147 P. 567 | Cal. | 1915
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *417
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *418 The plaintiffs have appealed from certain parts of the judgment, and from an order denying their motion for a new trial.
This action was begun in 1899 by the predecessors in interest of the present plaintiffs. Judgment was entered against the predecessor in interest of the plaintiff canal company, it appealed therefrom and on appeal the cause was on February 12, 1904, remanded by the supreme court with directions to the lower court to enter a certain judgment in favor of said plaintiff.(Miller Lux v. Enterprise Canal Co.,
There was a new trial of the cause resulting in the judgment now under review.
The original plaintiffs were corporations, named respectively, Miller Lux and The San Joaquin and Kings River Canal Irrigation Company. The names of the present plaintiffs are the same, except that the word "Incorporated" is added to each name. Since the action was begun, the defendant, James Canal Company, has succeeded to the interests of the Enterprise Canal Land Company, and the J.G. James Company has succeeded to the interest of Jefferson G. James. Substitutions of parties have been made in accordance with these changes in interest.
To an understanding of the issues a statement of the facts is necessary. Many of the facts are set forth in the cases within cited and others in the case of Turner v. James Canal Co.,
The principal contention of the appellants regarding the canal is that, by means of their dam below the northerly turn of the San Joaquin River and said canal heading near the *422
junction of the river and Fresno Slough, the plaintiff canal company has diverted from the river and put to beneficial uses a stream of seven hundred and sixty second feet of water, for a period of time sufficient to give it a prescriptive title or right to continue such diversion, and that this right is superior to any riparian right pertaining to the lands of the J.G. James Company abutting on Fresno Slough. That said plaintiff has acquired such prescriptive right or title against all persons as to whom the said diversion has been hostile and adverse, is shown by abundant evidence, and is practically conceded. (See Stevinson
v. San Joaquin and Kings River Canal Irrigation Co.,
"From time immemorial all of the water flowing from the said San Joaquin River into said Fresno Slough has been accustomed to naturally flow, and does now naturally flow, from said river into said slough, and over, upon, along and by the lands of the defendant, J.G. James Company, in these findings before particularly described, and out of said slough into said river, at a point on the course of said river above the point on said river where said main canal of said plaintiff commences and has its place of diversion. And the construction, maintenance and operation of said main canal does not now impede or prevent, and never has impeded or prevented the natural flow of any water from said San Joaquin River into the said Fresno Slough."
The main canal here referred to is the canal of the plaintiffs above mentioned heading into the San Joaquin River immediately below its junction with Fresno Slough.
The theory of the court below was, and that of the defendants is, that, so far as said canal is concerned, the owners of lands on Fresno Slough are upper riparian proprietors not affected by the lower diversion and use of the waters of the stream, and, pursuant to this theory, in finding 46 it further *423 said: "The taking and diversion of such water, either out of said slough or out of the main channel of the said San Joaquin River," when the river is flowing into the slough, "does not cause and will not cause . . . any damage to plaintiff . . . or to either of them."
The question thus presented relates only to the waters of the San Joaqiun River. It does not relate to the waters of Kings River or to the surface waters above mentioned when such waters flow northerly through the slough into the San Joaquin River, and no controversy over the right of the J.G. James Company to a reasonable share of such waters appears to exist.
It should be further noted that the rights claimed by Miller Lux to receive water from said canal for use on its lands are derived through and depend upon the title of the co-plaintiff to the canal and water and need not be separately considered. The plaintiff canal company is the sole owner of the canal and of the right to divert water therein.
Under the established law of riparian rights, a title by prescription cannot be acquired against a tract of riparian land by diverting the water from the stream at a point below such land, and not interfering with the stream at the riparian land. Thus it is said in Bathgate v. Irvine,
Recognizing the force of this rule, the appellants make the further claim that the water taken into the canal is devoted to public use and that the defendants cannot now prevent such use, but are confined to a claim for damages estimated by the value of their riparian rights. It appears from the findings that said canal is seventy-five miles long and that a large part *424 of the water taken into it has been for many years carried down and applied to the public uses of supplying several farming neighborhoods with water for irrigation and five or six towns or villages along its course with water for domestic use. It further appears from the evidence that Jefferson G. James, who, up to the time the action was begun, was the owner of the James lands, was at all times fully aware of the fact that this water was taken for public use and was so applied, and also of the method and place of diversion from the river. It does not appear that he ever made any objection to such diversion or use until this action was begun. Upon these facts, the plaintiff canal company contends that the interests of the public have intervened so as to prevent the James Company from asserting a right to take and use on its land the waters of Fresno Slough, if such taking will interrupt or destroy the said public uses, and that said defendant, as against said public uses, cannot take the water, but can only sue for compensation for its riparian rights thus appropriated by the public.
