79 P. 439 | Cal. | 1905
These two appeals were argued and submitted together and will both be considered and determined in this one opinion. They arise out of an action in the superior court entitled Miller Lux and the San Joaquin and Kings *654
River Canal and Irrigation Company, plaintiffs, versus the above-named defendants. The action was to enjoin the defendants from diverting water from the San Joaquin River. Judgment was rendered in favor of Miller Lux, enjoining the defendants as prayed for, but the court refused to give judgment for the other plaintiff, who claimed as an appropriator of the water of said river, on the ground that the river was a navigable stream, and that the maintenance of said claimant's ditch and dam by which it diverted the water was a nuisance, and rendered judgment in favor of defendants against said plaintiff canal and irrigation company. From this part of the judgment the said last-named plaintiff appealed, and it was here reversed and judgment ordered for said plaintiff. (See Lux v. Enterprise Canal etc. Co.,
Nor is a reversal of the judgment called for on account of the finding in finding No. LVII that during certain times there is an increase of the flow of water in the river over ordinary stages, "but there is no evidence before the court whereby it can be determined at what stages of the waters of said river at such times, if at all, water can be diverted therefrom without injury or damage to the plaintiff Miller Lux and others owning lands riparian to said river and having vested rights therein as to the flow of the waters thereof," nor on account of that part of the judgment which reserves to defendants the right to bring an action to have it determined at what stages of the water, if any, water may be diverted without injury to plaintiff. If this finding and this part of the judgment are of any consequence at all, they are not prejudicial to defendants, and certainly give to them no cause of complaint.
We do not deem it necessary to further discuss this appeal from the judgment; it is sufficient to say that in our opinion the judgment upon its face is free from error and the findings amply support it. Therefore on this appeal the judgment must be affirmed.
The motion was made on all the statutory grounds, and there are a good many specifications of the particulars in which, it is claimed, the evidence is insufficient to justify the decision. The language of the order granting a new trial is simply "that the motion of the defendants for a new trial of said action be and the same is hereby granted." There is no intimation in the record enabling us to see upon which of the various grounds of the motion the order granting it was based. This is perhaps unfortunate in a case of this kind; for it may be that the reason for granting the motion was not insufficient evidence, in which event the case might perhaps be more readily disposed of on its real legal merits. However, as the record stands, respondents are entitled to invoke the established rule that the order must be affirmed if it can be justified on any one of the grounds on which the motion was made, and that, as insufficiency of the evidence was one of the grounds, the order must be affirmed if there was fairly conflicting evidence as to any material finding of fact.
If the motion for a new trial had been denied, and defendants were appealing from the order denying it, we could readily say that the evidence was sufficient to justify the decision. But we would not be justified in holding that there was no conflict of evidence as to any material fact found. For instance, it is found "that the said Fresno Slough is no part of the San Joaquin River, but is a channel made from the overflow from Kings River during flood time, and is a part of or extension of said Kings River through which the waters of said river flow on their way to the ocean." This clearly involves a finding of fact; and considering all the evidence touching the nature and character of Fresno Slough, and the sources and condition of the water flowing or being therein, and particularly the testimony of such witnesses of respondents as Anthony, Parker, Chidester, Garner, White, and others, we cannot say that there was no conflict of evidence on the point, or that the judge of the trial court, in view of *658 such conflict, abused his discretion in granting a new trial. It is contended by appellant that this finding was immaterial, because even conceding that the slough is part of the river, and defendant James therefore an owner of lands riparian to the river, by virtue of his ownership of lands bordering on the slough, still he would have no right, for the purpose of irrigating said lands, to go upon the river at a point many miles above the mouth of the slough, and above plaintiff's lands, and from that point divert water by means of a dam and ditch, and carry it entirely around and away from plaintiff's lands lying above the slough, and thus preventing any of the water so diverted from flowing or seeping back on to plaintiff's said lands. But if we concede this proposition to be true, it would have been available only if the court had merely enjoined defendants from diverting water through the said ditch, which takes water from a point entirely above plaintiff's lands. But the court found that the defendants "were not entitled to take or divert any of the waters flowing in the San Joaquin River"; and in the judgment it is decreed that defendants be enjoined "from diverting any water out of or from the San Joaquin River, or obstructing the flow of water therein, at any point above the lands or any part of the lands of the plaintiff Miller Lux, or of the intervener, J.C. Mowry," and, further, that they are not "entitled to take or divert any of the waters flowing in the San Joaquin River." This finding and decree holds and adjudicates that defendants have no riparian rights at any point of the river, and is based on the finding that Fresno Slough is not a part of the river; and for this reason the finding that the slough is not a part of the river is necessarily a material finding. For this reason the order granting a new trial must be affirmed. If, as a fact, the court did not grant the new trial on this ground, but did grant it on some grounds which would not be held tenable by this court, the necessity of affirming the order, on the record as it stands, is unfortunate. We apprehend, however, that the parties can avoid a good deal of the expense and labor of a new trial by accepting much of the evidence given at the former trial without requiring it to be repeated.
In the appeal No. 2856 the judgment appealed from is affirmed. *659
In the appeal No. 3439 the order granting a new trial appealed from is affirmed.
Shaw, J., Angellotti, J., Van Dyke, J., Lorigan, J., and Henshaw, J., concurred.
Rehearing denied