Armstrong v. Payne

206 P. 638, 188 Cal. 585, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 460
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1922
DocketSac. No. 3005.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 206 P. 638 (Armstrong v. Payne) 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
Armstrong v. Payne, 206 P. 638, 188 Cal. 585, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 460 (Cal. 1922).

Opinion

WILBUR, J.

This is an action by riparian owners along Fitzhugh Creek, in Modoc County, to quiet their title to all the waters of Fitzhugh Creek and enjoin the defendants from interference therewith. The defendants rely upon an appropriation of 200 inches made in 1886 and one of 50 inches made by defendant Gertrude French in September 1912, and upon adverse use of the waters of said stream from 1886 and 1912, respectively. The trial court found that there was no prescriptive right in the defendants in and to any portion of the waters of Fitzhugh Creek and adjudged that all the waters of said creek belonged to the plaintiffs as riparian owners. Defendants appeal from the judgment and attack the findings with relation to adverse use. It appears from the evidence without contradiction that in 1886 II. G. Payne posted a notice of appropriation of 200 inches of water at the point of diversion on Fitzhugh Creek above the land of the plaintiffs; that at the same time he also posted a notice of appropriation of 200 inches of water on a stream known. as Mill Creek and recorded copies of such notices. The watersheds of Mill Creek and of Fitzhugh Creek are entirely separate and the land upon which the defendants diverted the water from said streams is outside the watershed of both streams. In pursuance of the notice of appropria *587 tion the defendant H. G. Payne built a ditch and flume about two miles long to carry the waters of Mill Creek to a point in Fitzhugh Creek about seven miles above their point of diversion, at which defendants also constructed a diverting dam, ditches, and flume leading from Fitzhugh Creek to their land and constructed upon their land certain reservoirs in which the waters diverted from Fitzhugh Creek could be stored when not otherwise used. It was conceded in the trial court that the defendants were entitled to take from Fitzhugh Creek all the waters they deposited in said creek from Mill Creek, less an estimated evaporation of 15 per cent, and the decree established that right by providing that measuring-boxes should be placed at the point of diversion from Fitzhugh Creek and at the point where the waters from Mill Creek were emptied into Fitzhugh Creek and fixed the right of the defendants at the point of diversion as 85 per cent of the amount actually emptied into Fitzhugh Creek from Mill Creek, and no more. Both Fitzhugh and Mill Creeks are fed by melting snows. The watershed of Mill Creek is at a much higher elevation than the watershed of Fitzhugh creek, consequently the snow melts later in the spring in Mill Creek watershed than in Fitzhugh Creek watershed. During the early part of the spring the snows melt with such rapidity in the watershed of Fitzhugh Creek that the stream overflows its banks. The defendants claim that from and after 1886 they continuously diverted 200 inches of water from Fitzhugh Creek at the point of diversion; that this use was continuous during the entire period that such an amount of water was flowing in the stream. They and their successors, some of whom are.not parties, consequently claim that the right to take the full 200 inches of water at the point of diversion on Fitzhugh Creek has been established by reason of such adverse use. Of the 200 inches so diverted one-fourth belongs to Carlos Payne and 33 inches has been conveyed to others not parties, and the total amount claimed by H. G. Payne is 117 inches continuous flow and by Gertrude French, 50 inches. The latter right is claimed, under her appropriation made in the year 1912, “during the period of melting snows.”

In ordinary seasons the Mill Creek water was turned into Fitzhugh Creek about June 10th, but sometimes the water was turned in as early as May 15th, and it had been turned *588 in as late as July 15th. H. G. Payne testified that his diversion ditch ran full at all times when water was running in Fitzhugh Creek, regardless of whether Mill Creek was diverted thereto. The defendants claim that their title to the waters of Fitzhugh Creek, during the early spring, before the Mill Creek waters were deposited therein, is thus established by adverse use. The only conflict in the evidence is as to the quantity of water actually diverted by the defendants from Fitzhugh Creek and from Mill Creek and as to alleged interruptions of the adverse use of the waters of Fitzhugh Creek by the defendants.

The plaintiffs rely upon the proposition that the use of the defendants was interrupted from time to time and that because of such interruptions there was no period of five years during which the defendants continuously diverted the water claimed by them. The defendants, on the other hand, claim that the interruption of their use was surreptitious and covert; that such breaches as were made in their diverting dam were at once repaired by defendants and the water was again diverted into the defendants’ ditch, and that by reason of the surreptitious character of the acts alleged to constitute the interruption, if they occurred as claimed by plaintiffs, such acts were insufficient in law to break the continuity of use necessary to establish defendants’ rights by prescription.

The defendants thus claim the right to 117 inches of the waters of Fitzhugh Creek up to the time Mill Creek waters are deposited therein, and particularly during the usual flood period claim such right, plus the 50 inches appropriated by Gertrude French.

We will first consider an erroneous ruling as to the admissibility of certain evidence which will require a reversal. The defendants offered to prove a verbal agreement between John Doten made in 1887, when he owned the property now owned by the plaintiffs, Clark brothers, whereby some arrangement was made as to the use of the waters of Fitzhugh Creek, defendants claiming that the use was continued under said agreement until 1897, when John Doten died, and thereafter until the Clark brothers bought the place in 1914. The offer was objected to by the plaintiffs, the objection was sustained, but subsequently the evidence was *589 admitted and then stricken out. Its general character can be seen from the following excerpt therefrom:

“Q. What was this arrangement, Mr. Payne? A. The arrangement was that I was to run all Fitzhugh Creek water and to take all of the water in the fall of the year except sufficient water to water his stock, and that I was to have my appropriation, excepting in the fall of the year I was to let enough water go down the creek for his stock water.
“Q. You were always to permit sufficient water to run down to his place on Fitzhugh Creek for stock purposes, is that it? A. That was it exactly.
“Q. Was there any arrangement 'between you and Mr. Doten in regard to the Mill Creek water? A. No, sir; only he told me at that time that he had been to Mill Creek and he was satisfied that we were running the full amount of water, and that he had been up to Mill Creek and had seen the water running. . . .
“Q. Was there any arrangement with you as to not turning the water from Mill Creek until a certain season of the year? A. Yes, sir; part of the agreement was that I was not to turn the Mill Creek water in until the first part, or about the 10th of June, and the reason he stated was because it damaged him by making the water too high, and that it cut out the dam at the house, and that if I put the Mill Creek water in too early it was dangerous to his ranch.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
206 P. 638, 188 Cal. 585, 1922 Cal. LEXIS 460, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/armstrong-v-payne-cal-1922.