The general doctrine thus invoked is well established in this state. It has been applied and defined in the following cases:Fresno etc. Co. v. Southern Pacific Co.,
The importance of these questions demands a careful examination of the decisions on the subject to ascertain the principles and reasons upon which they rest. The cases of Fresno etc. Co. v.Southern Pacific Co.,
In Katz v. Walkinshaw,
The same question arose in Newport v. Temescal etc. Co.,
In the Barton case the court bases the rule upon the facts that the landowner knew, or had reason to believe, that the water tended to exhaust the landowner's supply, that it was being used outside of the common basin by a community which had established itself there in reliance upon that supply, that it was being used there in reliance upon that supply, and that the owners had stood by for nine years without complaint or protest. These two cases referred to the taking of percolating waters from water-bearing strata common to lands of both plaintiff and defendant, which injured the plaintiff, by drawing the water from under his own land.
A similar condition existed in the case of Burr v. Maclay etc.Co.,
The question was more thoroughly considered in Gurnsey v.Northern Cal. Power Co.,
The question received elaborate treatment in Indiana B. W.Co. v. Allen,
There are many cases in other states declaring the same reasons for the rule. (McAuley v. Western etc. Co.,
In substance, the doctrine established by these decisions, though not, strictly speaking, the doctrine of prescription, at least amounts to this: That where a person has suffered property belonging to him and under his control to be taken and devoted to a public use by one engaged in administering such use, and the matter has gone on so far that the beneficiaries *430 thereof rely on its continuance and adjust their affairs accordingly, such owner having knowledge thereof and making no objection or protest, this conduct will be regarded by the courts as a dedication by such owner of the property to the particular public use, and he cannot thereafter interrupt nor prevent the same, his only remedy being to seek compensation for the property he has thus allowed to be taken, or as indicated in the Newport case. Upon this statement of the doctrine we proceed to examine into the circumstances of the case.
It is to be observed that in all of the above cases the public use involved an interference with the property rights of a private owner, sufficient to give such owner an immediate right of action to abate or prevent the same. In the Gurnsey case, the power line in the public road did not interfere with any private use which the owner desired to make of the land constituting the road, but it was an appropriation of the soil in which he owned the fee to uses to which he had not originally dedicated it. In the percolating water cases, the pumps would draw water from under the plaintiff's land and lower the water level thereunder. This, in effect, was a direct invasion of the plaintiff's rights which he might have enjoined by suit as soon as the injury was threatened. (Katz v. Walkinshaw,
There is no direct evidence to support the finding that the operation of the plaintiffs' main canal does not impede or prevent the natural flow of water from the San Joaquin River into Fresno Slough, or the finding that the taking of water out of such slough by the James Company will not cause any damage to plaintiffs. The evidence on the subject is merely to the effect that when from any cause the level of the water in the river is higher than the level of the water in the slough, the water will flow from the river into the slough, and that when the conditions are the opposite, the water will flow from the slough into the river. No evidence was necessary to prove either of these propositions. They are the necessary result of the operation of the natural law of gravity, the level of the river and slough being practically the same, and judicial notice would be taken thereof. It was also shown that the effect of the dam placed in the river by the plaintiff canal company, when kept at its usual height, was to raise the water of the river above its natural level and force it back up the river about three-quarters of a mile, and also to back the water up the slough and along by the land of the James Company to a distance of ten miles above the dam. The findings mentioned are really conclusions which the court deduced from these facts. The facts do not justify the conclusion. The force of gravity must, of necessity, control the action of water under given circumstances. The case is not like unto that of a stream permitted to pass the land of a riparian owner. On the contrary, the dam stops it in its course and forces it back a long distance up the stream and up the slough until it reaches approximately the level maintained at the dam. In this way the dam impounds the water designed to be taken, and it is the water so impounded that the plaintiff canal company has taken. The space at the common junction of the river, the slough and the canal is nearly square and about six hundred feet each way across. This space, with that between the banks of the river and slough, respectively, as far up as the back water extends, form a reservoir which the plaintiff has made and used for *432
