242 P. 725 | Cal. | 1925
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *651 This is an application for a writ of prohibition to restrain respondent court and judge from making an order suspending a permanent injunction pending appeal.
It appears from the petition that on July 15, 1916, an action was commenced in the superior court of Tulare County by some of the petitioners, but not by all of them, against the Lindsay-Strathmore Irrigation District, the purpose of which was to obtain a permanent injunction restraining the defendant irrigation district from pumping water from a tract of land in Tulare County known as the Rancho de Kaweah and from conveying said water away from said lands and away from the watershed of the Kaweah River for use in the irrigation of lands in the defendant district. It was alleged in the complaint in said action that the Tulare Irrigation District is a political subdivision and body corporate, organized and existing under and by virtue of the Irrigation Act of 1887 (Stats. 1887, p. 29); that the defendant Lindsay-Strathmore Irrigation District is also a political subdivision and body corporate, organized and existing under and by virtue of the Irrigation Act of 1897 (Stats. 1897, p. 254), and situated wholly within the county of Tulare about twelve miles in a southerly and southeasterly direction from McKay Point, and embracing within its boundaries about 14,000 acres of land, divided into numerous private holdings; that from time immemorial the Kaweah River had flowed and does now flow from its source in the Sierra Nevada Mountains in the county of Tulare in a westerly direction to McKay Point where it forks or divides, the northerly channel being known as the St. John's River and the southerly channel as the Lower Kaweah River and Mill Creek; that said river forms a distinct watershed on the western slope of said mountains until it reaches McKay Point; that from that point it spreads out through its numerous branches into what is known as the Kaweah delta, *653 until it is many miles in width from north to south and which comprises approximately 300,000 acres of land; that in this delta are located the cities of Visalia, Tulare, and other towns and many hundreds of farms upon which are growing fruit trees, timber, alfalfa, and other agricultural crops and upon which there are thousands of people and large numbers of livestock; that all of said farms and lands and people require the whole of the water of the Kaweah River, both surface and subterranean flow, for irrigation and domestic uses; that the underground flow is necessary to furnish a foundation for the surface water flowing in said river and its branches and the ditches and channels leading therefrom and to hold up the underground water-table beneath the surface of said lands in order to make the same productive; that the lowering of said water-table or underground flow will gradually diminish the productive qualities of said lands; that the lands adjoining said delta, including the lands embraced within the boundaries of the Lindsay-Strathmore Irrigation District, are higher than the lands in said delta and are composed mostly of adobe and clay; that water will not readily seep through the same and that the impervious condition thereof confines the surface and underground waters of said river to the said delta; that the Tulare Irrigation District is the owner of the Tulare Irrigation District canal leading out of the St. John's River; that some of the petitioning ditch owners are appropriators of water from the Lower Kaweah River, some are appropriators from both of said rivers, and that the petitioners, other than the ditch companies, are the owners of the lands riparian to either one or the other of said rivers; that all of said owners and appropriators were such prior to 1915, and have continuously used said water except as such use has been interfered with by the defendant district; that within six months prior to the commencement of said action the defendant district contracted to purchase and went into the possession of, and claimed to own, a tract of land known as the Rancho de Kaweah, comprising about 1,100 acres and situated about four miles from McKay Point and lying on both sides of the Lower Kaweah River and within one-half mile from the St. John's River; that said Rancho de Kaweah overlies the underground body of water of said delta; that immediately after the defendant district took possession *654 of said Rancho de Kaweah it bored three wells in different locations therein to a depth of 100 feet down into said underground body of water and obtained a large quantity of water therefrom; that said wells were bored for the purpose of the irrigation of lands within the boundary of the defendant district and conducting the same outside of said watershed; that said defendant threatens to and will, if not restrained by the court, bore thirty-seven more wells and construct pumping plants thereon for the purpose of pumping water from said wells for irrigation purposes on the lands of the district; that if the defendant be permitted to bore said wells and construct said pumping plant and take said water the water so taken will substantially diminish the quantity of water in said underground body of water otherwise available to the plaintiffs, to the irreparable injury and damage of the plaintiffs; that the defendant district has no right to take any of said waters away from said watershed or to diminish the surface or underground flow of said Kaweah River for the purpose of supplying the lands of the said district with water for irrigation or other uses.
