Churchill v. Russell

82 P. 440, 148 Cal. 1, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 624
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 26, 1905
DocketSac. No. 1193.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 82 P. 440 (Churchill v. Russell) 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
Churchill v. Russell, 82 P. 440, 148 Cal. 1, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 624 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

*2 LORIGAN, J.

This action is brought to restrain the defendants from diverting the waters of Butte Creek, in Siskiyou County. There is no question in the case but that the predecessor in title of the lands to which said water-right is appurtenant, Charles B. Boyes, as early as 1877 appropriated for purposes of irrigation the waters of said stream to the extent of one thousand inches, measured under a four-inch pressure, which is practically the full flow of said stream in the irrigation season, and that the appellant succeeded to said water-right by purchase from the original proprietor of the Boyes ranch and this water-right appurtenant thereto, unless by reason of the facts alleged in the answer of defendants, and found by the court to be true, the judgment in their favor that they are the owners, by a right prior to the plaintiff, of twenty inches thereof, is warranted. In their answer the defendants, while in effect admitting that as early as 1877 Charles B. Boyes had appropriated the waters of said creek, alleged, as a defense to the claim of plaintiff as his successor in interest to all said waters and as a basis for their asserted claim that they were the owners of twenty inches thereof, facts which the court found supported by the evidence, and upon which it made the following finding: “That since the year 1888, defendant Meta A. Russell has been the owner of and in the possession of the N. E.- % of section 24, township 45 N., of range 2 W., Mt. Diablo meridian. That said land is agricultural land, and needs water to irrigate the same. That in the year 1888 Charles Boyes, the predecessor of plaintiff, as an inducement to said Meta A. Russell to take up said land as a homestead, promised and agreed that, if she would do so, then she should always have and own and use at all times 20 inches, measured under a 4-inch pressure, of the said waters of Butte Creek. That, relying upon such promise, said defendant took up said land as a homestead and purchased the improvements thereon, belonging to one Snell, and thereafter took and used said 20 inches of water each and every year for the period of 14 years, and made valuable improvements upon said land.” Upon this finding a judgment declaring the defendants to be the owners of said water to the extent of their claim to twenty inches was entered, and plaintiff appeals from said judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

*3 The principal, though not the only, attack in the case is made upon this finding. It is insisted not only that it is not supported by the evidence, but that, even if so supported, it furnishes no warrant in law for the judgment based upon it. As far as the first point is concerned, it is .enough to say that the finding is supported by the direct evidence of the defendant J. F. Russell, which was substantially sufficient to warrant the court in making it. This would make any further reference to the evidence on this subject unnecessary, if it were not for the other point made by appellant as to the legal sufficiency of the finding to support the judgment.

The evidence, briefly stated, shows that after Boyes had appropriated the waters of Butte Creek, including the twenty inches in controversy, and prior to August, 1888, one Snell was in the occupancy of the quarter-section mentioned in the quoted finding as a squatter. The defendant J. F. Russell had in contemplation the purchasing of Snell’s right and interest in the land—possession and improvements—for the benefit of his co-defendant, and went to see Boyes in relation to it. Upon this subject he testifies: “Before we bought the Snell place, I went to see Charlie Boyes; and I told him I was thinking of purchasing the Snell place, and that my wife could take it up—she and I was not married then—and I told him I didn’t want it unless I had some water to go with it, and he said he didn’t want Snell there, and, if I would get him off, he said, ‘I will give you 20 inches of water.’ And I says: ‘Will you give it to us for all time?’ And he said, ‘Yes, the title to it.’ And that is the title I have of it.” Immediately after this interview, and as a result of their agreement, the defendants in August, 1888, purchased Snell’s possessory right to the land, went into possession, and the defendant Meta Russell made a homestead entry upon it as public land of the United States. They forthwith constructed a ditch and conducted therein from Butte Creek to and upon their premises the twenty inches of water which Boyes had agreed to convey to them. This land upon which they had settled, though agricultural land, required water for irrigation, and without it profitable crops could not be raised thereon. The defendants immediately commenced improving their property, utilizing this water for that purpose. There was but comparatively little land cleared off when they took possession—some eleven *4 acres. In 1889 they cleared off and broke up some thirty acres additional and planted it to hay and grain. In 1891 they set out a small orchard. The following year more land was cleared, bringing the cultivable land up to near fifty acres. All this land, aside from the orchard, was planted in part to grain and hay, and part to timothy and clover, and produced profitable crops through the use of this water. Subsequent to 1892 additional land was cleared off and brought under cultivation, said water also being used in irrigating the same up to the commencement of this action—some fourteen years—and improvements of a permanent character were placed upon the premises by the defendants. It is unnecessary to particularize further as to these matters, because what we have especially referred to is sufficient for the consideration of the point made by appellant relative to the agreement between Boyes and defendants and the right of the defendants to the twenty inches of water in question which they claim under it. Boyes died in 1890. Plaintiff purchased the Boyes ranch, to which the appropriated waters of Butte Creek were appurtenant, probably about 1895. The date is uncertain from the testimony. This action was commenced in 1901. There was no conveyance in writing of the twenty inches of water in question made by the original appropriator, Boyes, or any one else, to defendants. Whatever interest the defendants acquired to it rested in parol, and the point made by appellant is that the interest which the defendants asserted in the water-right so appropriated by Boyes is an estate in real property, and that the agreement for the conveyance thereof, not being in writing, is within the statute of frauds, and void.

That the interest asserted by defendants to have been acquired under the agreement with Boyes is an estate in real property, and that an agreement for the conveyance of such an interest is within the statute of frauds, is the settled law of this state. (Hayes v. Fine, 91 Cal. 398 [27 Pac. 772].) And were this the only matter for consideration relative to the finding, it is obvious that the appellant’s contention would be unanswerable. But although the court finds that the agreement is in parol, still the other facts found by it show such an execution of a parol agreement as, under the authorities, takes it out of the statute. It is found by the court that *5

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
82 P. 440, 148 Cal. 1, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 624, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/churchill-v-russell-cal-1905.