Bean v. Stoneman

37 P. 777, 104 Cal. 49, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 854
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1894
DocketNo. 19296
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 37 P. 777 (Bean v. Stoneman) 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
Bean v. Stoneman, 37 P. 777, 104 Cal. 49, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 854 (Cal. 1894).

Opinions

Haynes, C.

This is an action to recover damages for a failure to furnish water for irrigation, whereby it is alleged the orange and other trees, corn, and vegetables of the plaintiff were injured or destroyed. A jury trial was had, and resulted in a verdict for plaintiff for the sum of four thousand five hundred and eighty dollars. Defendants moved for a new trial, which was denied, and this appeal is from the judgment and the order denying a new trial.

[51]*51In 1873 the defendant, George Stoneman, was the owner of a ranch then and now known as the “Stone-man ranch,” upon a portion of which were springs and water sources, the waters from which were collected in a reservoir constructed upon the ranch, and from which the water or a portion of it was conducted through a ditch for the purposes of irrigation. In March of that year he sold and conveyed to Barrows and Furrey eighteen acres of land, part of said Stoneman tract, together with a certain portion of the waters arising upon the unsold part of the ranch. The covenant contained in the deed relating to the water right is as follows:

“And the party of the first part, for the consideration aforesaid, hereby conveys, bargains, and grants, and agrees to deliver and suffer to flow to the parties of the second part, their heirs and assigns of said above-conveyed lands, an amount of water equal to two-fortieths (to) of all the waters rising upon the lands of the party of the first part, so far as such waters can be brought to the northern line of the above-conveyed lands by the present ditch, or by such further ditch or flume as the party of the first part may hereafter construct, said amount of water to be delivered so that the parties of the second part, their heirs and assigns, shall, if by them required, have water for irrigation, as often at least as once in every ten days. Provided, That, in lieu and stead of receiving such amount and proportion of water by the ditch or flume of the party of the first part, the right is hereby granted to the parties of the second part, at their option, to take such quantity and, proportion of water from the reservoir about to be constructed by said Stoneman in front of his house, and to conduct the same thence on to the above-conveyed lands by an underground pipe through the intervening lands of the party of the first part, at the expense of the parties of the second part, and in a careful manner, and without injury to trees, vines, and other improvements on said intervening lands, and for the purpose of the [52]*52laying of said pipe the right of way and entry is hereby granted.”

At the date of this conveyance the parcel sold was not improved, but the ditch above mentioned was constructed to the land sold, and was used for irrigating other lands of the grantor; the length of the ditch or distance from the reservoir to the parcel sold being about one mile and a quarter.

The plaintiff became the owner of the eighteen acres so conveyed to Barrows and Furrey in June, 1887, together with said water right. Prior to 1891 the water was discharged from the reservoir into the ditch through a square wooden box, or flume, which passed through the embankment, or dam, near the bottom of the reservoir, and which was closed by a gate, the dimensions of the box being about fourteen by sixteen inches. In the winter of 1890-91 a portion of the dam was washed out, when the box was found to be decayed, and was replaced with an eight-inch steel pipe. From 1873 to 1891, whenever the lot now owned by plaintiff required irrigation, the water was turned into the ditch in what is termed an “augmented head”' — that is, the two-fortieths to which the lot was entitled did not flow into the ditch continuously, but was permitted to accumulate until needed, when it would be discharged in a volume approximating the capacity of the ditch. The evidence shows quite clearly that if the water to which plaintiff is entitled were permitted to flow continuously into the ditch it would be absorbed by the ditch, and no part of it would reach plaintiff’s land.

•Prior to 1890 Mrs. Stoneman, who succeeded to the unsold portions of the ranch, as well as her husband before the conveyance to her,- irrigated a vineyard upon the ranch, containing from one hundred and twenty to one hundred and forty acres, through the same ditch; but in 1890 the vineyard was destroyed by a disease which attacked the vines, and after that the defendants used no water- through that ditch, their orange orchard [53]*53and ornamental grounds being irrigated through another channel from the same reservoir.

Mr. Graves owns a place in the vicinity of plaintiffs lot, and he also obtained water for irrigation from defendant’s reservoir, but his water was conveyed through an iron pipe. In 1884 Mr. Hall, who then owned the lot now owned by plaintiff, and a Mr. Anderson, who owned land in that vicinity, were permitted to tap Mr. Graves’ pipe, and obtain water for irrigation through it. Mr. Hall used that source entirely until he sold to plaintiff, and the plaintiff thereafter used it almost exclusively until 1890, when the license was revoked.

From these causes, together with the destruction of defendants’ vineyard, the ditch was little used in 1890, and it was not attempted to be used in 1891, until on or about the 4th of June, when the plaintiff undertook to obtain water through it to irrigate his land. Shortly before this attempt he applied to Mrs. Stoneman to clean out and repair the ditch, which she declined to do, and the plaintiff thereupon did that work. Upon turning the water into the ditch the first day, the water flowed down the ditch about half way to plaintiff’s land. At the next effort a little water reached the plaintiff towards night, and another attempt brought the water a little earlier, but not in sufficient quantity to do much good, the greater part of it being taken up by the ditch. The failure to obtain sufficient water is attributed by plaintiff to the insufficient size of the pipe by which the water is discharged from the reservoir into the ditch, and to a perforated hood placed over the upper end of it, and a hydrant through which it is discharged at the lower end. The quantity of water rising upon the ranch and flowing into the reservoir was found by measurement to be thirty-eight miner’s inches.

The principal question in the case involves the construction of the covenant in the deed from Stoneman to Barrows and Furrey, hereinbefore quoted, and is directly presented by the following instruction given to [54]*54the jury: “ By the deed of George Stoneman to Barrows and Furrey, said Stoneman agreed to deliver the water at the northern line of the eighteen-acre tract as far as said water could be brought to that point by means of the ditch then extending to said land. By this agreement it is incumbent on said Stoneman and his successors to keep said ditch in reasonably good repair.”

We think the court erred in this instruction as to the place where the water is to be delivered and as to the obligation to keep the ditch in repair; though it is conceded that the same duty and liability which rested upon George Stoneman now rests upon Mrs. Stoneman, who has succeeded to his estate by a subsequent grant, and that appellants’ contention that the covenant was personal and did not run with the land and become obligatory upon Mrs. Stoneman cannot be sustained.

The quantity of water granted by the deed is two-fortieths of all the water rising upon the ranch and no more.

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Bluebook (online)
37 P. 777, 104 Cal. 49, 1894 Cal. LEXIS 854, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bean-v-stoneman-cal-1894.