Charnock v. Higuerra

44 P. 171, 111 Cal. 473, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 1044
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 10, 1896
DocketL. A. No. 76
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 44 P. 171 (Charnock v. Higuerra) 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
Charnock v. Higuerra, 44 P. 171, 111 Cal. 473, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 1044 (Cal. 1896).

Opinion

Van Fleet, J.

This is an action brought by several riparian proprietors against certain persons above them on the stream, to restrain them from diverting any of the waters of the stream.

[475]*475The complaint alleges that the plaintiffs are riparian proprietors, and as such entitled to all the waters of the stream; that the defendants are not entitled to use any of the water for any purpose; and that they, by means of certain machinery, artificially and wrongfully raise and divert from the stream a large amount of the waters thereof, for the purpose of irrigating certain lands not of right irrigable from the stream, and which do not so lie as to be irrigated by the waters of said stream “diverted therefrom by any natural means” on said lands.-

The facts found by the court are in substance: That both plaintiffs and defendants are riparian proprietors on the stream, the lands of defendants being above those of plaintiffs; and that neither plaintiffs nor defendants have any right to the waters of the stream, except as such riparian owners. That all of the lands of the plaintiffs, and thirty acres of the lands of the defendants, are so situated that the water of the stream can be diverted and conducted thereon solely by natural gravity from dams in the stream, situated within the limits of said lands, respectively, without backing the water upon the lands of the owners next above them; and that no other part of the lands of the defendants can be irrigated in that manner. That the defendants have erected pumping machinery and pumps on their land, and by means thereof pump water from the stream on to land belonging to them, bordering on the stream and within its watershed, but which lie too high to be irrigated solely by natural gravity from dams situated within the limits of their lands without backing the water upon the lands of others above them. That all of the lands of both parties are dry and of little value without irrigation, hut are of great value and very productive when irrigated. That defendants have not used, and do not threaten or propose to use, more than their just proportion of the water of the stream.

On these findings judgment was entered in favor of [476]*476defendants, with leave to any of the parties at any time to maintain another action to determine the exact proportion of tire water of said creek which the respective owners may use.”

A portion of these findings is attacked as unsupported by the evidence; but we think that the evidence fully justifies them in the particular in which they are so attacked. The only question, then, is whether the findings support the judgment.

1. It is contended by appellants that a riparian proprietor has not, for the purpose of irrigation, the right to raise water by means of pumps. No authorities are cited in support of this contention, and counsel states his inability to find any. So far as we can understand this argument is based on the meaning of the word “ irrigate,” which counsel contends is to convey water by ditches,” and on the alleged universal custom in the past to employ only such means in irrigation.

As to the meaning of the word “ irrigation,” counsel cites some doubtful passages from civil law writers; but it is evident that this court, in holding, as it has repeatedly held, that riparian proprietors have the right to use a reasonable proportion of the water of the stream to irrigate their lands, used the term in no such restricted sense. The Latin word from which it is derived means, primarily, to convey water to or upon anything, and, more generally, to wet or moisten anything; and the ordinary definition in our language is to water lands, whether by channels, by flooding, or simply by sprinkling. The mere method of obtaining the water with which to irrigate has nothing to do with the process of irrigation or the meaning of the word.

There was no proof in this case of any such custom as is claimed by appellants; and, if we can take judicial notice of such a matter at all, we are unable to say that pumping has never been used for such purpose. It may be that, owing to the comparatively greater expense of that method, it has been little used in the past; but, if improvements in machinery have made, or shall make, [477]*477that method practicable, we see no reason why riparian proprietors may not like others take advantage of such improvements. In fact it has always been considered that the reasonableness or lawfulness of any-given diversion of water is in nowise affected by the mere mode of diversion. Thus in Elliot v. Fitchburg Ry. Co., 10 Cush. 191; 57 Am. Dec. 85 (cited with approval in Lux v. Haggin, 69 Cal. 402, 404), Chief Justice Shaw said: One man may take water from a perennial stream of moderate size, by means of buckets or a pump—for the mode is not material—to water his garden.” And in such a case he says, “the water would be for irrigation,’' and such “ might be regarded as a reasonable use.”

So this court has repeatedly held that a prior appropriator of water may change, at pleasure, the place or mode of his diversion, so long as others are not injured by such change.

And in Earl of Norbury v. Kitchin, 7 L. T., N. S., 685, it was held that a riparian proprietor, so long as he took no more than his reasonable share of the water, might take water from the stream by pumping machinery, elevate it into a reservoir, and thence convey it by pipes to other land, not riparian, and there use it; the court holding that neither the mode of diversion nor the use to which the water was actually applied ivas material— the only question being whether or not the defendant had taken more than his reasonable share.

2. But appellants claim, as we understand them, that whether the particular mode is material or not, the mode by which the land of a riparian proprietor can possibly be irrigated is a material factor in ascertaining what portion of the water he may divert for irrigation. They contend that a riparian proprietor cannot be allowed to use any portion of the water of the stream to irrigate land which, though bordering on the streamy lies so far above it that water cannot be conducted thereon solely by natural gravitation from the stream, without the "use of any appliances other than ditches originally on such land and dams situated thereon, and [478]*478which will not back the water on the lands of other persons. In other words, the reasonable proportion of water which any riparian proprietor may withdraw for irrigation is made to depend, primarily, upon the area of his land which can be irrigated in that particular manner.

In the first place, that question does not properly arise in this case. The complaint was framed on the theory that the defendants were not riparian proprietors at all and had no right to divert any water. No issue was tendered as to what amount or proportion of the water of the stream could lawfully be used by the defendants, if they had the right to use any portion. It was denied that they had any rights to the stream; and the .complaint furnished no data from which any rights of the parties, as tenants in common of the water, could be determined. Nevertheless, as the question seems to have been treated as an issue, evidence being introduced on the'subject, apparently without objection, and as the court below did to a certain extent consider it, it calls for consideration at our hands.

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Bluebook (online)
44 P. 171, 111 Cal. 473, 1896 Cal. LEXIS 1044, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charnock-v-higuerra-cal-1896.