93 Cal. 407 | Cal. | 1892
This action was brought to restrain defendant from diverting the water of an alleged watercourse. Judgment was rendered for plaintiff, — at least, a judgment for costs, — and defendant appeals. If the appeal had been taken by plaintiff, some difficult questions might have been presented. Neither party seems to have had correct notions about riparian rights; but we see nothing in the record of which defendant can justly complain. There are only two or three matters that need be noticed.
1. We think that the complaint is sufficient. It states facts showing that plaintiff is a lower and defendant an upper riparian proprietor upon a stream that is sufficiently described; and the averments of plaintiff’s use of the water for a mill, winery, domestic purposes, etc., are mere surplusage.
2. The main source of the water of the stream was a certain large spring on defendant’s land; and many authorities are cited in the briefs about “subterranean streams,” “percolation,” “water filtration in the soil,” the “ sources of springs,” etc. But the court found, upon ample evidence, that from the spring in question “a stream of water from time immemorial has flowed in a perceptible current, carrying a large body of water, and at a short distance below the spring the stream flows in a deep, well-defined channel into Asbury Canon.” And this being so, it is useless to consider the sources of the spring itself. The right of the owner of land to have a well-defined watercourse continue to flow through it does not depend upon the length of the stream above him; his right is the same, whether the stream commences on his neighbor’s land or fifty miles away.
Defendant filed a cross-complaint, in which he averred, in substance, that he owned land extending from said Asbury canon or arroyo to another stream, called Sonoma Creek, into which said Asbury Arroyo empties; that at a point on said arroyo below the point at which defendant diverted water as charged by plaintiff, the plaintiff himself had diverted the water of said arroyo, and car
As before stated, it is difficult to see why defendant complains of the judgment. It appears that he first diverted the water, and has ever since continued to divert it, directly from the spring by means of a box and a three-inch pipe, and uses it for domestic purposes and for irrigating twenty or thirty acres of land. Afterwards, and within three years before the commencement of this action, at a point below the spring, he diverted all the water of the stream and carried it to another part of his land, and used it in connection with his business of manufacturing wine and packing fruit for market; and after this second diversion, as the court finds, neither plaintiff nor his tenants “had any water for domestic purposes, nor did any flow down Asbury Canon for the use of the stock of plaintiff or defendant.” Now, in the judgment, it is decreed that defendant may continue to
J udgment and order denying a new trial affirmed.
De Haven, J., and Sharfstein, J., concurred.