LOUIS P. JOERGER, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. PACIFIC GAS & ELECTRIC COMPANY (a Corporation) et al., Defendants; MT. SHASTA POWER CORPORATION (a Corporation) et al., Defendants and Appellants.
Sac. No. 3865
In Bank
April 9, 1929
Rule XXIII of this court provides: “In all cases in which the judgment or order appealed from is reversed or modified, and the order of reversal or modification contains no directions as to the costs of aрpeal, the clerk will enter upon the record, and insert in the remittitur, a judgment that the appellant recover the costs of appeal. . . .”
The motion is, therefore, granted. The remittitur is recalled for the purpose of correction as prayed for, and it is ordered that a correct remittitur be issued in its place, nunc pro tunc, pursuant to the requirements of rule XXIII, supra. (See San Joaquin etc. Irr. Co. v. Stevinson, 165 Cal. 540 [132 Pac. 1021]; Estate of Steehler, 197 Cal. 67 [239 Pac. 718]; Estate of Johnson, 200 Cal. 307 [252 Pac. 1052].)
Thos. J. Straub, Chenoweth & Leininger, L. H. Susman and Carr & Kennedy for Defendants and Appellants.
TYLER, J., pro tem.—Action to quiet title to certain lands and water rights and for damages for interference therewith. The transcript is voluminous, consisting of many thousands of pages. The questions presented are numerous, the briefs and supplements thereto being made up of over 3,000 pages. A complete recital of the pleadings and the facts would extend our opinion to undue proportions. We will, therefore, state only those which, in our opinion, are necessary to a full understanding and proper disposition of the questions here presented. The issues are framed upon an amended and supplemental complaint containing four separate counts or causes of action, and an amended answer of defendants Mt. Shasta Power Corporation, hereinafter referred to as the Power Company, and the Red River Lumber Company, hereinafter referred to as the Lumber Company.
The first three causes of action are of equitable cognizance involving the quieting of title to lands and certain water rights owned by the plaintiff, and the fourth relates to damages alleged to have been suffered by reason of numerous torts or trespasses upon and interference by defendants with such lands and water rights. The case was tried before the court and a jury. The issues raised by the first three counts were considered equitable and were decided by the trial judge, and the issue as to damages raised by the fourth count was submitted to and decided by the jury. The Joerger ranch is owned by plaintiff and is a consolidation of what was at one time four different ranches. These ranches were known as the “Tucker Place,” the “Grant Place,” the “Smith Place” or “Smith-Braden” or “Smith-Schnittger Place” and the “Braden Place,” and they were acquired by plaintiff during the years 1917 and 1920, the entire acreage consisting of some 1680 acres. The lands are situated in Shasta County and plaintiff has been engaged in farming portions thereof since the year 1917. A stream, known as Hat Creek, flows through a portion of
The first count of the complaint, after alleging ownership in plaintiff and his predecessors in interest of the land in question and of the Tucker-Fitzpatrick ditch for over thirty years, recites that Hat Creek is, and from time immemorial has been, a natural stream, and is one of the largest tributaries of Pit River, into which it flows; that plaintiff and his predecessors in interest have by right diverted from Hat Creek 1,000 inches of water, measured under a six-inch pressure, for irrigation, watering stock and domestic purposes,
Defendants thereupon filed separate answers. They deny and allege as follows: As to the first cause of action they deny complete ownership in plaintiff of the Tucker-Fitzpatrick ditch, its capacity, or that plaintiff has irrigated the amount of land he claims; allege its capacity and the right of defendants to a portion of the waters in both ditches to
At the close of the trial the court made certain findings which with the conclusions of law cover many pages of the record. Plaintiff was awarded certain rights in the waters involved and damages in the sum of $40,000. Defendants were awarded an interest in certain of the lands and certain riparian rights. Both plaintiff and defendants have appealed from certain portions of the judgment. In order to avoid repetition the various assignments of error will be stated where dealt with. The first claim made by defendants is that the trial court committed error in overruling their demurrers to the amended and supplemental complaint, as amended, for the reason that misjoinder of causes of action and of parties defendant appear on the face of that pleading. We have been cited to numerous cases by counsel for both parties upon this subject. We do not consider an extensive review of those authorities to be necessary. One of the objects of the reformed or code procedure is to simplify the pleadings and conduct of actions, and to permit the settlement of all matters of controversy between parties in one action, so far as may be practicable. The principal objection of defendants to the pleading is that some of the causes of action united in the fourth count are against the Power Company alone, while others are against both defendants jointly. It has been held in this state that notwithstanding the language of
The lands of plaintiff, as above pointed out, constitute a contiguous area along the knolls and sloping hillsides adjacent to Hat Creek. The ground is hilly and porous, marked by numerous depressions, and is irrigated by turning the water upon the ground and permitting it to run over the slopes. This is the character of system commonly used in the vicinity. There is no authority which requires an appropriator of water to change his system of irrigation so that others may perhaps be benefited thereby, assuming thаt the method may produce some waste. (Barrows v. Fox, supra.) The findings of the trial court as to the allowance of water and the beneficial use that plaintiff has made thereof for various purposes, and the area of land irrigated by him, except as hereinafter stated, find full support in the evidence. Many witnesses, both scientific and lay, testified concerning plaintiff‘s claims in this respect and their testimony fully supports the findings of the trial court upon
