177 P. 491 | Cal. Ct. App. | 1918
This action was brought for the purpose of determining conflicting claims to the waters of a stream called Birch or Summit Creek, which has its course in the Sierra Nevada Mountains in the county of Inyo. The court determined that, as between the parties plaintiff and defendants, both being appropriators, the right of the plaintiff was the better, and entered judgment accordingly. Defendants appeal from the judgment and from an order denying their motion for a new trial.
Plaintiff and defendants both claimed to be entitled to use the waters of the creek for agricultural purposes upon lands occupied by them, with this difference: That the lands of the plaintiff did not lie upon or along the stream, but were situated several miles distant therefrom. In order to obtain water from the creek, the plaintiff was obliged to construct a ditch and conduct the water over and across the intervening elevations of land. Under the plan adopted by the plaintiff the water, after passing through such a ditch, would fall into the bed of a dry creek, which watercourse extended to the plaintiff's land. The lands of the defendants did lie upon Birch Creek below the point of diversion selected by the plaintiff. In June, 1910, the plaintiff obtained from the appropriate federal department a permit to use 150 acres of land, the permit providing that the purpose was to allow the plaintiff to clearly establish the fact that the land was chiefly valuable for agricultural purposes, preliminarily to the land being listed as open to entry. Prior to that time plaintiff had gone *747
upon the land and had secured a federal permit to enable him to construct a water ditch to the property, commencing at a point on Summit Creek, hereinbefore mentioned. On the 17th of May, 1909, plaintiff had posted and filed notice of water appropriation on Summit Creek, claiming all of the water flowing in the stream, to the extent of two hundred inches measured under four-inch pressure. The form of notice and posting were all in full compliance with the terms of section
Defendants make the further claim that the court failed to find upon issues presented by their answer, which raised the question of their riparian rights in the waters of the stream. Respondent replies that no such rights were sufficiently pleaded and that no findings were necessary to determine any such issue; citing Riverside Water Co. v. Gage,
There was evidence tending to show that the amount of water claimed under the appropriation made by plaintiff was reasonably necessary for the purposes to which it was sought to be applied.
The judgment and order are affirmed.
Conrey, P. J., and Myers, J., pro tem., concurred.