It further appears from said petition that during the pendency of said action numerous other parties appeared as interveners and set forth their alleged rights substantially in the same form as the original plaintiffs in said action. The defendant in due time filed its answer to the complaint and to the complaints in intervention in which it put in issue generally and specifically the allegations of the complaint; denied that the underflow waters of the Kaweah River are necessary to supply water for the irrigation of the lands of the complainants, and alleged that except immediately below the bed of said river and of said streams there is no underflow thereof; denied that any part of the underflow waters of said river were necessary or available for use in irrigating the lands of the complainants, and alleged that underlying the surface of the lands of the complainants of said delta is a broad body of diffused and percolating water many miles in width moving at right angles to the surface contours of said lands and at various depths beneath the surface of the same, which water does not constitute any portion of the underflow of said river or streams and eventually drains into the trough of the valley and is lost for any and all useful purposes; admitted that it owned the Rancho *655 de Kaweah and had bored three wells prior to the commencement of said action, and that it has subsequently bored thirty-four wells upon its said lands and is pumping as much as fifty-five cubic feet of water per second from said wells, and alleged that subsequent to the commencement of said action it constructed its irrigation system at a cost to it of approximately $1,600,000, and has by means of said system caused the water pumped from said wells to be conveyed to lands within said district for the irrigation and domestic use of thousands of people living thereon, and that the aggregate amount of waters pumped from said wells was 13,500 acre-feet during the season of 1918 and 14,800 acre-feet during the season of 1919; denied that it had or will cause any injury or damage to the complainants in pumping the amount of water it has been pumping or any amount not in excess of 25,000 acre-feet; denied that any water taken by it not in excess of 25,000 acre-feet would substantially or at all diminish the quantity of water in the said underground body of water alleged to be available to the complainants. In the event that the court should find that the defendant by reason of its said pumping operations was causing any diminution in the amount of the water which would naturally flow in said streams the defendant prayed that the court apportion said waters so that it may take the maximum of 25,000 acre-feet, and it is alleged that water in that amount can be taken from the wells of the defendant and conveyed to the lands within defendant district without interfering with the rights of the complainants. It is further alleged that all of the lands embraced within the boundaries of the defendant district are susceptible of a high degree of cultivation and that more than 14,000 acres thereof are susceptible of the cultivation and growth of oranges and other citrus fruits; that more than 9,000 acres thereof are planted to citrus fruits, and that more than 7,500 acres are now in bearing; that said citrus fruits cannot be grown or produced without irrigation; that there is no other source of supply of water for irrigation of said lands within said district other than the water produced by the pumping operations in and upon the said Rancho de Kaweah; that if the defendant becomes unable to use said water by reason of an injunction in said action or otherwise the trees, fruits, *656 and vegetables growing on said lands will die and all of said lands will become arid and waste.
The allegations and denials of the pleadings as above epitomized somewhat in detail show the extent of the issues involved in the litigation and indicate the importance of the problem confronting the trial judge when called upon to exercise the discretion which the defendant Irrigation District contends he may and should exercise in its favor.
One phase of this litigation has heretofore been before this court (Lindsay-Strathmore Irr. Dist. v. Superior Court,
In the answer and return subsequently filed the respondent judge among other things alleges that certain of the petitioners, complainants in said action, were not parties thereto at the time of the commencement thereof; that they were made parties at later dates, to wit, some on the fourteenth day of June, 1920, some on the 20th of November, 1920, and the last one on the fifteenth day of January, 1921. It is further alleged that the construction of the plant and system of wells, pumps, pipe-lines, canals, and other works constructed by the defendant district had been commenced and prosecuted to a considerable extent prior to the commencement of said action on July 15, 1916, and that said works were substantially completed by the defendant district during the year 1917 and were in full operation and use in the month of April, 1918, long before the first appearance of numerous parties plaintiff in said action whose names are set forth in said answer and return.
