City of Gilroy v. Kell

228 P. 400, 67 Cal. App. 734, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 398
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 20, 1924
DocketCiv. No. 4780.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 228 P. 400 (City of Gilroy v. Kell) 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
City of Gilroy v. Kell, 228 P. 400, 67 Cal. App. 734, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 398 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

LANGDON, P. J.

This is an appeal by the defendants from a decree adjudging that the City of Gilroy is the owner of the right to take water from Uvas Creek in the county of Santa Clara, state of California, at a point where it has erected a dam across the same upon certain real property described in the complaint and owned by the defendants. The further provisions of the decree will be discussed hereinafter.

*736 Plaintiff alleged that it was the owner of said right to take water from Uvas Creek and also of certain dams and pipe-line beginning at the upper end of said dams and running down and along the westerly bank of said stream until it reaches the southerly line of said property belonging to said defendants, and thence to the City of Gilroy, together with the right to enter upon and pass over the lands of defendants for the purpose of maintaining and repairing said pipe-line and dams in a clean condition and free from driftwood and obstruction to the flow of the water; that for more than thirty years the plaintiff has maintained said pipe-line over the lands of defendants and has taken water from said creek at said point of diversion and has caused the same to run through said pipe-line, and has traveled over and across the lands now claimed by said defendant for the purpose of maintaining and repairing said pipe-line and dams; and has, during all of said time, entered thereon with teams whenever necessary for the purpose of hauling material thereon to repair said pipe-line and dams and during said time has used the gravel from the bed of said creek for the purpose of making said repair; that said use and occupancy has been continuous, uninterrupted, peaceful, open, and notorious with the knowledge of the owner of said land under claim of right and adversely to the whole world; that the uses to which said water has been and now are being put is for irrigation, household, and domestic uses by the inhabitants of the City of Gilroy and that said plaintiff and said" inhabitants thereof have no other adequate supply of water or means of obtaining the same; that at the time of the filing of the complaint the pipe-line referred to therein was broken and required immediate repair; that defendants have driven and continue to drive the employees of plaintiff from said property and refuse to allow them to enter upon said property for the purpose of repairing said pipeline. It was also alleged that the defendants maintained corrals for hogs upon the borders of said stream, thereby polluting the waters thereof. An injunction was asked, restraining the defendants from interfering with said alleged rights of plaintiff.

Defendants filed an answer and cross-complaint, denying plaintiff’s right to take the water of the creek, admitting its ownership of the dams and pipe-line, but alleging that *737 these were constructed upon the property by permission of the predecessors in interest of defendants; and denying that plaintiff had any right to enter upon said land for the purpose of maintaining or repairing said dams or pipe-line, or for the purpose of keeping the stream in and about said dams and pipe-line free from driftwood or any obstruction to the flow of the water, save and except by permission of defendants. It is alleged that the use and occupancy of the said land by the plaintiff has always been by permission of defendants and their predecessors and not adversely to said owners, and with the understanding that any water taken from said creek over and across said real property should be taken subject to the riparian rights of the owners of the land. The cross-complaint denies interference with the employees of plaintiff while engaged in the necessary repairing of the pipe-line. It is also alleged that the plaintiff has never paid any taxes levied or assessed against said real property or any portion thereof, but that the defendants and their predecessors in interest have always paid the same; that plaintiff has never inclosed any portion of said real property with any substantial inclosure or any inclosure, and that plaintiff’s entry upon said property was not under color or claim of title or founded upon a written instrument, but was with the permission of the owners of the land; that plaintiff is not the owner of any lands riparian to said Uvas Creek and its use of the water of said Uvas Creek is subject to the riparian rights of the defendants. It is also set forth that defendants are riparian owners along said Uvas Creek and entitled to a reasonable use of the waters of said creek for household and irrigation purposes; that the state water commission of the state of California had issued to defendants its permit granting to defendants, subject to vested rights, “that the amount of water diverted by her should be on the basis of one cubic foot per second, continuous flow, to eighty acres of irrigated land, and that water may be diverted to the full capacity of the ditches to be constructed for such time during any thirty days period as to result in an amount equivalent to said continuous flow allowance”; that any and all rights of plaintiff are subject and subordinate to the rights granted to defendants under said permit of the said state water commission of the defendants under said permit of the said state water commission of the state *738 of California; that plaintiff threatens to change and alter the construction, course, level, grade, and location of its pipeline and dams now upon said property and thereby will take all the waters of Uvas Creek, or far in excess of the amount of waters of said creek to which they may be entitled and will thereby deprive defendants of the waters of said creek. Defendants then set out various reasons why any change in the construction of the pipe-line would irreparably injure them and prayed that the court determine the rights of the respective parties to the action, declare that the rights of plaintiff are subject to the rights of defendants as set forth and alleged in the cross-complaint and that the plaintiff be enjoined from committing the acts complained of by defendants.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P. 400, 67 Cal. App. 734, 1924 Cal. App. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-gilroy-v-kell-calctapp-1924.