the purpose of diverting this water thereby, as one part of its system. This reservoir is partly upon the land of the James Company and extends for a distance of several miles up the slough over its land. This use of the James land for the purposes of plaintiff's canal, was continued for many years with his knowledge and without objection. It must be conceded that these operations of said canal company have and do materially interfere with and change the natural flow of the water in the river and in the slough in its course through the James' land. If the flash boards be placed in the dam so as to raise the water of the river above its natural level, the headgate of the canal being closed, the water will, of course, back up into the slough, forcing more water into it than it would receive by the normal action of the stream. If, then, the headgate be opened, it will relieve the back pressure and the slough will receive less. If the dam is maintained so as to allow all the natural flow to pass down the river without raising its level, some water will pass into the slough to replace natural evaporation and seepage and, if the river is then rising, to fill the slough to the level of the river. At such times, if the headgate is opened it will take a large quantity of water from the river at the junction, lower its level accordingly, and cause less water to flow into the slough. Measuring around what may be called the perimeter of the junction, the headgate may be as much as three hundred feet from the mouth of the slough, but it is not so far away, the lines of the banks and the rate of flow of the stream being considered, that the taking out thereat of a flow of seven hundred and sixty second feet would not lower the surface level at the mouth of the slough. Such a flow is no insignificant stream, being the equivalent of a stream two hundred feet wide and 3.8 feet deep moving at the rate of one foot per second. When from any cause the water runs out of the slough into the river, the headgate of the canal is, with respect to that current, below the James' lands. But when the water runs from the river into the slough, it is, with respect to that current, above the James' lands, and it is so near to the course of the current from the river into the slough that the diversion of seven hundred and sixty second feet through the headgate must of necessity draw water from that current and diminish the quantity passing into the slough. When the water at the junction is stationary, it is similar to a lake *433
or pond, and the diversion of so large a quantity into the headgate must lower the level of the entire body and draw water both from the slough and the river. (Duckworth v. Watsonvilleetc. Co.,
Likewise, the statement that the taking of water out of the slough by James to be used upon his lands would not damage the plaintiff, cannot be true, except upon the hypothesis that the plaintiff has no right to the water. In that case it would suffer no legal damage, but actual damage must of necessity ensue. If the plaintiff has a right thus to take the water such diversion by the defendant would cause it legal damage.
These conditions have been maintained by the plaintiff canal company at all ordinary stages of the river, for more than twenty-five years before this action was begun. In reliance upon the continuance of this water supply, towns and villages have grown up and hundreds of irrigated farms have been established in the district supplied by said plaintiff's canal. With all these circumstances James was familiar and he gave no warning of any objection to such use, but suffered it to continue. His land along the slough was used by the canal company as a part of its reservoir in which to collect the water for distribution. By that means the water has been taken all these years, with his knowledge and tacit consent. To permit him or his successor now to take out the water therein stored for diversion by said canal company, would, in effect, permit him to destroy or seriously impair *434 and injure the water system of which his property has constituted an important part and in the establishment of which he has acquiesced. Every consideration of regard for the general welfare and public good, so much emphasized in the decisions above mentioned, applies with the greatest force to the conditions here shown. He was not, as in the case of an upper riparian owner, powerless to interfere with the use of the water. He could have maintained an action to prevent the backing up of the water on his land to form the reservoir and force the water into the canal and to prevent any interference with the flow into the slough. The doctrine is applicable to him and to the James Company as his successor.
Therefore, the plaintiff canal company is entitled to continue its diversion for public use as it has heretofore done and the J.G. James Company cannot be allowed to interfere with that use. The part of the judgment which declares that the J.G. James Company may, when the water of the river is flowing into Fresno Slough, take the same and use it on its riparian land along the slough, regardless of the effect of such taking to diminish the flow into said plaintiff's canal to an amount less than seven hundred and sixty second feet, is, to that extent, erroneous. The defendants cannot be allowed to divert the water so as to cause such diminution, or so as to prevent that quantity from flowing into said canal.