At the time of the commencement of said action no application was made by the plaintiffs for a preliminary injunction and no action was taken by the plaintiffs for injunctive relief until the fourteenth day of March, 1921, when application was made to the respondent court for a preliminary injunction restraining the defendant district from taking or diverting any of the underground waters underlying the Rancho de Kaweah or any of the surface waters of the Kaweah River as it passes through said rancho away from said lands at any time when there should be flowing in the Kaweah River at McKay Point not to exceed 1,140.7 cubic feet of water per second. Thereafter, on April 6, 1921, the said court made its order that the defendant should, pending the determination of said action, be permitted to operate its pumps on the Rancho de Kaweah on condition that it restore to the channel of the Kaweah River at all times when the flow of said river at McKay Point should be less than 1,144 cubic feet per second, such quantity of water, not to exceed fifteen cubic feet per second, as added to that then flowing at McKay Point would equal 1,144 cubic feet per second, except that such restoration need not be made between the fifteenth day of November of each *658 year and the fifteenth day of the following April, and that a preliminary injunction be issued, restraining the defendant from taking or diverting any underground water underlying the Rancho de Kaweah away from said lands, excepting at the times and in the manner above stated. Thereafter, on or about the twenty-fifth day of August, 1921, a preliminary injunction was issued by said court in accordance with said order, was served on the defendant and has ever since been in full force and effect except as to a modification thereof favorable to the defendant, made on the twenty-fourth day of August, 1922. It is further alleged in said answer and return that it is the intention of the respondent judge, unless prohibited from so doing by this court, to determine and grant the defendant's motion for a suspension of said injunction pending appeal, said order for suspension to be contained in the judgment hereafter to be entered in said action or to be made concurrently with the entry of said judgment and to continue pending an appeal to this court, and that it is his intention in making such order to impose upon the defendant such terms and conditions as to him may seem just and equitable, and which terms and conditions will, in his opinion and judgment, provide adequate security for compensating the said complainants for any damage or loss they may suffer by reason of such operations by said defendant pending appeal, in the event that such judgment should be affirmed on appeal or the appeal therefrom be dismissed. It is further alleged that in the trial of said action many complicated questions of law and of fact were involved and were presented to the trial judge; that he has decided such issues of law and fact in accordance with his best judgment; that he is of the opinion and believes that the defendant district is advised by its counsel that it has good and meritorious grounds of appeal from the judgment to be entered against it, and that he believes the said district intends in good faith to prosecute such appeal; that he believes that a number of questions of law and fact decided and found by him in his findings and conclusions on file and material to said judgment are novel and that the said district should in justice and equity have an opportunity to test the correctness of said judgment by taking an appeal therefrom. The respondent judge further alleges that after a careful consideration of all the *659 evidence in the case "if an injunction absolutely restraining defendant from taking water by means of wells and pumps from the Rancho de Kaweah, or otherwise, as directed by the conclusions of law filed in said action and as intended to be incorporated in the decree to be made and entered in said action, shall be enforced pending an appeal by said defendant from such judgment, any appeal by said defendant from such judgment would be entirely nugatory and without value to said defendant." It is further alleged that the lands within the defendant district require water for irrigation in order to make them productive or valuable for any purpose other than pasturage; that said lands are highly developed, the greater part thereof being planted to citrus trees which cannot be grown or maintained without sufficient water for irrigation; that said lands so planted to citrus trees, aggregating 9,000 acres or thereabouts are of the value of $1,250 an acre if supplied with sufficient water, but without water for irrigation would be of not to exceed $50 an acre; that other lands within said district are planted to valuable crops which require irrigation; that there is no adequate supply of water within said district for the irrigation of said lands and that there is no available supply elsewhere which could be developed and brought to said lands within many months, or at all, if such decree of injunction shall be enforced immediately and remain effective; that if such injunction be put into force and effect pending an appeal from said judgment the defendant district will during the pendency of such appeal be unable to supply adequate water within said district to irrigate the trees, plants, and crops growing thereon; that the citrus and other trees growing upon the irrigated part of said lands in said district will die and be destroyed, the majority of the lands within said district will become arid and waste, and the plant and system for the pumping and transporting of water from the Rancho de Kaweah to said district and for the distribution thereof to said lands within said district, constructed by the district at a cost of $1,600,000 or thereabouts, will be rendered useless and of little or no value. It is further alleged that if said injunction be put in force and effect during the pendency of said appeal and the said district should succeed in obtaining a reversal of said judgment, such reversal would be utterly useless and without value or benefit to the appellant. *660 It is also alleged that from a consideration of all the evidence in the case the respondent judge believes that the loss and inconvenience which would be suffered by the complainants in said action from the continuation of the pumping by the defendant during the pendency of said appeal under proper terms and conditions to be imposed as a part of any order suspending said injunction would be relatively small as compared with the loss and damage to the district from the enforcement of such an injunction pending an appeal, and that such loss and damage to complainants for the period of the pendency of the appeal could be compensated in money and the payment of such compensation could be adequately secured; that the respondent judge is informed and believes that a suspension of the operation of such injunction pending an appeal would not destroy any right of the complainants, or any of them, established or protected, or to be established or protected by the judgment so to be entered.
