Ayer v. Grondoni

187 P. 137, 45 Cal. App. 218, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 296
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 23, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 1937.
StatusPublished

This text of 187 P. 137 (Ayer v. Grondoni) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ayer v. Grondoni, 187 P. 137, 45 Cal. App. 218, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 296 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

ELLISON, P. J., pro tem.

This action was brought to determine the respective rights of the parties to a certain water ditch taking water from Slate Creek, in Nevada County, known as the Texas Ditch, and to determine their respective rights to the waters flowing in said ditch.

The complaint alleges that the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest have been the owners of the ditch for more than forty years, and during all that time have been in open, notorious, continuous, and adverse possession of both ditch and water, and during said forty years have paid all taxes levied and assessed on said ditch and water right, “said ditch having its head in Slate Creek where said creek is crossed by a manzanita flume, and extending thence to the Texas mine, a distance of one mile, more or less, together with the first right to divert 175 inches of water of said Slate Creek at the head of said ditch and carry the same by ditch and flume to the Texas mine and intermediate points.”

The complaint alleges that the defendants have wrongfully and unlawfully conspired to interfere with plaintiff’s ditch and water rights, and have at divers times entered upon said ditch and trespassed upon the same. In specifying the wrongful acts of the defendants, the plaintiff recites several instances, all alike in character. A summary of one instance, as alleged in the complaint, will be sufficient for the purposes of the decision. It is alleged that on February 6th the plaintiff turned the water out of said Texas ditch at its head on Slate Creek, and placed in the head of said ditch a gate, with padlock and chain thereon, to prevent the running of water into said ditch or raising said gate; that thereafter, on February 7th, the defendants wrongfully broke and removed said headgate of said Texas ditch.

The defendants deny the plaintiff’s ownership of either ditch or the right to flow water therein. They deny that the plaintiff, or his predecessors in interest, have bem in possession continuously, or otherwise, for forty years, or for any length of time, of the Texas Ditch, and deny that he, or his *220 predecessors in interest, have been the owners, or in the pos-' session continuously, or otherwise, in the use of 175 inches of the water of said creek, or the first right to divert any of the waters of said creek.

The defendants deny that the plaintiff, or his predecessors in interest, have used the ditch or water right for any period of time, or at all, for irrigation or motive power or steam, “except as in this answer hereinafter alleged.” It is then alleged that at a time about twelve years before the commencement of this action the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest ceased to use, and have not since put to a beneficial use, 175 inches of water taken from Slate Creek, save and except three inches of water used by one Edminster, the agent of plaintiff; that the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest abandoned and lost all water right that they might have had in the waters of said creek except said three inches; that said three inches of water used by plaintiff was only that portion of the water of Slate Creek which the defendants and their predecessors and others permitted to flow past their respective intakes, and that plaintiff did not use continuously, or at all, said three inches of water for a regular period, but through his agent used through said ditch said three inches of water at such times and on such occasions as the defendants and others voluntarily and gratuitously permitted plaintiff to use it, and during the dry season plaintiff did not at any time receive more than three inches of water through said Texas Ditch.

We have thus deemed it necessary to 'state with some fullness some of the issues raised by the pleadings, because the main contention of appellant is that there are not findings of the court upon some of them and that the findings upon others are either contrary to the pleadings or not sustained by the evidence.

I.

[1] The plaintiff .complains that the court failed to find on the issue raised as to the ownership of the Texas Ditch. The finding of the court is, in effect, that neither the plaintiff nor his predecessors in interest have for forty years, or for any time, been the owners of the Texas Ditch, or been in the exclusive open possession of it, or an adverse possession of it, or any possession of it at all, “except as hereinafter in these findings set forth.”

*221 It is stated by counsel for plaintiff that he was entitled to a specific finding as to the ownership of the ditch, and that the exceptions referred to nowhere appear in the findings.

If this were all that appeared in the record, the finding (no exceptions being stated afterward) would be one to the effect that plaintiff was not the owner of any interest in the ditch at all. There is, however, a finding of fact “that plaintiff is the owner of the Texas Ditch, subject to the rights of the defendants Grondoni and Hecker as in this judgment set forth.”

While this finding appears in the conclusions of law, and is, perhaps, misplaced, it is nevertheless a finding of fact, and disposes of the issue as to the ownership of the ditch, because in the findings the interests of both Grondoni and Hecker are found, and the findings altogether are to the effect that the plaintiff is the owner of the ditch, except as limited by the rights declared to exist in the above two defendants.

We think this is sufficient finding upon the ownership' of the ditch.

II.

[2] The complaint alleges that the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest for. forty years have paid all taxes levied and assessed against said ditch and water rights. The answer admits this by a failure to deny.

The finding should have been as broad as the allegation. There is a finding, however, that it is not as broad. It is to the effect that the rights of plaintiff in and to the Texas Ditch and in and to the water rights in said Slate Creek were regularly assessed by the assessor for forty years last past to the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest, and that all taxes so levied and assessed upon the rights of the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest have been paid by the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest.

The court found that plaintiff owns a certain interest in the ditch and waters of Slate Creek, and that the defendants Grondoni and Hecker each owns a certain interest in the ditch and water right, and the finding, in effect, is not, as alleged in the complaint, that the plaintiff has paid all taxes levied and assessed on said ditch and water right, but that plaintiff has only paid taxes on whatever rights he may own in the ditch and water, leaving an inference that a part of *222 the ditch and water and an interest in both were not assessed to plaintiff and that he has not paid taxes on all of the ditch and water. This finding is contrary to the admission of the pleadings. But we are of the opinion that it may be disregarded.

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Bluebook (online)
187 P. 137, 45 Cal. App. 218, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ayer-v-grondoni-calctapp-1919.