What has been said with respect to the taking of water from Fresno Slough by the J.G. James Company for the irrigation of its land, applies also to the taking of water for the same purpose from the San Joaquin River through the Enterprise canal, now maintained by the James Canal Company. As Jefferson G. James, by his acquiescence in the public use of the water by the plaintiff canal company, has, in effect, dedicated to that public use the riparian rights pertaining to the James' land, to the extent required therefor, he, or his successor, cannot be allowed to regain those rights by the expedient of going up the river and there diverting the water to the same riparian land through the Enterprise canal. If the James Canal Company be regarded as a mere appropriator of water from the stream above the plaintiff's dam, its diversion is, on well settled principles, unlawful as against the plaintiff's prior appropriation below, so far as it is injurious thereto. *435
The respondents question the proposition that the plaintiff canal company is devoting the water it takes into its canal to public use. The parties stipulated in writing, for the purposes of the trial, that the said canal company had, for the five years immediately preceding the commencement of the action, continuously diverted into its canal and appropriated the seven hundred and sixty second feet of water in controversy, and that "all of said water during all of said time, was sold, rented, supplied and distributed to others, including a part thereof to the plaintiff, Miller Lux, for purposes of irrigation, the watering of stock and domestic and other beneficial uses, and that beneficial use was made of said water so appropriated, and all thereof." This was incorporated into and made part of the findings of the court. The court also found that many thousands of acres of land, occupied by a large number of persons as owners or tenants, were irrigated with water from said canal, and that they had thereon many thousands of acres of growing crops of grain, fruits and other crops. The evidence shows that there were many hundreds of such persons. And, as before stated, a number of villages have grown up along the canals, the inhabitants of which receive water therefrom for their lands and for domestic use. The use described in the stipulation, and the facts disclosed by the uncontradicted evidence, show that the water was devoted by the canal company to public use. There is no merit in the contention to the contrary. It may be that some of it has been disposed of to Miller Lux at rates more advantageous than to others; but that is an abuse which the proper public authorities may prevent or regulate; it does not convert the use into a private use.
Upon a former hearing of this case an opinion prepared by Mr. Justice Henshaw was rendered by the court in Bank in pursuance of which the judgment was modified in certain particulars. This opinion embraced all of the points involved in the case. A rehearing was granted by the court, solely for the purpose of again considering the questions relating to the public use of waters taken by the San Joaquin and Kings River Canal and Irrigation Company, Incorporated, upon which we have now reached the conclusions heretofore stated. The portions of the opinion relating to the other matters presented by the appeals were and are satisfactory *436 to the court, and we now adopt the same as the opinion of the court upon this hearing. They are as follows:
"Entirely different are the questions presented by the second branch of this appeal. The James Company was not alone awarded the right to the use of a reasonable quantum of water from Fresno Slough, but was given the further right to divert this water from the San Joaquin River proper, the point of diversion being, by the meanderings of the river, some twenty miles above the junction of Fresno Slough with the San Joaquin River, and something more than ten miles above in a direct line. There was thus accorded the right to the James Company to go above their lands and above the lands of intervening owners to divert water for riparian use. That this may be done when it may be done without interference with the rights of the lower riparian proprietors, that is to say lower than the land upon which the water is to be used, has been decided and is not questioned.(Turner v. James Canal Co.,
"The further findings declare that the three sloughs above described were originally `high water' sloughs, that is to say that their beds were so far above the bed of the San Joaquin River at their junctions therewith that they originally received water from the San Joaquin River only during periods of high water and at only such times as Fresno Slough was carrying the waters of Kings River into the San Joaquin; that these sloughs, more than ten years ago, were by plaintiffs and others `developed, improved, cut down, enlarged and the course and direction thereof changed, and their natural condition changed, and the flow of water therein so regulated, controlled, increased and diminished by artificial means and all of the water flowing therein conducted to and upon the lands, in, over and upon which said sloughs did not naturally run and take their course, whereby the said Brown Slough, Aliso Slough and Lone Willow Slough ceased to be natural sloughs and natural watercourses, and the land, in, over and upon which said sloughs naturally ran, ceased to be riparian lands bordering upon said San Joaquin River, or any branch, watercourse or channel thereof; and said sloughs are not now, and for more than ten years before the commencement of this action have not been, natural branches of watercourses of the San Joaquin River.' The findings proceed *438 to declare that Miller Lux have for more than ten years used these sloughs in their changed and artificial condition, taking water from the San Joaquin River to irrigate lands which they own that never bordered the sloughs while the sloughs were in their natural condition, and to irrigate and supply with water lands not bordering upon the San Joaquin River, and to supply water for stock, domestic and other purposes. But it is further found that the taking and the use of these waters through these sloughs `has never prevented and does not now prevent the flow of water from said San Joaquin River into said Fresno Slough, and over, along and upon the lands of the defendant J.G. James Company'; and the waters of the San Joaquin River `continued to flow and do now flow into the said Fresno Slough and fill the same as the same were accustomed to do before the taking and diversion of any water from the river through the sloughs.' The purport of these findings is, of course, that these sloughs which naturally took water from the river at its high stages have, by artificial means, been converted from their character of natural watercourses into the character of irrigation ditches or canals, but that neither in their natural state nor in their changed artificial condition did or do they prevent the natural flow of the San Joaquin River into Fresno Slough. True, if, by their changed condition, they were enabled to take and did take more water out of the San Joaquin than when they were in their natural state this would have a direct tendency to reduce at such times the amount of water which would flow from the San Joaquin into Fresno Slough. But it is further found that before and after this change of character in the sloughs the San Joaquin River always continued to flow and to fill Fresno Slough in its accustomed manner. The court finds that the defendant James Company has been diverting, and has the right to divert, to its lands through the Enterprise canal a reasonable quantity of water, and that this water can be and is and may in the future be so diverted without injury to any of the lands of plaintiff.
