention by the petitioner in his points and authorities accompanying the petition. These specifications are as follows:
1. That section 32 and sections 36a to 36f of the Water Commission Act, approved June 16, 1913 (Stats. 1913, p. 1012), and as amended by subsequent acts are unconstitutional and particularly section 36b thereof.
2. That no issues are raised in the complaint, and the court has no jurisdiction to proceed with the hearing.
3. That the only proper order that can be made by the court below is one of dismissal. *431
4. That the petitioner has no plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law.
[1] As the petitioner's argument is directed particularly to the provisions of section 36b, we will in the consideration of his application proceed in the same line of thought. In his attack on said action reliance is based upon the recent case ofMojave River Irrigation District v. Superior Court of SanBernardino County,
In the Mojave case it appears from the facts set forth in the opinion that a proceeding was instituted in the Superior Court to review the action of the water commission in granting a permit to the Mojave River Irrigation District to appropriate water flowing in the Mojave River, and that the cause before the Supreme Court was based upon an application to prohibit the Superior Court from hearing and determining the proceeding pending therein, to review the action of the commission, on the ground that a writ ofcertiorari or writ of review so to do does not lie and that the provisions of section 1b of the Water Commission Act as amended in 1923, purporting so to do, was unconstitutional. The court then takes up and reviews many of the recent cases wherein it is held that a writ of certiorari will not lie to review the action of an administrative officer, citing, among others, the case of Tulare Water Co. v. State Water Co.,
We may now consider section 36b and the various cases from different states passing upon water laws containing identical provisions. After providing for an investigation of the water rights of various claimants appropriating water from any certain stream and its tributaries, the hearing of the various claimants, taking of proofs, examination of streams, their tributaries, dams, ditches, etc., the act provides that the commission shall come to a determination as to the respective quantities of water the different claimants are entitled to divert and the lands upon which the waters may be used, setting forth in minute detail so that the quantity of water to which each claimant may be entitled, and the lands upon which it is entitled to be used may be readily ascertained, etc., the water commission is directed to file the same in a county through which the stream runs, together with the transcript of all the testimony taken by the commission, and then obtaining from the court of said county an order for a hearing upon such determination, *434 which order must be published for a specified length of time and a certified copy of the notice of the time and place of the hearing served upon all the parties. Section 36b of the act then provides as follows: "At least ten days prior to the day set for hearing, all parties in interest who are aggrieved or dissatisfied with the order of determination of the state water commission shall file with the clerk of said court notice of exceptions to the order of determination of the state water commission, which notice shall state briefly the exceptions taken, the reasons therefor, and the prayer for relief, and a copy thereof shall be transmitted by registered mail at least ten (10) days prior to such hearing, to the state water commission and to each claimant, who was an adverse party to any contest wherein such exceptor was a party in the proceedings. The order of determination by the state water commission and the statements or claims or claimants and exceptions made to the order of determination shall constitute the pleadings, but the court may allow such additional or amended pleadings as may be necessary to a final determination of the proceeding. If no exceptions shall have been filed with the clerk of the court as aforesaid, then on the day set for the hearing, on motion of the state water commission, or its attorney, the court shall enter a decree affirming said order of determination. On the day set for hearing all parties in interest who have filed notices of exceptions as aforesaid shall appear in person, or by counsel, and it shall be the duty of the court to hear the same or set the time for hearing, until such exceptions are disposed of, and all proceedings thereunder shall be as nearly as may be in accordance with the rules governing civil actions." It requires but a cursory reading of this section to show that the court is empowered to permit the filing of additional or amended pleadings as may be desired by the parties to set forth fully and completely, all and singular, their rights, or to whatever rights the parties may deem themselves entitled, as fully and completely as is provided for in any of the sections of the Code of Civil Procedure. The specific language of the section also is to the effect that the proceedings shall be as nearly as possible in accordance with the rules governing civil action. This means that the testimony upon which the court finally acts must be such as would entitle *435 the court to act in any civil proceeding. The section does not provide simply for a review of the testimony taken by the commission, nor of the correspondence or data which may have been deemed sufficient by the commission. The essential requirement of the language of the section, taken as a whole, is that the court, in the light of the findings of the commission before it, shall proceed as nearly as possible as would be the case in an ordinary civil action to hear whatever the parties in interest may have to present in the way of proper testimony, and after such hearing enter a decree determining the quantity of water that each claimant is entitled to appropriate from the stream in question and also fixing and determining the place of use thereof. The subsequent sections provide for the taking