The petitioners contend that the respondent court is wholly without jurisdiction to make said order. The question therefore is: Has the superior court the power, in the exercise of a sound discretion, to suspend the operation of an injunction to which it has decided the plaintiff is entitled, pending an appeal from the judgment?
It is conceded by all parties that there is no statutory authority in this state for the exercise of such power. It is also conceded that, where not prohibited by statute, the superior court, under section 5 of article VI of the constitution, has all the jurisdiction in equity which was possessed by the English courts of chancery on July 4, 1776. Prior to 1772 the courts of chancery of England did not exercise the power to suspend proceedings in equity pending appeal for the reason that the taking of the appeal had that effect. But since that time the contrary rule has prevailed. (Hovey v.McDonald,
It therefore appears that "for a long course of years" prior to 1807 the English courts of chancery exercised the power to stay proceedings in equity pending appeal. The petitioner has cited no case or historical treatise, and we have discovered none, which holds or indicates that such power was not exercised as early as 1772 and we find no authority for holding that they did not possess that power more remotely even though they did not exercise it. Indeed, as early as 1697 it is intimated in Horner v. Popham, 1 Eng. Reprint, 152, that on an appeal from the House of Lords to Parliament, the House of Lords would have authority to stay proceedings in equity pending appeal. In speaking of the English chancery practice it is stated in Daniel's Chancery Pleading and Practice (6th Am. ed.), at page 1469, that an appeal does not stop or hinder any proceedings on the decree or order appealed from unless by special order of thecourt. It is further stated that the court will in some cases upon special application of the appellant suspend the proceedings under a decree pending an appeal.
The Earl of Halsbury, Lord High Chancellor of Great Britain for nearly twenty years, says in his work on the Laws of England, volume 17, page 211, section 465, under the title "Injunction": "An appeal does not operate as a stay of execution or of proceedings under the decision appealed from, except so far as the court appealed from or any judge thereof or the court of appeal may direct; and no intermediate act or proceeding will be invalidated except so far as the court appealed from directs. . . . If irreparable damage will be done to the appellant in the meantime, the operation of the injunction may be stayed on terms."
The purpose of the stay or postponement of the effective date of the injunction is to protect appellant from having his right of appeal rendered nugatory or merely nominal if he should succeed. (Monkhouse v. Corporation of Bedford, 17 Ves. Jr. 380 [34 Eng. Reprint, 147]; Walford v. Walford, L.R. 3 Ch. App. 812; Polini v. Gray, 12 Ch. Div. 438.) The last case cited was an equitable action to determine the *663 rights of claimants to a fund. The plaintiffs failed in the court of first instance and prosecuted an appeal. They contended that if they should ultimately succeed in the House of Lords that success would be useless to them unless an interim order were made for preserving the fund. Assuming the contention to be correct, the court said: "The question is, whether this court has jurisdiction to prevent such a consequence. It appears to me on principle that the court ought to possess that jurisdiction, because the principle which underlies all orders for the preservation of property pending litigation is this, that the successful party in the litigation, that is, the ultimately successful party, is to reap the fruits of that litigation, and not obtain merely a barren success. That principle, as it appears to me, applies as much to the court of first instance before the first trial, and to the court of appeal before the second trial, as to the court of last instance before the hearing of the final appeal." (See, also, Attorney-General v. Colney Hatch LunaticAsylum, 4 Ch. App. 146; Attorney-General v. Proprietors ofthe Bradford Canal, 2 Eq. Cas. 71; Shelfer v. City of LondonElectric Lighting Co., 2 Ch. 388.)
