73 Cal. 249 | Cal. | 1887
—■ The plaintiff made a deed by which he granted, bargained, sold, and conveyed to the defendant the right to make and maintain a water ditch upon .and across his land, along a line then surveyed, to a certain point upon the land, and the right to construct and maintain at such point a reservoir not exceeding one and one half acres, the exact site thereof to be thereafter determined, and the right to “ lay down and maintain upon said premises an iron pipe, flume, ditch, or other conduit leading from said dam or reservoir to the Idaho
The deed contained also the following clause:—
“ It being understood and a part of the consideration for this conveyance that the grantor shall have the right at all times to appropriate for his own use, and to conduct wherever he shall desire, so much of the waste water flowing over said dam or reservoir as he shall choose.”
The plaintiff's grievance is, that the defendant allowed the Maryland Mining Company to tap its pipe “by a branch pipe or tap in said iron pipe leading to the said Idaho quartz mine at a long distance from said reservoir and said Idaho quartz mine, and intermediate the same”; and that by reason of such diversion there was not enough waste water for his purposes. But we do
The contract being perfectly clear, and the action being in affirmance of the contract, the court below was right in rejecting parol evidence of prior conversations, and as to what was understood, etc.
If the branch pipe put in for the use of the Maryland company were upon plaintiff’s land, it might be objected by him that this additional burden was not authorized by his deed. But it appears from the findings that this branch pipe was put in “ at a point between the land of plaintiff and the Idaho quartz mine.”
We think, therefore, that the judgment refusing any relief to the plaintiff was proper.
Upon the cross-complaint of the defendant the court decreed that the defendant “ is the owner of the right of way forever over the lands hereinafter described, for a ditch, pipe, flume, conduit, and reservoir to store and convey water, etc., .... for any lawful purpose.”
The defendant argues that the decree ought to have
The other matters argued do not require special mention.
We therefore advise that the judgment and order be affirmed.
— For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are affirmed.