Bashore v. Mooney

87 P. 553, 4 Cal. App. 276, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 37
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedAugust 30, 1906
DocketCiv. No. 217.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 87 P. 553 (Bashore v. Mooney) 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
Bashore v. Mooney, 87 P. 553, 4 Cal. App. 276, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 37 (Cal. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, P. J.

Action to quiet title to a certain water ditch known as the Zumwalt Extension of the Tulare Irrigation Company’s Ditch, and the right of way therefor. Two of the three original plaintiffs conveyed to the third, after the complaint was filed, and the latter filed a supplemental and amended complaint as sole plaintiff in the case. There were numerous defendants, as to some of whom the court found that they had no interest in the ditch; as to others the court found that they had a certain interest therein; as to • the defendant Tulare Irrigation Company it was found that it was the owner of said ditch to a certain point, connecting with the portion of said ditch found to belong to plaintiff, with “the right at all times to turn into said portion of said ditch owned by plaintiff as aforesaid all the surplus water of said defendant which it shall desire to turn therein.” None of these defendants appeal. As to defendants, appellants, the court found that they are the owners of the right to maintain certain drops and headgates in the ditch and certain side ditches leading therefrom on certain land by them owned, situated in section 7, township 19 south, range 25 east, through which plaintiff’s ditch runs, in part, and to take therefrom water sufficient to irrigate one hundred acres of land on said section, but that they have no other right to or interest in plaintiff’s said ditch. Plaintiff was found to be the owner of the ditch and right of way in question, except as above indicated and judgment passed for plaintiff accordingly. The defendants last above referred to appeal from that part of *279 the judgment which adjudges plaintiff to he the owner of so much of said ditch and right of way as passes over said last-named defendants’ lands in said section 7 with the right to enter thereon at proper times to repair and operate the same; also from that part of the judgment which limits said defendants’ rights as above stated. After judgment was entered and notice of appeal served, defendant and appellant J. J. Mooney died, and defendant H. M. Mooney was substituted as administrator. In their brief appellants do not question that part of the decree or the findings which relate to the Tulare Irrigation Company and that interest will not be noticed further; indeed by their answer they seem to concede the rights of the irrigation company. The appealing defendants in their answer denied plaintiff’s ownership of the portion of said ditch which passes over defendants’ said land and alleged that the Tulare Irrigation Company is the Owner of the portion of said ditch from the east line of said section seven for a distance of one-quarter of a mile, and that the remaining portion of said ditch situated on said section 7 is owned by defendants. In the answer of some of the many remaining defendants it is alleged that the entire ditch from its point of commencement to its end was constructed for the use and benefit of the owners of the land lying along the same, “and as a neighborhood ditch to supply water for irrigation to and upon said lands from the system of the Tulare Irrigation Company and from other irrigation systems . . . and has been since its construction appurtenant to the said lands of defendants.” Other defendants claimed part ownership in the ditch. The Tulare Irrigation Company was made a defendant upon a demand of several of the defendants.

Appellants challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the findings upon which the interests decreed to plaintiff and appellants are based. It is also urged that the findings do not nor does the complaint support the judgment.

The judgment and its support: The contention is—

1. That the complaint is insufficient to support the judgment, because based upon the allegation that the plaintiff is the owner in fee of the ditch in question, while the findings .show simply a tenancy in common with appellants; 2. That the findings show that the ditch is constructed upon land owned by appellants and plaintiff never acquired any title to *280 the ditch from the owner by conveyance or agreement; 3. That the findings fail to show that plaintiff acquired title by prescription as required by the statute of limitations; 4. That the findings are so uncertain that it cannot be ascertained therefrom to what extent plaintiff is the owner of a right of way for the ditch referred to in the findings and judgment.

1. The point that the findings are insufficient as to the extent of plaintiff’s title because of the allegation in the complaint of ownership in fee. is not well taken. That plaintiff claimed title in fee did not preclude the court from finding a right or ownership in the nature of an easement; the greater title alleged included the lesser. The judgment may not exceed the demand of the complaint, but there is no rule that would prevent the court from granting less relief than that demanded.' Plaintiff’s right had its inception in the act of constructing the ditch, and if it ripened into title by adverse use for the statutory period this was sufficient.

2. - It was not necessary that the prescriptive right should have its origin in a grant from the owners of the land or by agreement with them. (Code Civ. Proc., secs. 324, 325.) The rule requiring entire possession by one claiming land under a prescriptive right is inapplicable to rights of way for roads and ditches. Otherwise it would be practically impossible to acquire similar easements by prescription. It was said in Humphreys v. Blasingame, 104 Cal. 40, 44, [37 Pac. 804, 805], “Plaintiff’s use of the way under claim of right was necessarily hostile, but it need not amount to an ouster or exclusion of the defendant from a right to use the way. The use of the way, if without right, is a trespass, which would have given the defendant a right of action; and that is all that is necessary to set the statute running, so far as a right of action is concerned. ’ ’ Of course there must be occupancy of so much of the land as is sought to be taken for the right of way.

3. The prescriptive right which the court found to have ripened in plaintiff and his predecessors in interest was initiated as early as 1879 and is the right referred to in the findings, and, as presently shown, continued until the filing of the complaint, except as to defendants’ interest. Defendants’, prescriptive right was found by the court to have been initiated about the year 1890, long after the five years’ *281 adverse use by plaintiff’s predecessors had elapsed. That defendants could acquire a prescriptive right to use the ditch to convey a limited quantity of water to their lands while plaintiff or his predecessors retained the right also to use the ditch for his own purposes to the extent of its remaining capacity, we have no doubt. We so held substantially in the recent case of Smith v. Hampshire, No. 181, decided June 23, 1906, ante, p. 8, [87 Pac. 224]. (See, also, Abbott v. Pond, 142 Cal. 393, 396, [76 Pac. 60].) “Every interest created in favor of several persons in their own right is an interest in common,” unless acquired in a way not involved here. (Civ. Code, sec. 686.)

4. It is also contended that the findings are insufficient to show a prescriptive right. The.

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Bluebook (online)
87 P. 553, 4 Cal. App. 276, 1906 Cal. App. LEXIS 37, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bashore-v-mooney-calctapp-1906.