Plаintiff sues to quiet title to the unused portion of a strip of land over which his predecessors granted an easement to defendant for flood control purposes. A general demurrer to his second amended complaint was sustained without leave to amend and plaintiff appeals from the ensuing judgment of dismissal.
Plaintiff is the suсcessor in interest to Lucius and Jeannette Vogel who, on August 10, 1932, conveyed to the Flood Control District a perpetual easement for flood control purposes across certain land owned by them. The deed recites that it is made “in the consideration of the benefits to be derived by the undersigned by the establishment and maintanance of the official channel hereafter referred to and for other valuable considerations”; grants “a perpetual Easement for flood control purposes in, over and across the following described real property situate in the County of Los Angeles.” Here follows a metes and bounds description. The deed then specifies that: “The easement herein granted shall include the right to construct, reconstruct, inspect, maintain and repair a channel and protection works for the purpose of confining the waters of Los Angeles River in a single *288 channel and the right to enter upon and to pass and repass over and along said land to deposit tools, implements and other materials thereon to take therefrom and use earth, rock, sand and gravel for the purpose of excavating, widening and deepening and otherwise reeti/ing the channel and for the construction, maintenance and repairs оf embankments and other protection work by said District it’s officers, agents and employes and by persons under contract with it and their employes whenever and wherever necessary for flood control purposes. ... To have and to hold together with the right to do all things necessary to be done for the purpose of confining the water of said stream within said right way.” Appellant alleges that the easement was granted in order “to procure the protection of the land herein referred to from said periodic floods,” which averments refer back to the statement “that said property was intersected by the Los Angeles River, which wаs subject to annual overflow of said river and to shifting of the channel thereof.” The parcel described appears to be 826.78 feet in width at the north end and 800.92 feet at the south boundary. It is not possible to determine from the complaint whether this strip of land is but a part of a larger parcel owned by the grantors or whether it covers their entire holding. Counsel took opposing positions on this question when propounded at oral argument.
The complaint alleges that the district built a permanent flood control channel through the property and “bisected” it; that the channel has a width of 300 feet, the bottom and sides being lined with concretе and the banks protected by levees approximately 16 feet in width and 15 feet in height. It is also averred that immediately adjacent to the levees on the west side the state has constructed a permanent paved freeway, 175 feet wide, which occupies the major portion of the land west of the channel; that along the easterly side and immediately adjacent to the levee, a public sewer district of the county has constructed a sanitary sewer occupying 20 feet of the property on the east side of the channel.- Also that “said improvement [flood control channel] is the only improvement planned or intended to be constructed by the Los Angeles County Flood Control District for the purposes as aforesaid and for the purposes mentioned in the said easement.” And “ [t] hat all of the rest, residue and remainder of said property has not been and is not now used by the defendant for the purpose specified in said easement; that more *289 than twenty-five years have elapsed since the granting of said easement and said time is a reasonable time for the defendant to select a route for the said easement and the same has been selected as aforesaid.” The presently unused parcels are two strips on the extreme east and west sides of the easement parcel. The District has refused to convey to plaintiff those portions of the property. Plaintiff prays for an adjudication of all adverse claims of defendant to said unused portions of the property; that defendant be declared to have no right, title or interest thеrein; that plaintiff’s title thereto be quieted; and for other relief.
Appellant relies upon cases such as
Youngstown Steel etc. Co.
v.
City of Los Angeles,
Plaintiff’s allegations seem to establish, under the foregoing authorities, that the location of defendant’s flood control channеl is now fixed in the place heretofore chosen for it. But the grant does not stop with a right to an original construction. It also conveys incidental easements for reconstruction, maintenance and repair of the channel and the right to pass and repass for the deposit of tools and other materials and to take earth, rock, sand and gravel for the purpose of excavating, widening and deepening or otherwise rectifying the channel and the maintenance and repair of embankments and other protection work.
Ward
v.
City of Monrovia,
It is well settled in this state that an easement created by grant is not lost by mere nonuser.
(City of Vallejo
v.
Scally,
Volume 25, American Law Reports 2d 1265, at 1275: “The prevailing rule in the case of an easement created by deed or devise is that nonuser alone, however long it may be continued, will not constitutе an abandonment of the easement or be deemed evidence thereof, or otherwise har the grantee or his successors in title from either assuming or resuming, as the case may be, the exercise of the right.”
Harvey
v.
Missouri Pacific R. Co.,
Volume 3, Tiffany on Real Property (3d ed.), section 802, pages 321-322: “The mode in which the grantee of the easement, with the grantor’s acquiescence, exercised the easement after its acquisition, that is, the practical construction of the grant by the parties, may be referred to in order to aid in ascertaining its meaning, but the fact that the grantee made for a considerable time a more limited use of the land than that justified by the grant cannot affect the construction of a grant which is in terms unambiguous.”
It follows that plaintiff has not stated a cause of action and cannot do so. But his counsel argues that he is entitled, in any event, to a declaratory judgment, even if it is to the effect that plaintiff has no right to other relief.
In this connection appellant could have relied upon
Maguire
v.
Hibernia S. & L. Soc.,
In
Essick
v.
City of Los Angeles,
Anderson
v.
Stansbury,
Volume 15 California Jurisprudence 2d, section 25, page 145, makes this observation: “ It is of interest to note that, in affirming the denial of declaratоry relief by the trial court, the opinion of the reviewing court sometimes discusses matters of substance with respect to which the declaration
*294
was sought, and in effect affords the plaintiff-appellant a declaration as to the law measuring his rights or duties.” This must be true. Our holding that plaintiff cannot recover upon the causе of action which he attempts to state becomes the law of the case. If the cause were reversed, plaintiff could not amend to eliminate the present allegations which show he has no cause of action at law or in equity.
(Wennerholm
v.
Stanford Univ. Sch. of Med.,
The judgment is affirmed.
Fox, P. J., and Herndon, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied August 18, 1959.
Notes
Cf.
cases where the width of the way is expressly fixed by deed, in which it is held that the grantee may make use of the land up to the limits of the physical limits described.
(Ballard
v.
Titus,