The law is well settled that any use of a stream which materially fouls and adulterates the water, or the deposit or discharge therein of any filthy or noxious substances that so far affect the water as to impair its value for the ordinary purposes of life, or anything that renders the water less wholesome than when in its ordinary state will constitute a nuisance, which courts of equity will enjoin, and for which a lower riparian owner, injurеd thereby, is entitled to redress. (Trevett v. Prison Assn., 98 Va. 332 [81 Am. St. Rep. 727, 50 L. R. A. 564, 36 S. E. 373]; Peterson v. City of Santa Rosa, 119 Cal. 387 [51 Pac. 557].) Conceding, therefore, defendants’ generation of power to be a riparian use, that fact does not entitle them to pollute the water to the injury of others entitled to it. (Farnham on Waters, sec. 495, p. 1645; Mentone Irr. Co. v. Redlands L. & P. Co., 155 Cal. 323 [17 Ann. Cas. 1222, 22 L. R. A. (N. S.) 382, 100 Pac. 1082]; 40 Cyc., pp. 593, 594; Fisher v. Feige, 137 Cal. 39 [92 Am. St. Rep. 77, 59 L. R. A. 333, 69 Pac. 618]; Peterson v. City of Santa Rosa, supra.) It is a matter of common knowledge that pure and wholesome water for domestic uses, and in farming operations, is a valuable asset, and its presence or absence materially affects the value of farm property, and such rights cannot be destroyed by a riparian owner in a stream to such an extent as to render the water unfit
Defendants complain of the admission of the testimony of one Dr. White, a physician and health officer of Shasta County, as to the fitness for domestic use of plaintiff‘s water supply, it being claimed that he was not a bacteriologist and had made no analysis of the water, for which reasons he was not qualified to testify upon the subject. There is no merit in this objection. As county health officer he was certainly qualified to testify as tо his opinion concerning the condition of the water and its fitness for domestic use. It does not require a bacteriologist to determine this question or that water is muddy, full of algae and bugs, and that its taste is unpalatable due to such causes. Nor is there merit in the claim that the court erred in admitting the testimony of certain witnesses for plaintiff to the effect that all the waters in the ditches were used
Complaint is made of certain instructions given to the jury. Defendants are in no position to avail themselves of alleged errors in this respect. The instructions requested by plaintiff and defendants do not appear in the transcript herein, which contains only the instructions as given by the court. Upon an appeal prepared under the alternative method, instructions offered at the trial and refused by the judge, in order to be available to an appellant for use upon appeal, should be included in the reporter‘s transcript and settled by the judge. Since the transcript contains no copies of requested instructions by the parties and does not reveal which of the instructions were given by the court on its own initiative, defendants cannot here complain of error in the instructions. (Martin v. Pacific Gas & Electric Co., 195 Cal. 544 [234 Pac. 321]; Shannon v. Calmus, 70 Cal. App. 652 [234 Pac. 107].) For all that appears they may have been presented by defendants themselves. However, we have examined all the instructions and find no error contained therein.
The ruling of the court in the admission and exclusion of certain evidence is next complained of. In this connection it is first contended that the trial court erred in admitting testimony as to plaintiff‘s damages to his crops for the years 1923 and 1924, for the reason that such damages were not within the issues, they having occurred subsequent to the filing of the complaint. The evidence was properly admitted. It was offered and received in support of plaintiff‘s claim that damage to his crops for the period involved was in consequence of the unlawful acts of defendants committed prior to the filing of the amended and sup-
Defendants next complain of the admission of evidence as to the cost of a concrete flume at the head of the John Smith ditch, claimed by plaintiff to be necessary by reason of defendants’ acts in obstructing the intake of the ditch. The diversion weir in Hat Creek is upstream from the ditch, and prior to the diversion by the Power Company of the water through its plant, such company сonstructed a wooden flume from the face of the dam into the ditch and the water therefrom was carried through this flume after the construction of Hat No. 2 power plant. It appeared in evidence that this flume was leaking and would soon decay
Defendants further complain of the admission of evidence regarding cost of raising the sides of the concrete section of the Smith ditch as constructed by defendants, and the necessity for, and the cost of constructing a concrete section in the Tucker ditch, which would carry the amount of water claimed by plaintiff. What we have said with reference to the Smith ditch disposes of this objection. There was evidence to show that the maintenance of this ditch in its origi-
