34 Cal. 109 | Cal. | 1867
This is au action to recover damages for the destruction of an addition to a dam, by means of which the waters of Shady Creek were turned into plaintiff’s ditch, and to restrain defendants from tearing down any other addition that may be made. The defence is, that said addition so torn down was a nuisance to defendants’ mining claim.
The plaintiff’s testimony tended to show the following state of facts, viz: That plaintiff is the owner of a mining ditch cut for the purpose of conveying water from Shady Creek to French Corrall for mining and other purposes; that the right to the use of said waters of Shady Creek was acquired, and said ditch located, as early as 1850; that the water of Shady Creek was turned into said ditch by means of a dam constructed across said creek; that the original height of said dam was six feet, but that, more than five years before the commencement of this suit, plaintiff had raised it from time to time, till it had attained the height of twenty-four feet; that in the month of August, 1863, plain
The defendants’ testimony tended to prove that in 1853 defendants and their grantors were the owners and in possession of certain mining claims located in the bed and on the banks of Shady Creek, about three fourths of a mile above plaintiff’s said dam; that said claims had been possessed and worked according to the mining customs from the date of their location to the present time; that, for the purpose of working said claims, defendants had a flume constructed above said claims, discharging at the lower end of their said ground; that, at the lower end of said flume, there was, up to 1863, a fall of from five to twenty feet; that in 1863 plaintiff raised said dam between five and six feet; that the bed of the creek was very flat, and in consequence of the raising of said dam the tailings were thrown back upon defendants’ claims, and defendants were entirely prevented from working the same; that said claims were valuable and could be profitably worked before said dam was thus raised; that the raising of the dam prevented their being worked, and that if the height of the dam should be reduced to the point from which it was raised in 1863, said claims could be again worked. Also, that, since the location of defendants’ claims, a large supply of water had been brought from distant streams through other ditches and poured into Shady Creek, above said dam and claims of plaintiff’s and defendants’, and that by means of this additional supply of water the amount discharged into Shady Creek was greatly increased, and that the greater portion of the tailings thus
There was some other testimony, but the foregoing is sufficient to show the real points in contest, and illustrate the theory upon which the case was submitted to the jury. The tendency of the testimony, then, is, that the overflowing of the defendants’ claims with water and tailings, upon which defendants rely to justify them in abating the last addition to plaintiff’s dam as a nuisance, was occasioned by said addition of from four to six feet to the height of said dam, made in 1863; that it was necessary for plaintiff to make this addition in order to enable them, to turn the waters of Shady Creek, to which they were entitled, into their ditch; and that this necessity was principally in consequence of mining done on the stream some two and a half or thr.ee miles above the dam, by reason of which a large quantity of tailings and debris were carried down and deposited in the bed of the stream above said dam, thereby filling it up.
Without particularizing the instructions given and refused, this case was distinctly submitted to the jury upon the theory, that if plaintiff acquired the prior right to divert any portion of the waters of Shady Creek by means of a dam and ditch, and the stream and dam should at any subsequent time, by reason of mining by strangers above, become filled up to such an extent as to make it necessary to raise the .dam higher than it originally was, to enable the plaintiff to continue the diversion by means of its ditches, then the plaintiff is entitled to make additions to the height of the „dam from time to time, as occasion requires, without limitation, and wholly irrespective of the effect of these additions upon the interests of other parties acquiring rights for mining and other purposes on the stream above, subsequent to the original appropriation of the water of the stream.. We think tire principle thus broadly stated wholly inadmissible. The plaintiff is undoubtedly entitled to protection to the full extent of the right acquired by virtue of its prior appropriation of the waters of Shady Creek. The plaintiff appro
Undoubtedly, when plaintiff took up the water, and before other conflicting interests had vested, the right to the water carried with it the right to construct such works as were necessary to the full enjoyment of the water. But when it established its works, and fully appropriated the water by means sufficient for the purpose, and used it for a term of years in a particular mode, unless there was something manifesting a more extended right, other parties had a right to suppose that the plaintiff had itself defined the limits of its rights and act accordingly. .
The question to be determined is, to what extent did plaintiff acquire the right to affect the banks and bed of the stream at the point where defendants’ claims are located, before the location of said claims ? This point being ascer
The case was submitted to the jury upon an erroneous theory, and for this reason the judgment must'he reversed, and a new trial had.
We have said nothing as to the effect upon the rights of the parties of the working of defendants in contributing to the filling up of the plaintiff’s dam and rendering its elevation necessary, for the reason that the Court, in its charge, did not take this element into account, and no question of the kind is presented by the record. We only refer to it, because respondent’s counsel have discussed that portion of the testimony in their brief; but it was not in the case upon the theory adopted by the Court in stating the law to the jury. In the second instruction the Court speaks generally of “ obstructions caused by tailings coming down the stream from mining claims aboveand in the third, of “ tailings coming down said stream from mining claims of other parties above said dam.”
Judgment and order denying a new trial reversed and new trial granted.
Mr. Justice Sanderson expressed no opinion.