Bank of Visalia v. Smith

81 P. 542, 146 Cal. 398, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 536
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1905
DocketSac. No. 1110.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 81 P. 542 (Bank of Visalia v. Smith) 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
Bank of Visalia v. Smith, 81 P. 542, 146 Cal. 398, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 536 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

HARRISON, C.

July 13, 1894, S. Z. Curtis (since deceased) executed to the plaintiff a mortgage upon certain land in Tulare County, as security for the payment of a promissory note then executed by him to the plaintiff. The property covered by the mortgage is described therein as follows:—

'“The south half of the southwest quarter of section 24; also all of section 23 and the west half of section 24; all in township 17 south, of range 25 east, M. D. M.
“Also that certain water-ditch which conveys water to said lands for farming purposes, known as the Curtis Ditch; with all the water-rights and privileges appurtenant to said ditch, or by means of which said ditch is supplied with water.
“Together with all and singular the tenements, hereditaments and appurtenances thereunto belonging, and the rents, issues and profits thereof.”

*400 Curtis died intestate April 4, 1896, without having paid the note, and the defendant W. M. Curtis was appointed the administrator of his estate. Thereafter, the plaintiff herein, in an action therefor, obtained judgment for the foreclosure of the mortgage, under which the mortgaged property was sold to B. E. Hyde, who subsequently conveyed it to the plaintiff. Curtis was at the time of executing the mortgage the owner of five shares of the capital stock of the defendant corporation, Wutchumna Water Company, which is still standing in his name on the books of the corporation, and the plaintiff seeks by this action a judgment declaring it to be the owner of these shares of stock, and directing the defendant W. M. Curtis to surrender the certificate therefor, and the defendant Smith, as the secretary of the corporation, to issue to it the certificate for the same, claiming that it acquired title thereto by virtue of the aforesaid mortgage and conveyance to it. The court found that the shares of stock were not included in the property mortgaged by Curtis to the plaintiff, and are not appurtenant to the land or other property mortgaged by him, and rendered judgment in favor of the defendants. Prom this judgment the plaintiff has appealed.

The shares of stock are not mentioned in the description of the property mortgaged, or in any of the proceedings for the foreclosure of that mortgage, or in the conveyance made upon the sale thereof, or in the conveyance to the plaintiff, but the plaintiff contends that they are appurtenant to the property mortgaged, and included in that portion thereof which specifies the Curtis ditch, under the clause “with all the water-rights and privileges appurtenant to said ditch, or by means of which said ditch is supplied with water.” This description does not, however, mention the shares of stock, nor do its terms give rise to any presumption that they are appurtenant to the Curtis ditch, or that they represent any water-right or-privilege, “by means of which said ditch is supplied with water.” “A thing is deemed to be appurtenant to land when it is by right used with the land for its benefit.’’ (Civ. Code, sec. 662.) Whether such appurtenance exists is a question of fact, to be determined upon extrinsic evidence, and the burden of establishing such fact is upon him who claims a right to the appurtenance. Shares of stock, as such, are not presumptively appurtenant to land, and if the plain *401 tiff would claim that the shares of stock in question represent water-rights or privileges which are appurtenant to the Curtis ditch, or by means of which the ditch is supplied with water, it was incumbent upon it to introduce evidence of such fact. There is no presumption that the Curtis ditch is owned by the Wutehumna Water Company, or that the capital stock of that corporation, or any of its shares, bears any relation to that ditch, or to the means by which it is supplied with water. On the contrary, the fact that Curtis mortgaged the ditch to the plaintiff justifies an inference that it was his own property, under a title distinct from any claimed by the Wutehumna Water Company. The capital stock of this corporation represents the property owned by it, and, in the absence of any evidence that it was the owner of the Curtis ditch, or of the water flowing therein, it must be held that the shares of its capital stock, owned by Curtis, was property distinct from that mortgaged by him to the plaintiff.

The superintendent testified before the superior court that prior to the construction of the Wutehumna water-ditch, Curtis and two others had constructed a ditch (of which he owned a one-half interest), sometimes called the Curtis, Lindsay, and Moffett ditch, and sometimes the Curtis ditch, extending from the St. John’s River as far as to the Curtis ranch, and that the ranch was irrigated from the water flowing through this ditch; that the Wutehumna water-ditch was taken out of the Kaweah River, several miles above the head of this Curtis ditch, and that in constructing the Wutehumna ditch, when this ditch was reached, its channel was utilized for the Wutehumna ditch, so that for the distance of abount two and three-quarter miles from this point of intersection the water from the two ditches was intermingled, and carried along the same channel until the Curtis ranch was reached, and that the ranch was irrigated from the waters so carried along this ditch. There was no evidence, however, tending to show that any water-right or privilege was appurtenant to the Curtis ditch, or to the Wutehumna ditch, or was the means by which either of said ditches is supplied with water.

The plaintiff offered in evidence the mortgage from Curtis to it, and the judgment-roll in the action for its foreclosure, together with the conveyance made to it by virtue of the sale under that judgment, but as neither of these documents con *402 tain any mention of the shares of stock, the evidence was properly excluded.

In the finding of fact contained in the judgment-roll of the foreclosure suit the court found the foregoing matters testified to by the superintendent,, and also found that from 1892 to the time of his death in 1896 Curtis was owner of the five shares of stock and of the land described in the mortgage, and was entitled to such proportion of the water flowing in said ditch as that number of shares bore to the whole number of shares issued by the corporation, and* that, with a slight exception, the water represented by and belonging to him by virtue of his ownership of said shares was used entirely upon the said land, and was conducted thereto from the ditch of the Wutchumna company through a ditch known as the Curtis ditch, and that during a portion of each year the water used upon said land had been supplied exclusively through these ditches by virtue of the! ownership of said shares of stock; and the appellant urges' that it thus appears that the water was appurtenant to the land, and that its right to the shares of stock is thereby shown. There was, however, no issue before the court in the foreclosure suit upon which it was authorized to find these facts, and in its conclusions of law it held that the said shares of stock were not included in the mortgage from Curtis to the plaintiff, and were not appurtenant to the mortgaged land. In the judgment which was rendered upon these findings no direction is given respecting these shares of stock, nor is any reference made to them therein.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 P. 542, 146 Cal. 398, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 536, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bank-of-visalia-v-smith-cal-1905.