It has been generally held by the courts of the United States and by the courts of the several states where the matter is not controlled by statute that courts of equity possess the power here contended for by the respondents. In recognition of such power the supreme court of the United States in 1878 promulgated the rule wherein it provided that: "When an appeal from a final decree, in an equity suit, granting or dissolving an injunction, is allowed by a justice or a judge who took part in the decision of the cause, he may, in his discretion, at the time of such allowance, make an order suspending or modifying the injunction during the pendency of the appeal upon such terms as to bond or otherwise as he may consider proper for the security of the rights of the opposite party." (Hovey v. McDonald,
The respondents have cited numerous other cases which support their contention. Quotations from them would appear to be superfluous. A citation of some of them will suffice. (Leonard
v. Ozark Land Co.,
In 22 Cyc., at page 970, under the title of "Injunctions," the writer says: "The court may in its discretion suspend the operation of an injunction. It may in the very decree itself provide that the operation of the injunction shall be stayed for a certain length of time or until the happening of a condition, and it is within the discretion of the court to stay the operation of the decree pending an appeal therefrom, until the hearing of the appeal on the merits." (See, also, 32 C.J. 388; 38 L.R.A. (N.S.), note, p. 440 et seq., and cases cited.)
It must therefore be said that the chancery courts in England have from an early day exercised the power to suspend or stay injunctions until an appeal may be heard and determined. It must also be said that courts of equity in the United States, both state and federal, when uncontrolled by statute, have exercised the same power. It follows that the superior court in this state likewise possesses that power. *666
The petitioner contends that the case of United Railroads v.Superior Court,
It is strongly intimated in the above-quoted question which this court framed as the only one for determination, that if the order for the preliminary injunction had contained a provision reserving to the court the right to revoke or modify the preliminary injunction which it was then ordering, such power could have been reserved. We do not decide that question, for it is not involved here, but the intimation fortifies the conclusion that the only theory upon which that case was decided was that in view of our statutory provisions regulating and providing a "full and complete system of law and procedure as to granting, refusing, modifying and dissolving temporary injunctions," and without reserving to itself the right to revoke or modify such an injunction, the court's power in the premises had spent its force and been exhausted.
