80 Cal. 181 | Cal. | 1889
Lead Opinion
This is an action between rival appropriates to determine who has the superior right to divert water from Cross Creek, a natural watercourse, flowing through Tulare County. Plaintiff claims that the defendants have no right to any water until its ditch has been first supplied to its full capacity, and the court so decided.
The court found that “ neither the defendants nor their ancestors or grantors have at any time prior to the construction of the ditch complained of, to wit, the month of May, 1884, claimed or asserted any right to the waters of Cross Creek adversely to the plaintiff,” and that the defendants’ ditch from the time of its construction, in 1876, until May, 1884, “ carried away no appreciable quantity of water,” but these findings are not supported by the evidence. The evidence shows, without substantial conflict, that the Hyde ditch, owned by defendants, was finished and commenced to divert water in the spring of 1876, and that those who have owned and controlled it have ever since continuously, uninterruptedly, and under a claim of right, adverse to all the world, during the irrigating season of each year, diverted water through the same from Cross Creek for the purposes of irrigation. There is evidence tending to show an interference with the Hyde ditch, but it is so slight that those who performed the acts of interruption may be regarded simply as trespassers, and the intrusions not long enough to raise a presumption that those in possession of the ditch knew of the trespass, or sufficient to show a break in the continuity of the adverse use.
As between the parties hereto, there is no question of riparian rights, and in view of the evidence as to the uninterrupted use by defendants of their ditch, it is
There is some evidence tending to show that the Hyde ditch was enlarged about the year 1882, and its carrying capacity greatly increased; but the defendants are entitled to a finding as to the quantity of water carried by their ditch during its uninterrupted use by them prior to 1882. It is clear that the ditch carried away an appreciable quantity of water. How much—what quantity—we do not pretend to say. It is for the trial court to determine that matter.
Appellants claim that the plaintiff shows no right whatever to divert water, because it never obtained permission of the water commissioners of Tulare County to construct a ditch or divert water. This contention is based upon section 3 of a statute appointing water commissioners for Tulare County. The section provides: “Ho ditch shall hereafter be taken out of any stream in the waters of which different persons have an interest by virtue of prior appropriation, without leave of said commissioners.” (Stats. 1868, p. 112.) The defendants have no interest in the waters of the stream “by virtue of prior appropriation.” Ho prior appropriators are complaining of any act of the plaintiff. It is not claimed that there has been any appropriation of any of the waters of Cross Creek below the ditch of plaintiff, and in the absence of such appropriation, no one can be injured by the act of plaintiff. The fact that defendants obtained the permission of the water commissioners to build their ditch and divert water, does not give them any right as against the plaintiff herein, who was a prior appropriator. The statute does not confer upon the board of water commissioners the right to take away the interest which a prior appropriator has in the waters of a stream.
We think that the evidence in support of the finding that the plaintiff was a corporation, acting in good faith
The defendants offered to prove that there were other ditches diverting water from the creek above defendants’ ditches, which other ditches were later in timé of diversion than either plaintiff’s or defendants’ ditches. The court did not err in refusing to admit this proof. The defendants did not deny that they diverted the water. There was, therefore, no doubt as to who did divert the water. The fact that other persons may have invaded the plaintiff’s right was immaterial.
The ruling of the court in admitting evidence as to who had the control and management of the Lakeside ditch is inconsistent with its ruling upon the same subject when evidence was offered in behalf of the defendants. We think the court erred in excluding the latter.
We have considered other assignments of error made by appellant, but see nothing prejudicial in any of them.
As the case must go back for a new trial, it is proper to suggest that the findings of the court upon the question what quantity of water the plaintiff was entitled to have flow past defendants’ ditches should, if possible, be made definite by naming the number of inches or gallons, instead of by fixing the width, depth, and grade of the ditch. A finding that plaintiff is entitled to have its ditch supplied to its full capacity may lead to future disputes and litigation. In view of the character of the soil, the capacity of the ditch is likely to change rapidly.
Judgment and order reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
McFarlakd, J., and Sharpsteik, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
As I construe the findings of the superior court, they show with sufficient clearness that from the completion of plaintiff’s ditch, in 1874, down to the year 1884, it has continuously diverted water sufficient to fill said ditch, excepting only when the natural flow of the stream (Cross Creek) was insufficient to fill it, and that at such times it diverted all of such natural flow; that the Hyde ditch of defendants, as originally constructed, in 1876, diverted no appreciable quantity of water, but that after, and only after, the enlargement of the Hyde ditch, in 1882, and the subsequent construction of the Manning ditch, the defendants have been diverting water included in plaintiff’s appropriation. I should not, therefore, regard the findings as insufficient in this respect, even if the plaintiff’s right was founded exclusively upon prescription. But the truth is, plaintiff’s right rests upon a prior appropriation, and does not need to be supported by proof of uninterrupted user, and if the findings require the construction placed upon them in the opinion of the court, the fault seems to me to be immaterial.
As to the offer of the defendants to show that other persons, not parties to the action, had taken out water higher up the stream, by means of ditches constructed later than any diversion by plaintiff or themselves, and that such more recent diversions of water were the real cause of the injury to plaintiff, I think the ruling of the court excluding the testimony was correct in the present state of the pleadings. To make such testimony material, defendants should set up in their answer the facts showing the necessity of making such third persons parties to the action, in order to a complete determination of the rights of all in the waters of the stream. Upon a proper showing of the facts,—which I think should be allowed by amendment, if requested,—the court might direct other subsequent appropriators to be brought in.
Differing in these particulars from the views expressed in the opinion of the court, I nevertheless concur in the judgment, upon the ground that there should have been a more specific finding of the exact quantity of water, measured by some definite standard (miners’ inch, for example), appropriated by plaintiff, and that the decree should have been equally specific in its injunction.
Thornton, J., concurred.
Works, J., concurred in the judgment, and in the views expressed by Chief Justice Beatty.