Cohen v. La Ca&209ada Land Etc. Co.

91 P. 584, 151 Cal. 680, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 484
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 16, 1907
DocketL.A. No. 1861.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 91 P. 584 (Cohen v. La Ca&209ada Land Etc. Co.) 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
Cohen v. La Ca&209ada Land Etc. Co., 91 P. 584, 151 Cal. 680, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 484 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This action was brought to restrain the-defendants from diverting and carrying away certain waters-of which plaintiff claimed to be the owner and for the recovery of damages for such diversion.

Judgment went for the defendants, and this appeal is taken therefrom, and also from an order denying the motion of plaintiff for a new trial.

The main question on this appeal is addressed to the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain certain findings of- the court.

Referring first to the general features of the case as disclosed by the evidence before referring particularly to the findings: It appears that about 1891 one Mrs. Gould became the owner of a tract of land containing one hundred and sixty acres, situated at La Cañada, in Los Angeles County. This tract, sixty acres of which was useful for agricultural purposes, embraced the lower portion of what is known as Snover Canon, and extended some distance up it. At the time of her purchase there was lying contiguous to and northerly of this tract of one hundred and sixty acres a forty-acre tract of unappropriated government land of the United States, extending across the cañón, and on this tract were several small springs. This forty-acre tract was worthless for agricultural purposes. In 1891 and 1892, while said forty-acre tract was still unappropriated public land, Mrs. Gould appropriated the waters of said springs, conducted them by pipes to her house and lands, and used them for irrigation and domestic purposes. Subsequently, and in 1899, the present *682 plaintiff became the owner of said one-hundred-and-sixty-acre tract, together with its appurtenances. In the years 1898 and 1899 the predecessors of defendants went upon said forty-acre tract and with the assent of those who in the meantime had acquired title thereto from the United States government dug several tunnels thereon and conducted the waters obtained thereby to lands belonging to them some two miles distant, for the purpose of irrigating their lands and selling the surplus waters to their neighbors.

The plaintiff thereupon brought this action, the amended complaint having been filed in 1904, claiming that the defendants had, by constructing such tunnels, intercepted and diverted the Waters of the springs, the right to which she and her predecessors had prior thereto acquired and owned by appropriation and use.

Presenting this as the general situation, we now come to a more particular consideration of the findings made by the court bearing on the controversy between the parties relative to the waters of such springs.

The court found that the springs referred to in the complaint were situated, two of them, in or near the thread of the canon and two on the steep mountain-side thereof, which springs, for convenience’ sake, may be designated as springs numbers 1, 2, 3, 4. And it may also here be mentioned that the tunnels involved are designated upon the plat filed in evidence as tunnels 2, 3, 4,-6, 7. The area of the watershed of Snover Canon is about three fourths of a mile square; the area above the tunnels the construction of which are involved here amounting to about two hundred acres. Relative to the springs, it was found that as they existed in 1896, the waters therefrom, if not diverted, would flow in a small stream upon the lands of the plaintiff for a short distance, but that since 1897 there had not been sufficient water issuing from said springs during the irrigating seasons to form a stream, or flow over and upon the lands of plaintiff, and that no stream had flown thereon, and aside from the waters of said springs no stream would flow, or has flowed, down said canon except a temporary flow caused by rainfall; that the predecessor of plaintiff appropriated the waters of said springs in 1891 and 1892, and in the early part of the irrigating season of 1893 conducted said waters to the extent of *683 one and three-quarters inches to a reservoir constructed by her, but from said date, owing to the effects of fire and of drouth and other natural causes, the flow from said springs steadily diminished, so that at the time the defendants and their predecessors began the work of constructing tunnels in said canon in 1898 one of said springs had entirely ceased to flow, others had greatly diminished, and the total amount supplied by said springs had been reduced to less than one-half inch of water, miner's measurement, constant flow; that the tunnels constructed by respondents were constructed by and with the consent of the owner of the said forty-acre tract, upon which said springs were found; that by means of said tunnels certain waters were developed.near and at the end or face of said tunnels; that all of the waters so found and developed were and are percolating waters which issue from the seams and fissures of the granite dyke, or wall, in which the same were found, and none of said tunnels intercepted any known stream of water running in any defined channel; that said tunnels were run in the vicinity of. and at points below the plane of said springs, and one of said tunnels is at one point near its mouth directly under one of said springs, on the side of the canon, but said tunnel is seventy-five feet long, and is in granite strata, and the waters therein are found within eight feet of the face thereof; that neither of the other tunnels is under a spring; that the said tunnels are run nearly at right angles with and away from the thread of the cañón, and the water which issues from said tunnels was found in granite dykes which cross said canon, the strata •and main seams of which stand almost perpendicular; that said springs were not and are not, nor is either pf them, fed by any known stream running in a defined channel; that no part of said waters which were developed or found in said tunnels would, if said tunnels were not there, issue from said springs or either thereof, or feed or support the same in any way, and no part of said waters found or developed in said tunnels would, if said tunnels were not there, find its way into the Snover Cañón so as to feed or support in any way any stream, either surface or subflow, in said cañón, but said waters of said tunnels would, except for said tunnels, disappear into the crevices of the mountains and be lost; that said springs have not, nor has either of them, been destroyed *684 by the defendants or any of them; that the amount of water found or developed in said tunnels upon said forty-acre tract was about 1.50 of an inch of water measured under a four-inch pressure, and the said flow of said tunnels has not increased during the irrigating seasons since the construction thereof; that the lands upon which the defendants have used the water of said tunnels are not riparian, and do not abut or adjoin the lands upon which said springs and tunnels are situated, or the lands of plaintiff, or the lands upon which the waters from said springs would naturally' flow.

We have set forth these findings of the court as applicable to all the springs referred to in the complaint and the various tunnels run by defendant which are claimed to have diverted the water therefrom. - This appeal, however, involves only springs numbers 3 and' 4 and tunnels 2, 6, and 7.

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Bluebook (online)
91 P. 584, 151 Cal. 680, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cohen-v-la-ca209ada-land-etc-co-cal-1907.