Boehmer v. Big Rock Irrigation District

48 P. 908, 117 Cal. 19, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 611
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 14, 1897
DocketL. A. No. 187
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 48 P. 908 (Boehmer v. Big Rock Irrigation District) 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
Boehmer v. Big Rock Irrigation District, 48 P. 908, 117 Cal. 19, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 611 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

Haynes, C.

This action is prosecuted by the plaintiff to quiet title to certain water rights alleged to be appurtenant to certain of his lands as riparian owner. The cause was heard upon an agreed statement of facts and the deposition of one witness. Written findings were filed and judgment entered. The defendants moved for a new trial, and upon the hearing thereof the following minute order was made: “ Defendants move the court for new trial herein on the grounds stated in the notice of motion on file. Motion is argued and thereupon granted on the grounds stated, and also on the court’s own motion for the reason that the findings are contrary to the evidence and were signed and filed inadvertently by the court without observing the error, the same having been prepared by counsel for the plaintiff.”

This appeal is by the plaintiff from said order. Defendants’ motion for a new trial specified three findings as not justified by the evidence.

1. That the second finding, in so far as it finds that the plaintiff and his predecessors in interest have been since the year 1871 the owners and seised in fee of the northeast quarter of section 7 in township 4 north, range 9 west, San Bernardino base and meridian, is not justified by the evidence.

Plaintiff’s ownership of said quarter section was denied by the answer, and therefore the burden was on the plaintiff to prove title. The stipulation shows that said land was within the grant to the Southern Pacific railroad in aid of its branch line, under the act of March 3,1871, and also within the grant to the Atlantic and Pacific railroad under the act of July 27, 1866; that [23]*23said quarter section was patented to the Southern Pacific Company in 1876, and was conveyed by said company in 1882 to one James O’Reilly, under whom the plaintiff claims; that before O’Reilly conveyed, the United States brought suit against the railroad company and O’Reilly to cancel the patents to a large quantity of land, embracing the above quarter section; that a decree was entered adjudging that the United States was the owner thereof, and canceling the patent issued therefor, but saving the rights of pre-emptors and homesteaders holding under patents issued to them, and also saving the rights of the defendants other than the railroad company acquired under the act of Congress entitled “An act to provide for the adjustment of land grants, approved March 3, 1887.”

The patent to the railroad company having been canceled, and the plaintiff not having given any evidence to show that he or his grantor was within any of the exceptions named, he failed to prove his allegation of ownership.

2. It is also clear that the defendants’ exception to the third finding is well taken. The second finding is that plaintiff is seised in fee of a large number of quarter sections therein described by section, township, and range, but not otherwise; and the third finding is that said lands lie along and adjoin natural streams of running water, namely, the Rio Llano, or Big Rock creek, and another stream known as Pallett’s creek.

The individuals named as defendants—as to whom the only allegation is that they constitute the board of directors of said irrigation district—disclaimed all interest in the controversy, and the corporation disclaimed all interest in the waters of Pallett creek. The stipulation shows that three of the quarter sections in township 4, range 9 west, do not touch Big Rock creek, though they adjoin other quarter sections owned by plaintiff through which said stream runs; and the same is true of certain quarter sections in township 4 of range 10 west. The third finding would show, there[24]*24fore, that all the lands of plaintiff described in the complaint are riparian, and would eliminate the question whether the quarter sections which do not touch the stream are riparian because they are contiguous to other quarter sections through which the stream runs, and which are thus brought within the fourth finding, which is that plaintiff’s lands through which the streams run are riparian, and entitles the plaintiff to the reasonable and necessary use of the water therefrom for domestic and irrigation purposes, while said fourth finding clearly limits plaintiff’s riparian rights to those quarter sections through which the streams run.

3. The fifth finding is also excepted to so far as it finds that 'certain springs on plaintiff’s land are fed solely by percolating waters. This exception is unimportant in view of the sixth finding, which is to the effect that the rights of the defendants to the waters of Big Rock creek, or to said springs, are subject to said rights of the plaintiff, and it is therefore not necessary to consider whether the presumption is that said springs are fed by percolating waters in the absence of any evidence as to how they a're fed.

Appellant further contends that the order appealed from must be reversed because the motion for a new trial was made by all the defendants, while the individuals named as defendants, having disclaimed all interest in the controversy, were not affected or injured by the findings or judgment; in other words, that “a motion for a new trial is indivisible, and when made jointly by two or more parties, if it cannot be allowed as to all, it must be overruled as to all.”

Appellant cites six or seven cases from Nebraska, about the same number from Indiana, one from Minnesota, and one from Wyoming, which sustain his said proposition.

The early Indiana cases—which seem to. have been the pioneers of this line of decisions—adopted it in analogy to the ruling that a joint demurrer will be overruled unless it is well taken as to all the demur-[25]*25rants jointly; and Asevado v. Orr, 100 Cal. 293, and Rogers v. Schulenburg, 111 Cal. 281, are cited to the point that a joint demurrer by all the defendants is properly overruled if the complaint is good against either of them.

The question here presented has not before been considered or decided by this court so far as I have been able to find. Whether the cases cited by appellant were rightly decided under the practice prevailing in those states we need not consider. Obviously it is one of those questions which should be determined in harmony with the principles governing our own practice. It is true that the individual defendants, having disclaimed all personal interest in the controversy, were not injured by the findings or judgment, and were not “ aggrieved ” thereby. But the order granting a new trial having been rightly made as to one of the defendants—the irrigation district—the plaintiff was not in. jured by the joinder of the individual defendants in the motion, nor by the granting of the motion as to all, and he should not be permitted to profit by findings which do not accord with the facts which he has stipulated to be true if it can be avoided. Section 475 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “The court must in every stage of an action disregard any error or defect in the proceedings which does not affect the substantial rights of the parties, and no judgment shall be reversed or affected by reason of such error or defect.” In the face of this provision appellant’s contention cannot be sustained.

It is also contended by appellant that the court had no power to order a new trial of its own motion, the cause having been "tried by the court without a jury.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P. 908, 117 Cal. 19, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 611, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/boehmer-v-big-rock-irrigation-district-cal-1897.