We will now consider the portions of the judgment from which plaintiff has taken an appeal. He first contends that the trial court erred in construing a certain deed which construction, it is claimed, deprived him of certain rights to which he is entitled. A brief statement of faсts is necessary for an understanding of the question involved in this objection. On October 21, 1907, Lincoln Braden was the owner of the east half of the southeast quarter, the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter and the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of section 20, township 36 north, range 4 east, M. D. B. & M., situated in Shasta County. Hat Creek, in the state of nature flowed through a portion of this land in a northerly direction. Where Hat Creek enters the southern boundary of section 20, the entire stream is in the southeast quarter of the southwest quarter of said section, and it continues in its natural course through the said southeast quarter of this southwest quarter until near the northern boundary of said legal subdivision when the creek makes an abrupt bend and a portion of the channel thereof is situated in the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of said section. On the date last mentioned Braden and his wife conveyed to one Jesse E. Frick “all that portion of the southeast quarter of section 20 . . . lying and being west of a line running along the east bank of Hat Creek and following the water‘s edge.” The deed further recites that the parties of the first part intend to and do convey all land lying west of the east bank of Hat Creek in said legal subdivision of said land hereinabove referred to; the easterly boundary of the land hereby conveyed is intended to be a meandering line following the east bank of Hat Creek and following the water‘s edge at ordinary stages of the water; and the parties of the first part hereby intend to convey and transfer all the riparian rights which they have or possess by reason of ownership in said legal subdivision of land hereinabove particularly described. The Power Company subsequently acquired this land as conveyed to Frick, and at the time of the trial of this case, defendant Lumber Company was the owner thereof. On
Where through fraud or mistake, or in the event that the terms of an instrument are sufficiently uncertain to leave the intention of the parties in doubt, parol evidence bearing upon the question is admissible. Here no fraud or mistake is charged nor, as above stated, is there any ambiguity or uncertainty involved. An attorney under such circumstances who prepared the instrument cannot testify as to what was intended by the parties. (10 Cal. Jur., sec. 199, p. 930.) Whatever his concept of a written agreement may be, it is inadmissible to overthrow plain and unambiguous language. (Fleming v. Law, 163 Cal. 227 [124 Pac. 1018].) A meaning cannot be given to an instrument under the guise of construction or explanation which is not to be found in the instrument itself. (Payne v. Commercial Nat. Bank, 177 Cal. 68 [L. R. A. 1918C, 328, 169 Pac. 1007].) Nor can extrinsic evidence, in the absence of fraud or mistake, be received of the intention of the parties. (Nicholson v. Tarpey, 89 Cal. 617 [26 Pac. 1101].) Their rights must be ascertained from its terms (
It is next contended that the trial court erred in deciding that the plaintiff is not entitled to divert water through the John Smith ditch to irrigate that portion of the Tucker place lying east of Hat Creek. In this connection it is urged that the evidence shows that Smith and Brаden diverted a certain flow of water through the John Smith ditch for the purpose of supplying the Tucker land; that a prescriptive right was thereby created as against the Lumber Company to divert a certain quantity of water for such purpose, and that when plaintiff succeeded to the rights of Smith, Braden and Grant, by virtue of his purchase from them of their lands and of all their interest in the said ditch, he had a right to continue to convey a sufficient quantity of water through the ditch for the irrigation of the Tucker lands east of Hat Creek. Defendants, on the other hand, contend that the evidence shows that the only water used on such lands was waste and seepage water to which plaintiff could acquire no right. Plaintiff concedes that when his predecessors in interest were irrigating their lands, a certain amount of seepage and waste water drained off the same on to the Tucker lands below, and that this water was used to at least partially irrigate a portion of such lands.
And finally plaintiff contends that the court erred in awarding the Power Company 360 miner‘s inches of water through the Tucker-Fitzpatrick ditch for the use of its lands, as there is no evidence in the record to show the quantity of water so actually used. Counsel for defendants concede that plaintiff is correct in this contention.
From what we have said it follows that the portion of the judgment in favor of plaintiff is affirmed, as is also the portion which denies to plaintiff any water for the use of the Tucker lands lying east of Hat Creek. The portion declaring defendant lumber company to be the owner of all riparian rights in any of the waters of Hat Creek in the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of section 20, township 36 north, range 4 east, M. D. B. & M., is reversed, as is also the portion declaring the Power Company to be entitled to 360 miner‘s inches of water measured under a six-inch pressure through the Tucker-Fitzpatrick ditch.
Waste, C. J., Finch, J., pro tem., Langdon, J., Richards, J., Curtis, J., and Shenk, J., concurred.
Mr. Justice Preston, being disqualified, does not participate in the foregoing opinion.
A petition for a rehearing was denied by the Supreme Court on May 9, 1929, and the following opinion then rendered thereon:
THE COURT.—Rehearing denied. Defendants and certain amici curiae in support of their petitions for a rehearing have asserted that the allowance of two and one-half miner‘s inches per acre duty of water for irrigation is incredible and palpably improbable. There is no merit in the claim. The lands in question, as pointed out in the opinion, are hilly and porous and present a very unusual and extreme condition from a water requirement standpoint. All of the witnesses who were engaged in farming the lands in question testified as to the amount of water required to properly mature the crops and their testimony fully
