77 P. 767 | Cal. | 1904
The complaint states a cause of action to quiet the alleged title of plaintiff to the use of all the waters of a certain stream in San Bernardino County known as Edgar Creek. The answer denies plaintiff's title and sets forth the title of defendants. The plaintiff appeals from the judgment and from an order denying its motion for a new trial.
Upon the appeal from the order denying the motion for a new trial, plaintiff assigns as error the insufficiency of the evidence to justify several of the findings. Upon an examination of the record we find that there is sufficient evidence tending to support the respective findings to bring the case within the rule that this court cannot disturb the decision of the court below upon questions of fact depending upon conflicting evidence. The testimony is voluminous and of the character usually given upon contests relating to title by prescription. It would serve no useful purpose to discuss it in detail.
We are of the opinion that the judgment, in certain particulars, is not supported by the findings, and that it must in consequences thereof be modified.
The prayer of the complaint is that all the adverse claims of the defendants, or either of them, to the waters be determined, and that they and each of them be enjoined from asserting any claim to any part of the waters of the stream *70 adverse to the plaintiff. The defendants allege that they and their predecessors in interest are, and for years have been, the owners of a large body of land situate upon the creek some three or four miles above the land of the plaintiff; that they have the right to use the water thereon as riparian proprietors, by reason of the fact that the creek flows through the land described, and that they have the further right to the use of all of said water flowing through their land, for irrigation, domestic use, and the watering of stock upon the said lands, by virtue of an appropriation and continuous adverse use thereunder. The complaint does not state the nature of the plaintiff's right to the water, whether by virtue of a riparian right or a prescriptive right. Upon the issues thus presented it was the duty of the court to determine and in its judgment declare the extent of the right of the defendants as well as that of the plaintiff.
The court finds that the plaintiff was also the owner of some three hundred and twenty acres of land situated upon the creek, and with respect to the riparian rights in the waters it finds that both the plaintiff and the defendants have the right to use the waters of the stream as riparian proprietors, in proportion to the respective ownership of lands on the stream owned by them respectively, in common with the other owners of land situated along the stream having similar rights, but that these riparian rights, both of the plaintiff and defendants, are subject to the prescriptive rights in the water found to be owned by the plaintiff and defendants respectively. It further finds that the plaintiff is the owner and entitled to the use of all that portion of the flow of the creek and of the waters thereof rising and customarily flowing in the creek after the defendants' rights to said stream have been fully satisfied, and not otherwise. This finding, we understand, refers to the plaintiff's right by virtue of appropriation and prescription. With respect to the prescriptive rights of the defendants the court finds that the defendants are the owners of the right to the use of all the surface waters of the creek flowing at the upper boundary of their land, for the purpose of irrigation and domestic use upon said land.
The judgment declares that plaintiff and defendants are riparian proprietors upon the stream, and have, respectively, the right to use the water of the stream "proportionately to *71 the frontage of their lands upon the said stream, considered with regard to the whole frontage of land upon said stream"; that the defendants are the owners and entitled to the full, free, and uninterrupted use and enjoyment of all the surface waters of the creek flowing at their point of diversion near the north line of their lands; that the plaintiff is entitled to all the waters of the stream customarily flowing in the stream at its dam, a short distance above its land, where the ditch begins by which it acquired the prescriptive right referred to in the findings, and that all the rights of the plaintiff in the waters of the stream are subject and subordinate to the prescriptive rights therein adjudged to be owned by the defendants.
The judgment declaring the measure of the respective riparian rights of the parties is not correct. Where two persons own land along the line of a watercourse, the measure of their rights is not necessarily controlled solely by the length of their respective frontages on the stream. Many other things may enter into the question. One may have a tract of land of such character that but little use could be made of the water upon it, while the land of the other may all be so situated that it could be irrigated with profit and advantage. In Harris v. Harrison,
Upon the findings, with respect to the water-rights of the defendants, the court should not have adjudged that the defendants were the absolute and unqualified owners of the right to divert and use all the surface waters of the stream. The owner of a prescriptive right to the waters of a stream has not the unconditional right to change the place of its use at his pleasure. The right to change the place of use is subject to the qualification that where there are other persons having subordinate rights to the waters of the stream, the right to change the place of use can only be exercised when, and to *72
the extent that, such change will not injure the subordinate right. (Kidd v. Laird,
The other alleged errors do not require extended notice. The fact that during the time the defendants were using the water adversely to the plaintiff, the defendants' lands, upon which they were using the water, were vacant government lands, did not make their use the less adverse, nor prevent them from acquiring a right thereby. Any lawful use at any place would be sufficient for that purpose, regardless of the title of the defendants to the land on which it was used.
The nature of the plaintiff's title, whether by United States patent or otherwise, is also immaterial. One person may, by adverse use, divest the title of another, regardless of the source of that title.
In view of the nature of the evidence, we do not perceive how the court could have ascertained and declared the exact amount of water which each party was entitled to use by virtue of their respective riparian rights. The conditions upon which such proportional rights depend do not appear.
It is ordered that the judgment of the superior court be modified so that the first paragraph thereof after the preamble shall read as follows: "Now therefore it is ordered, adjudged and decreed that the defendants herein, except the defendant Wilshire, who has heretofore filed a disclaimer in this cause, are the owners and entitled to the possession, and full, free and uninterrupted use and enjoyment of all the surface waters of Little San Gorgonio Creek, sometimes known as Edgar Creek and sometimes known as Weaver Creek, now flowing or accustomed to flow at or above the points of diversion on said stream, now or heretofore made by said *75 defendants, as indicated in findings XIV and XXI herein, for the purpose of using the same for irrigation and domestic use upon the lands belonging to the defendants respectively, and described in their answers on file herein, and that the said defendants, and each of them, be enjoined from at any time making any use of said waters elsewhere." And that the second paragraph of said judgment, immediately following the above, be modified so as to read as follows: "That said defendants, and each of them, and said plaintiff, are riparian proprietors upon said stream, and that as such riparian proprietors they each have the right respectively to the reasonable use of the waters of said stream, each considered with regard to the rights and necessities of the other, and of other owners of land fronting upon said stream; the plaintiff's riparian right, however, being subject to the diversion by said defendants of all the surface waters of said stream customarily flowing in the irrigating season of each year, at the points indicated by conclusion of law number one herein, which said right of appropriation to all the surface waters of said stream so flowing is a prior and superior right to said waters to plaintiff's riparian right, or to any right of plaintiff to the waters of said stream, where the same flow through the lands of defendants at or above the points of diversion indicated by conclusion of law number one herein."
The judgment, as so modified, and the order denying the motion for a new trial are affirmed.
Angellotti, J., and Van Dyke, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.