Anaheim Water Co. v. Semi-Tropic Water Co.

30 P. 623, 64 Cal. 185, 4 Colo. L. Rep. 129, 1883 Cal. LEXIS 598
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 27, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 30 P. 623 (Anaheim Water Co. v. Semi-Tropic Water Co.) 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
Anaheim Water Co. v. Semi-Tropic Water Co., 30 P. 623, 64 Cal. 185, 4 Colo. L. Rep. 129, 1883 Cal. LEXIS 598 (Cal. 1883).

Opinions

Ross, J.

In its course through Los Angeles County the Santa Ana River forms the dividing line between the ranchos Canon de Santa Ana, San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana, and Las Bolsas on the one side, and the ranchos Santiago de Santa Ana and Lomas de Santiago on the other. Between the ranchos Canon de Santa Ana and the San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana and also fronting on the river is a small piece of land belonging to the government. Erom a map furnished us by the respective parties it appears that the rancho Santiago de Santa Ana has a frontage on the river almost equal to the combined frontage of the ranchos Canon de Santa Ana, San Juan y Cajon de Santa [187]*187Ana, Las Bolsas and the government land, and reaches from the sea to a point on the river but a little distant from tvhere the river enters the boundary of the county.

The plaintiffs assert a right to divert from the river sufficient water to keep their ditch, which is alleged and found by the court below to be six feet wide at the bottom, eight feet wide at the top, and two feet deep (grade not given), flowing full at all times and seasons of the year; and in this asserted right the decree of the court below secures them, without regard to the quantity of water that may be left in the river when such a quantity is so diverted and irrespective of the wants and the necessities of the owners of the Santiago de Santa Ana Rancho, under and for whom the defendant asserts the right to divert a portion of the water of the said river. Counsel for the plaintiffs contend that the right thus asserted and adjudged them is founded, (1) in grant; (2) upon prescription; (3) upon prior appropriation, and (4) upon an estoppel in pais.

It will be convenient to consider these grounds in their order.

1. Omitting details, the plaintiffs’ title by grant rests, first, upon a deed executed September 1,1857, by Bernardo Yorba, the then owner of the rancho Canon de Santa Ana, to Juan Pacificus Onti veras, the then owner of the lower rancho, San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana; and secondly, on two deeds executed September 12, 1857, by Onti veras and wife to George Hansen and John Frohling — the two last named persons being the predecessors in interest of the plaintiffs.

By the deed of September 1, 1857, Bernardo Yorba conveyed to Onti veras, for the expressed consideration of two hundred dollars, a right of way in and over a certain strip of the rancho Canon de Santa Ana commencing at a point one hundred varas below a dam in the river on his said rancho which leads a portion of the water of said river into a ditch running through a portion of said lands and into and through a portion of the aforesaid lands of the said Juan Pacificus Ontiveras (to wit, the rancho San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana), and which is now used by him for irrigating a portion of said lands and running from said point in a westerly direction to the boundary line of the rancho Cajon de Santa Ana,” said strip of land to be sufficiently wide for the construction of a water ditch of capacity to hold [188]*188and convey water sufficient to irrigate. 1,200 acres of land and for the passage of a man on horseback on either side of the ditch for the purpose of inspecting and keeping it in order .... “ and also the right to construct a sufficient dam at the before-mentioned point in the said river in order to supply the said ditch with water for the uses and purposes above mentioned.”

By one of the aforesaid deeds of September 12, 1857, Ontiveras conveyed to Hansen and Frohling the same rights and interests conveyed to him by the aforesaid deed from Yorba, and by the other deed of September 12, 1857, Ontiveras conveyed to Hansen and Frohling 1,165 acres of the rancho San'Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana, afterwards and now known as the Anaheim tract, “ and also the right of way in and over a strip of land twelve varas wide running through the said rancho San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana, for the purpose of making a ditch of capacity to carry water sufficient to irrigate the said piece of land; said ditch to be commenced at a point on the eastern boundary line of the aforesaid rancho (San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana), which may be most convenient for the purpose, and to run as directly as the nature of the soil and the conformation of the ground will permit, to the said tract of 1,165 acres; and also the privilege of using so much of the water from the Santa Ana Biver as appertains to the said rancho (San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana) for the purpose of irrigating the same, by virtue of the grant of said rancho by the former Mexican government, and by the laws and customs of the country at the time of such grant, and by virtue of the existing laws and customs as may be sufficient for the purpose of irrigating the aforesaid tract of 1,165 acres of land, together with the privilege of making such other ditches through the said rancho (San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana) as may be necessary for irrigating and cultivating said tract of land.”

There can be no doubt that by the deed last mentioned Ontiveras conveyed to Hansen and Frohling the privilege of using so much of the water of the Santa Ana Biver as appertained to the raneho San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana as should be necessary for the irrigation of the.Anaheim tract of 1,165 acres, provided the quantity of water appertaining to that rancho and previously unconveyed by Ontiveras was sufficient [189]*189for that purpose. But of course this grant by Ontiveras could not affect any right of the owners of the rancho Santiago de Santa Ana to the use of the water of the river.

It is said, however, that at the time of the execution of the deed from Yorba to Ontiveras of date September 1, 1857, Yorba iras the owner of an undivided interest in the rancho Santiago de Santa Ana, and that by 1ns deed to Ontiveras he conveyed to him the right (subsequently vested in the predecessors of the plaintiffs) to divert sufficient of the water of the river for the irrigation of 1,200 acres of land upon the rancho San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana. It is not necessary to decide whether the deed of September 1, 1857, from Yorba to Ontiveras conveyed to the latter the right to divert any of the water of the river that pertained to the rancho Canon de Santa Ana; for while those who have succeeded to the rights of Yorba in that rancho were originally made defendants to this suit, the action was subsequently dismissed as to them, and the contest continued only as to those holding under the Santiago grant.

Whatever else might be held with respect to the deed from Yorba to Ontiveras, we think it perfectly clear that no right to divert any of the water of the river that appertained to the rancho Santiago was conveyed by it. The deed starts with the recital that “ whereas the parties of the first part (Yorba and wife) are seized in fee of a certain rancho or tract of land called Canon de Santa Ana, .... lying on and near to the river, said river being one of its boundaries, and the said party of the second part (Ontiveras) being seized in fee of a certain tract of land called San Juan y Cajon de Santa Ana, . . . .

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Bluebook (online)
30 P. 623, 64 Cal. 185, 4 Colo. L. Rep. 129, 1883 Cal. LEXIS 598, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anaheim-water-co-v-semi-tropic-water-co-cal-1883.