108 Cal. 95 | Cal. | 1895
Appeal from the judgment. Plaintiff is a lower, defendants are upper, riparian proprietors. Parks creek for many years had flowed over the land of defendants to a point on that land known as Batterton crossing, where it divided into two branches called the North Channel and the South Channel. About one-third of the waters of the creek passed onto the plaintiff’s land through the North Channel, while the remaining two-thirds flowed down the South Channel. A third waterway, seemingly an ancient course of Parks creek, left the main stream, about one-half a mile above Batter-ton crossing, and entered upon and extended over the land of plaintiff in a direction parallel with that of the North Channel. This last waterway was known as the Spring Branch Channel. There wras no direct surface flow from Parks creek into it, the point of separation being dammed by gravel, bowlders, and debris, but its bed was lower than the bed of the North Channel, and from North Channel, by percolation and by small but defined surface streams, water rose in this Spring Branch Channel and flowed over plaintiff’s lands. The amount of water so rising bore direct relation to the amount of water flowing through the North Channel. Plaintiff relied upon the waters of the Spring Branch and North Channels for all beneficial purposes.
Such were the conditions until the winter of 1890-91, when an extraordinary freshet deposited a bar of bowlders, gravel, and debris at the head of the North Channel, and thus prevented the waters from flowing into it as had been their wont. At the same time the waters cut a new bed for themselves. This New Channel (so named) left the original stream from the south about a mile above Batterton crossing, extended in a general course parallel with it, and joined the South Channel, still on the lands of defendants, above the point where South Channel entered plaintiff’s property, and thence flowed on by the accustomed South Channel. During the first year after this change some of the water passed down the old way to Batterton crossing. The rains of
Plaintiff then commenced this action, averring that these changes were occasioned wholly by natural causes, and asserting the right to enter upon defendants’ land and to take such necessary and proper steps as might he required to return the water to the channels wherein it flowed prior to the year 1889, and asking that defendants be enjoined from preventing him from entering upon their land and doing such proper and necessary acts. He also pleaded a grant to himself from defendants’ predecessor of his land and of “ the waters accustomed to flow in the Spring Branch Channel.” Defendants denied the asserted rights, and by cross-complaint pleaded the construction and maintenance for thirty years last past of a dam across the head of the North Channel sufficient to divert all the water thereof, during ordinary low stages, from the North to the South Channel, and also their prescriptive right to divert two-thirds of the water of the creek by ditches. They pleaded defendants’ interference with these rights, and asked damages accordingly.
Plaintiff was denied an injunction, but, as riparian proprietor and as grantee under the deed above mentioned, was decreed the right of “ restoring and restraining the waters of Parks creek to the following channels: 1. From the point where the New Channel cut from and left the former channel (original bed of the stream) down said former channel in a single body to the Batterton crossing; 2. From the Batterton crossing in two channels in the following proportions, to wit: One-third through the said North Channel and the remainder through said South Channel.”
We cannot see that the rights of the parties in this
But the complaint of plaintiff does not declare upon any such invasion or infringement by defendants. It asserts the right to go upon the land of an upper riparian proprietor and return a stream to its original channel which has been diverted therefrom suddenly and sensibly by natural causes. And plaintiff’s warrant in doing this rests not upon any contractual relations with defendants, but upon his prerogatives as a lower riparian proprietor.
We do not attach importance to the contention of appellants that the right of the lower riparian proprietor is merely to have the water enter his land by its accustomed channels without regard to the quantity which these channels are wont to carry. The lower proprietor, as against the unwarranted acts of the upper, is entitled not only to have the water enter his land by its accustomed channels, but to have each channel carry its due amount of water. Any other rule would lead to untold hardship and oppression.
But we are here concerned only with the rights of the lower proprietor where the change in the channel has been caused not by the act of man, but by the act of God. Does the right of the riparian proprietor to have the water enter his land by its accustomed channels stand superior to changes wrought in the flow of a
A somewhat extended examination leads to the conclusion that the assertion of such a right is new to jurisprudence. The right finds no recognition by the commentators of either the civil or common law, and no case has come under our observation in which the question is considered. Even Sir Matthew Hale, whose De Jure Maris is declared by Chancellor Kent to have exhausted the learning on the subject, makes no mention of so important a topic. This silence is itself significant. For it is not easily to be believed that if this important right exists it would not have been asserted and announced in numerous instances.
While thus lacking in authority it is certain that the contention cannot find better support from principle or reason. The foundation of the riparian proprietor’s rights rests upon the universally accepted maxim adopted by the common law from the civil law: Aqua currit, et debet currere ut currere solebat ex jure naturx. These rights thus draw their support from the laws of nature, but they do not rise superior to those laws. When, by their operation, the flow is lost the right is lost with it. The new channel itself becomes the natural channel. Otherwise a riparian proprietor would hold all lands above him in. extraordinary and perpetual servitude. If, by the forces of nature, the stream should change its course at a point miles above him he would still be empowered to subject any and all of the intermediate territory to operations requisite to enable him to turn the water back upon his own premises, and this power would be h,is to the very fountain-head of the stream. Such a doctrine could not be tolerated.
If it be needed, however, the reasoning of the foregoing finds abundant support in analogous principles of the law which are firmly established. Says Sir Matthew Hale (Hale’s De Jure Maris, c. 1): “A water
For the foregoing reasons the judgment is reversed and the case remanded.
McFarland, J. and Temple, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.