Further with reference to the scope of our code provisions relating to injunctions it is said in 14 Cal. Jur., at pages 296 and 297: "The code provisions regulating injunctions do not curtail the general grant of equity power vested in the superior courts by the constitution nor affect their general chancery power to preserve the fruits of a possibly successful litigation to appellants from an adverse judgment against them. It follows that the superior court has equitable jurisdiction at the time of rendering judgment for the defendant, either to continue in force a preliminary injunction so as to maintain the status quo of the subject matter of the litigation pending an appeal, or to make an original injunction order at such time restraining the successful party pending such appeal from interfering with appellant's property, notwithstanding the right to a perpetual injunction, which was the primary object of the action, may be denied by the judgment itself." This statement is supported by the citation of authorities in this state but is based particularly on the leading case of City of Pasadena v.Superior Court,
To his findings of fact the respondent judge appended his conclusions of law wherein he decided that the complainants were "entitled to a judgment and decree of this court, determining their respective rights, as aforesaid, and to a perpetual injunction of this court forever enjoining and restraining the said defendant," etc., but, as above noted, no such judgment or decree has been entered. It is the contention of the petitioners herein that the signing of the decree in accordance with the findings and conclusions is merely a ministerial act and that no decree may now be signed and entered except in strict conformity with said conclusions of law. In ordinary actions at law it is, of course, the rule that the signature of the judge is not necessary to the validity of the judgment (14 Cal. Jur. 914, and cases cited), but "it has been the almost invariable custom in this state for decrees in equity to be so signed." (Byrne v.Hoag,
The petitioners further contend that the making of the contemplated order will not preserve the status quo of the subject matter of the litigation but will preserve a condition which the defendant district has deliberately created since the action was commenced. This contention is based on the fact that additional wells were bored on the Rancho de Kaweah, expensive improvements were constructed by the defendant district and vast improvement of land areas took place after the commencement of said litigation. The contention is also based on the rule that ordinarily when the status quo is referred to the status at the commencement of the action is in contemplation. The respondents insist that this rule should not be applied to the situation of the defendant district for the reason that numerous parties complainant in said action were not parties thereto until long after the completion of the works by the defendant and that the asserted rule should not operate to the benefit of those who were not in litigation with the defendant district until after the said works were completed. It is unnecessary to here solve that problem for, assuming that the rule as contended for by petitioners is correct, it is not invariable as an examination of the authorities discloses. Concerning the rule that should apply in a proceeding identical with the present one the supreme court of Washington said in State ex rel. Burrows v. Superior Court,supra: "Justice to the *671
litigants usually requires that the status of the parties at the time of the judgment should be maintained pending appeals." (See, also, Chester Traction Co. v. Philadelphia W. B.R. Co., 174 Pa. St. 284 [34 A. 619].) This is especially true when no preliminary injunction was sought by the plaintiffs until some five years after the commencement of said action (Johnson v.Seabury Johnson,
Finally, it is contended by the petitioners that the making of the contemplated order will deprive them of their property without due process of law and without adequate compensation. Obviously there is no merit in this contention. The said action is still pending and will be deemed pending until its final determination on appeal (sec. 1049, Code Civ. Proc.). We, of course, express no opinion as to the merits of the appeal, but it may not be gainsaid that reversals do occur. For the purpose only of the consideration of this contention of the petitioners in this proceeding it may be said that the asserted rights of the petitioners may never be established. If they do not finally prevail it may not be said that they have presently such a vested right in the property in the litigation as may be protected under the due process clause of the fourteenth amendment and section 14 of article I of our constitution as against a valid order or judgment of the court finally deciding that their alleged claims are unfounded. This contention of the petitioners assumes that their rights have been finally adjudicated, which of course is a false premise, as such rights are still in litigation. A similar contention was made in State ex rel. Burrows v. SuperiorCourt, supra, where it was held to be untenable. (See, also, 15 Cal. Jur. 121, 122.)
In his verified answer and return to the alternative writ herein the respondent judge states, as above noted, that in making the contemplated order he intends to impose upon the defendant and appellant such terms and conditions as to him may seem just and equitable and that such terms and *673
conditions will, in his judgment, provide adequate security for compensating the complainants on account of any damage or loss which the latter may suffer by reason of the operations of the defendant district pending appeal, in the event the judgment be affirmed or the appeal dismissed, and that without the contemplated order any appeal by the defendant "would be entirely nugatory and without value" to said defendant. He arrives at these conclusions "after careful consideration of all the evidence in the case." Contemplating the results which he sets forth as attending the consequences of an immediately effective injunction it may properly be said as was said in the Pasadena case (795): "Common fairness and a sense of justice readily suggests" that while the defendant in good faith is prosecuting its appeal it "should be in some manner protected in having the subject matter of the litigation preserved" until the appellate court can settle the controversy. The exercise of the power which the respondents propose to exercise is "incidental to the right of appeal," and the contemplated order may be deemed a part of the injunction itself. (See American Trading Co. v.Superior Court,
It is unnecessary to pass upon other points raised by the parties in view of the conclusions herein expressed.
The peremptory writ is denied and the proceeding is dismissed.
Myers, C.J., Waste, J., Lawlor, J., Seawell, J., Lennon, J., and Richards, J., concurred. *674