American Co. v. Bradford

27 Cal. 360
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1865
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 27 Cal. 360 (American Co. v. Bradford) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Co. v. Bradford, 27 Cal. 360 (Cal. 1865).

Opinion

By the Court, Currey, J.

The plaintiff, composing a joint stock company, under the name and style of the “American Company,” brought its action in June, 1863, against the defendants, alleging in its complaint that for more than ten years then last past it had been the owner and in possession of a certain ditch called the “ Deadwood Ditch,” leading and extending and conducting the waters from Deadwood Creek, in Sierra County, to Craig’s Flat 'and Morristown, in the same county, for mining purposes. The plaintiff alleged that by means of the ditch and a dam at the head of it across the creek, it had, during the period named, except when wrongfully prevented by the defendants, diverted, as it lawfully might, from the creek, at the dam, sufficient of its waters to fill the ditch, which quantity of water had been, during all such period, appropriated and used by the plaintiff for mining purposes; and further alleged that plaintiff was still entitled to the rights which the company had so acquired. [363]*363The rights and property thus acquired, the plaintiff alleged, had been obstructed by the defendants, who had from time to time, without right, entered upon the ditch and dam, and upon the creek above the dam, and by ditches, sluices and dams of their construction, diverted large quantities of the waters of the creek from the ditch, by reason of which a sufficient quantity of water to fill the plaintiff’s ditch could not and did not flow through it, whereby the plaintiff had sustained damage in a sum specified. The plaintiff also alleged a threatened continuance by the defendants of the wrongs of which they complain, and they show by allegations that remedies at law were inadequate for the redress of the injuriés threatened, and then pray for judgment for damages and for an injunction restraining the defendants pending the suit, and that such injunction might, on the final determination of the case, be made perpetual.

All the defendants but one appeared and answered. They first admitted that plaintiff owned the ditch described, and then denied that plaintiff was at any time entitled to so much of the water of the creek as would fill its ditch, except when there was sufficient in the creek for that purpose after supplying the defendants’ mining claims below the dam. The defendants also denied that during “ the whole ” of the period of ten years the plaintiff had diverted as much of the waters of the creek as would fill its ditch, or ever was entitled to divert therefrom that quantity, except when a surplus sufficient therefor remained after the defendants were supplied. The defendants further denied that they or either of them at any time “wrongfully, injuriously or unlawfully,” diverted or turned any water of the creek out of or from the ditch, and in the same connection they denied that any water by them at any time diverted from the creek of right ought to have flowed into or through plaintiff’s ditch, and in conclusion they denied that the plaintiff had sustained any damage by the acts of the defendants.

For an affirmative defense, the defendants answered that long prior to the location of the plaintiff’s ditch and dam, [364]*364certain mining claims were located and worked in the bed and banks of Deadwood Creek, by persons from whom the defendants had derived their right and title whereby the defendants’ grantors became and were entitled to the use and possession of all the waters of the creek, or so much thereof as might become necessary to the working of these mining claims, as the prior appropriators of the waters of the creek. And they also averred that the waters diverted by them from Deadwood Creek naturally flowed down its bed upon defendants’ mining claims until wrongfully obstructed and diverted by the plaintiff, and that the same were necessary to the working of such mining claims.

A preliminary injunction was granted in the case, and when the cause was tried a judgment was rendered for the plaintiff, and the injunction was made perpetual. The appeal is from the judgment and from an order of the Court overruling a motion made by the defendants -for a new trial.

The questions of fact in issue between the parties were tried by a jury. At the trial the defendants requested the Court to instruct the jury to find specially in respect to certain facts. This the Court refused to do, but submitted to them the following questions, with directions to respond to them in writing :

First—Is plaintiff entitled to all the waters of Deadwood Creek at the point where the same is diverted by its ditch ?

Second—Are defendants entitled to any portion of the waters of Deadwood Creek which rise above the dam of plaintiff, and if they are so entitled, to how much and at what times ?

The Court also directed the jury to return a general verdict, and to fix the amount of damages if their verdict should be for the plaintiff.

The defendants excepted to the Court’s refusal to submit to the jury the questions of fact propounded on their behalf, and also to the submission of the two propositions set forth and to the direction to the jury to fix the amount of damages in case their verdict should be for the plaintiff.

The jury rendered a general verdict for the plaintiff and assessed the damages at three hundred dollars, and to the first [365]*365question they answered: “ That plaintiff is entitled to all the waters of Deadwood Creek at the point where the same is diverted by its ditch," and to the second question they answered: “That defendants are not entitled to any portion of the waters of Deadwood Creek which rise above the dam of plaintiff.”

The one hundred and seventy-fourth section of the Practice Act defines the nature and character of a general verdict, and also of a special verdict; and the next section provides that in an action for the recovery of money only, or specific real property, the jury, in their discretion, may render a general or special verdict. But in all other cases, the Court may direct the jury to find a special verdict upon all or any of the issues, and in all cases may instruct them, if they render a general verdict, to find upon particular questions of fact to be stated in writing, and may direct a written finding thereon.

It is the Court’s province to determine as to what particular facts the jury shall find specially, and neither party has the right to dictate the terms of any particular question to the jury, and for refusing to comply with such a request no error can properly be assigned.

At the request of the plaintiff, the Court gave to the jury certain instructions, which it is not necessary to notice in detail. The instructions so given are', in our judgment, a just exposition of the law on the subjects to which they relate.

The defendants on their part requested the Court to instruct the jury to the effect that if they believed from the evidence that the ditch was located before the defendants’ mining claims, and that plaintiff had a goodj title to the waters of the creek above the dam, and had never entered into any agreement as to the quantity of water to be used by each of the parties, but also still believed from the evidence that the defendants had used a portion of the waters adversely to the plaintiff for more than five years before the commencement of the action, that then, to the extent of the water so used by the defendants, the jury should find in their favor. The Court refused to so instruct the jury, and the defendants excepted.

[366]

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Bluebook (online)
27 Cal. 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-co-v-bradford-cal-1865.