"Appellants insist that under the common-law doctrine of riparian rights, as that doctrine is expounded, not alone by the common law courts and the courts of sister states, but as accepted and declared by the decisions of this state, this may not be done, for that it is well settled that each riparian *439 proprietor is entitled to the full flow of the stream, saving as that flow is reduced by the reasonable use of reasonable quantities of water by upper riparian proprietors, and, second, that the right to such flow is a property right of great value. Respondent answers that it recognizes that the common-law doctrine accepted in sister states is as appellants declare, but that this court has over and over asserted (as it has) that it would not be bound by that doctrine where it was found unsuited to our radically different conditions and needs; that the use of water for irrigation is so highly necessary a use as to demand a modification of the common-law doctrine and the declaration that the lower riparian proprietor may go above an intervening riparian proprietor and take water for use upon his lower lands, provided he can do so without substantial injury to the intervening proprietor; that whether or not substantial injury results is a question of fact to be determined in each case by its circumstances, and that in this case the findings of the court, fully supported, declare that the taking could be made without injury. To this appellants make reply that it will be difficult, if not impossible, to conceive of a case where this could be done without injury, that is to say, without an impairment or destruction of a right of property which has by this court repeatedly been declared to rest with the upper riparian proprietor by virtue of the situation of his lands and his right to the uninterrupted flow of the stream. But that even if a case could be imagined where such a diversion could be made without injury, this is not such a case, and the findings so declaring are without support.
"With this epitome of the diverse contentions of the parties, we may the better proceed to a consideration of the matter. And, first, it is to be remembered that we are here dealing with the correlative rights of riparian proprietors in the matter of irrigation.
"Since the leading case of Lux v. Haggin,
"In Charnock v. Higuerra the exercise of the common and equal right of the riparian proprietors to take and use the *441 water is carefully limited by the declaration that it must be done `so as not to infringe upon the equal rights of others.' InTurner v. James Canal Co., the lands of the objecting riparian owner were entirely below the James lands upon which it was proposed to use the water. In Rose v. Mesmer the right of the lower riparian proprietors to go above his lands to take water is put under the limitation that it be done with the consent of the upper proprietors. Therefore it is certain that there is no declaration by this court that a lower riparian proprietor may so take his water as matter of right, and in truth the decisions are otherwise.