of additional testimony by way of reference to the commission, but that is no different in effect than where a court issues a commission to take testimony. This brief summary shows the distinction between section 1b and section 36b of the Water Commission Act. That the parties were brought into court other than by means of the issuance of a summons does not appear to us to affect the constitutionality of the act. The question really is, in every case, whether the court has jurisdiction of the parties and of the cause. In this particular there is no essential difference in obtaining jurisdiction of the parties, than when the court issues its order to show cause why a certain action should not be taken. It is not in all cases absolutely necessary that a summons may be issued in order to give the court jurisdiction of the parties. For instance, in the present application this court is asked to acquire jurisdiction over the Superior Court of the County of Siskiyou and Honorable Charles J. Luttrell by issuing and having served upon him an order to show cause. That after having acquired jurisdiction of the parties, the subsequent proceedings may not be in all particulars identical with the trial of some other civil action, such as a damage suit, does not affect the constitutionality of the section in question. If void because in detail it differs slightly from the procedure in other cases, then, and in that case, the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure having to do with eminent domain actions would likewise be vulnerable. It only requires a reading of the various sections of the Code of Civil Procedure to show the dissimilarity between the *436 summons in an ordinary action and the summons provided for in eminent domain proceedings. Again, if exactly the same procedure must be followed in all cases, the section of the code setting forth that in the first instance only an interlocutory judgment may be entered in a divorce action and then a final judgment a number of months later, would likewise be unconstitutional. In the present case the petition sets forth that there are 131 claimants asserting rights to the waters of the Shasta River and its tributaries, based upon appropriation. These rights are not absolutely independent and unrelated, but they are all dependent and correlated, each depending upon the lawful exercise of the right claimed by the others. There is only so much water in a stream and its tributaries to be used, and each claimant owns really the use and not the water itself, which, from the very nature of the case, demands an enactment suitable to the conditions presented. In this regard we read the Water Commission Act as a general law applicable to a particular subject, to wit, the use of the waters of the various streams of the state. Other states having constitutional limitations similar to subdivisions 3 and 33 of section 25 of article IV of our constitution, relating to legislative acts regulating the practice of courts of justice have upheld identical statutes with the one now under consideration. In the case of Eden Irrigation Co. v. DistrictCourt, 61 Utah, 103 [211 P. 957], the Supreme Court of Utah had under consideration a water act containing the provisions which are similar in substance to the Water Commission Act of this state. So far as pertinent here, the Utah act reads: "After full consideration of the statements of claims, the surveys, records and files, and after a personal examination of the river system or water source involved, if such examination is deemed necessary, the state engineer shall formulate a proposed determination of all rights to the use of the water of such river system or water course, and a copy of such proposed determination shall be mailed by regular mail to each claimant, with notice that any claimant dissatisfied with such determination may within ninety days from such date of mailing, file with the clerk of the district court a written objection thereto duly verified on oath." The act then goes on to provide for hearing, contests, and entry of final decree. It was there objected that such a proceeding was *437 inhibited by the constitution in that the legislature was prevented from passing any local or special laws regulating the practice of courts of justice, just as it is insisted here. The court, in passing upon this contention, expressed its views in these words: "Finally, it is insisted that the act in question offends against that provision of our constitution (Const., art. VI, sec. 26), which prohibits the legislature from enacting a special law `regulating the practice of courts of justice.' This contention, it seems to us, is somewhat far-fetched. In the first place, we cannot conceive how the law in question is special, nor how it regulates the practice of courts of justice. Nothing of that character is attempted. Neither is that the effect of anything that is contained in the act. The question respecting the regulation of the waters of this state is a very comprehensive one, and in some respects, for the purpose of simplifying and expediting the administration of the law with respect to that matter and the protection of water rights, the legislature no doubt would have the right to direct the courts how to proceed in certain matters, and, so long as the law applied to all courts and governed all persons claiming water rights, there is nothing special about such a law."
In the case of Stuart v. Norviel et al.,
In Pacific Livestock Co. v. Oregon,
In the case of In re Willow Creek, supra, appears an elaborate opinion from the Supreme Court of Oregon in which every phase of the water act of that state is taken up and thoroughly considered and every question raised by the petitioner in this cause completely answered. From that opinion we will, however, take only the following excerpt: "It is within the province of the legislature to say that registered mail may be used as a means of conveying a notice, when publication is also required, and especially where in case of dispute a notice of contest is required to be served and returned the same as a summons in an action in the courts." (Citing a number of cases.)
In the case of Humboldt Land Cattle Co. v. DistrictCourt,
In a proceeding to determine the water rights in the Humboldt River,
In addition to the cases which we have reviewed, the following may also be cited supporting the decision from which we have quoted: Farm Inv. Co. v. Carpenter, supra; Crawford Co. v.Hathaway,
[2] An appeal lies from the judgment of the trial court in decreeing the rights of the respective appropriators, and thus, all parties are given a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy at law, and is a sufficient answer to the petitioner's objection that no adequate remedy exists other than that prayed for herein.[3] Nor do we find any merit in the contention that the proceeding is not properly entitled. Excluding the cover pages of the report of the commission, we find the following: "In the Matter of the Determination of the Relative Rights based upon prior appropriation of the various claimants to the waters of Shasta River and its tributaries in Siskiyou County, California," which is as full and complete a title as we find in many proceedings, as, for example, in probate matters where the cause is entitled, "In the Matter of the Estate (giving the name of the person), Deceased." [4] Nor is there any merit in the petitioner's contention that the Water Commission Act does not purport to determine the rights of riparian owners. The petitioner does not base his rights upon riparian ownership as it is expressly stated that he is an appropriator of *441 the waters of one of the tributaries of the Shasta River. [5] The Water Commission Act under consideration does not purport to deal with other than the appropriated waters of the state and the ascertainment and determination of the waters that have been appropriated, and then giving to the commission power to grant permits to appropriate the unappropriated waters of the state. That the third subdivision of section 11 of the act purporting to bar or terminate the unused rights of a riparian land owner after the expiration of ten years may or may not be unconstitutional, as the taking of property without due process of law, is wholly immaterial, as any holding relative to that section would not have any bearing whatever upon the decision of the courts as to the rights of appropriators. The whole tenor of the act deals only with appropriators. Section 20 sets forth the form by which an appropriator shall set forth all the facts upon which his right to the use of the waters is predicated, and includes only such rights as have their origin in appropriation, and following all these various proceedings, the judgment of the court finally to be entered deals only with the rights of appropriators.
That the various sections of the Water Commission Act are new to the legal profession does not affect their validity, for, as said by the Supreme Court of Nevada in one of the cases to which we have referred, every forward-looking piece of legislation meets the old and time-honored objection — unconstitutional.
The petition for an order to show cause is denied.
Hart, J., and Finch, P.J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on July 6, 1928, and the following opinion then rendered thereon:
THE COURT.
This cause is again before us for consideration upon the petition of interveners for a rehearing. The petition for rehearing is based upon the alleged unconstitutionality of section 32 of the Water Commission Act (Stats. 1913, p. 1012), and is urged upon our attention by reason of the fact that in the opinion herein filed upon petition for a writ of prohibition the provisions of that *442
section were not referred to, set forth or discussed. [6] Upon an application for prohibition only one question can be considered, and that is whether the trial court has jurisdiction to proceed. (See sec. 1102, Code Civ. Proc., and the annotations thereto, contained in Kerr's Cyc. Codes.) [7] If, under the Water Commission Act, and the provisions of section 36b thereof, the trial court has jurisdiction to proceed, it is utterly immaterial, for the purposes of the determination of the merits of the petition for prohibition, whether section 32 of the act is or is not unconstitutional. If section 32 of the Water Commission Act is void, as alleged by the interveners, then and in that case the interveners have a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy to remove any alleged cloud that might be cast upon the title to their property by reason of any acts of the water commission or by appeal from any decree or judgment of the trial court assessing any of the costs mentioned in said section 32 against the property belonging to any of the petitioners. As stated by this court in Lightner Mining Co. v. Superior Court,
Being of the opinion that the trial court has jurisdiction to proceed as stated in our opinion heretofore filed, no basis for the issuance of a writ of prohibition has been presented by the interveners herein, even though their contentions as to the invalidity of section 32 of the Water Commission Act be meritorious. The contentions of the interveners may properly be presented to the trial court, and if the trial court holds adversely thereto, a plain, speedy, and adequate remedy exists for the correction of any error if such determination be erroneous.
The petition for rehearing is denied.
An application by petitioner and interveners to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on August 3, 1928.
Seawell, J., Richards, J., and Curtis, J., dissented.