"It is to be remembered that a riparian proprietor's title to the water begins only when it reaches his land and lasts only so long as it is flowing past his land. Until it reaches his land he has no title whatsoever and no right other than the protective right to see that the full flow past his land to which he is entitled is not illegally diminished. Thus it has been said `Neither a riparian proprietor nor an appropriator has title or ownership in the water of the stream before it reaches his land or point of diversion respectively. This has been expressly decided with respect to appropriators. (Parks C. M. Co. v.Hoyt,
"Respondents, in yielding a reluctant acknowledgment of the force of these decisions, in effect, request that they be swept aside and ask why `If a diversion made by a lower owner should defeat in part the natural irrigation of his upper neighbor's land, upon the policy of our laws, it should not be so'? The answer is this: Many questions touching the use of waters arise in this state which were never known to the common law. As those questions arise they will be treated as cases of first impression and the common-law doctrine will or will not be followed as shall seem best for our changed conditions. (San Joaquin etc. Co. v.Fresno Flume Co.,
"The conclusion thus reached, that the respondent may not under the objection of appellants divert its water above their *445 riparian lands, even under the findings made by the court, renders unnecessary any detailed consideration of those findings. In certain respects the findings are declared to be against evidence, as, for example, the finding that Lone Willow Slough is a high water slough. The evidence tending to show that Lone Willow Slough was not a high water slough, but that at all stages of the river drew water from the San Joaquin is pointed out, and respondents are challenged to produce evidence to the contrary. They do not accept the challenge nor point out such evidence, and it is not to be supposed that this court, under these circumstances, will itself study the record to determine whether or not there be such supporting evidence. Again, the tenor of the court's findings as to the three sloughs — Aliso, Brown, and Lone Willow — seems to be that because they were deepened, and because their waters were controlled by weirs or floodgates, and because some of their waters by ditches and canals were carried to lands not riparian to the sloughs, and therefore not riparian to the San Joaquin River, their whole character as natural watercourses was changed, with the result that those lands which still lay along their natural channels ceased to be riparian, and those lands strictly riparian to the San Joaquin River and which were supplied by its waters through the ditches and canals leading out of these sloughs also ceased to be riparian in character. This of course could not be. Moreover, the deepening of the sloughs so that they could and did take water from the San Joaquin at lower stages than their natural state permitted, did not change their character as natural watercourses, nor can it be said that to control the water of such sloughs by dams, weirs, and floodgates can have the effect of destroying their natural character so as to render the lands fronting on them nonriparian. Logically, if this was so, the dam which plaintiffs have maintained for many years across the San Joaquin River would have the effect of destroying the riparian character of all the lands below. And finally upon this point it should be said the court's findings disclose that by these sloughs, superior in location to Fresno Slough and thus to the James land, large quantities of water for many years have been taken and devoted to beneficial purposes; some to irrigation and domestic use on lands unquestionably riparian; others for like uses on land nonriparian either to the river proper or the slough. But this last use, open, *446 notorious and in interference with the flow of the river waters to Fresno Slough and so to the James's land, has given to these appropriators a prescriptive right to continue this use. The finding of the court that these sloughs in their natural state took water from the San Joaquin River only during the time when the Kings River was flowing into the San Joaquin River through the Fresno Slough, does not militate against this, first, because the deepening and improvements of the sloughs whereby they took water at very much lower stages of the river were made more than ten years before the commencement of the action, and the use of the water under the changed conditions has ripened into a prescriptive right, and, second, because the finding itself is not supported by the evidence.
"Appellants were entitled to their costs in the trial court as of course against the Enterprise Canal and Land Company and the James Canal Company, since the action against them involves the title to real property. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 1022, subd. 5.)"
Our final conclusions upon these opinions are as follows: The J.G. James Company is entitled to take from Fresno Slough its reasonable quantity of water for use upon its riparian land, except that such diversion and use must not interfere with the diversion by the San Joaquin and Kings River Canal and Irrigation Company, Incorporated, by means of its dam, headgates, and canals at and near the junction of the San Joaquin River and Fresno Slough, from said river, of a stream of water equivalent to a flow of 760 cubic feet per second for public use. The right of said San Joaquin and Kings River Canal and Irrigation Company, Incorporated, to take said quantity of water from said river and devote the same to public use is paramount to the riparian rights of the J.G. James Company as owners of lands riparian to Fresno Slough. The defendants are not entitled to divert water for said lands, or at all, through or by means of the Enterprise canal, or the James Company's canal, but may take the same only from Fresno Slough.
The findings are full and complete and, with the exceptions stated, are sustained by the evidence. Those which are not are, according to the views which we have expressed as to the law, unimportant and may be disregarded. Those remaining are sufficient to support a judgment in harmony with our *447 conclusions. We see no reason to believe that a retrial would or should produce essentially different findings of fact. A new trial is not necessary.
It is therefore ordered by the court that the order denying a new trial be affirmed, that the parts of the judgment appealed from be vacated and the cause remanded to the court below, which shall thereupon proceed to modify its judgment to make it conform to this opinion. Appellants to recover costs.
Melvin, J., Sloss, J., Lorigan, J., and Angellotti, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.