Dannenbrink v. Burger

138 P. 751, 23 Cal. App. 587, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 386
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1913
DocketCiv. No. 1121.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 138 P. 751 (Dannenbrink v. Burger) 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
Dannenbrink v. Burger, 138 P. 751, 23 Cal. App. 587, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 386 (Cal. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is a suit to quiet title to certain water-rights and to enjoin the defendants from claiming or asserting any claim to said water-rights a.nd from interfering with the full enjoyment thereof by the plaintiffs.

The defendants were awarded judgment on the issues made by their 'answer to the complaint.

In due time the plaintiffs presented a motion for a new trial, which was denied, and this appeal is prosecuted by them from the order denying said motion.

The vital point upon which the decision of the controversy between the plaintiffs and the defendants must depend involves the question whether the latter were entitled to appropriate and thus acquire the right to use the waters which it is claimed have for many years seeped or percolated through a certain ditch, owned by the plaintiffs and their predecessors for over thirty years- immediately prior to the commence *589 ment of this aoti-on and whereby they utilized, principally for mining purposes, a large proportion of the waters of a stream known- as Gwin gulch, in Trinity County.

Said- gulch is a mountain stream and the quantity of water that it carries, like all ordinary mountain streams, varies according to the seasons of the year. In the winter time or the rainy season the flow of water in the gulch is large, while in the summer months or those months during which there is little, if any, rain, the flow of water naturally decreases so that the stream contains or carries during such periods a very small amount of water. The plaintiffs claim the right, by appropriation, to take and use twelve hundred inches of water from said gulch by means of three ditches, named and known as the “Waste Ditch,” the “Eagle Ditch,” and the “Empire Ditch.”

The complaint alleges that “the said ditches and the water-rights appurtenant thereto have been more than thirty years last past iand now are appurtenant to that certain group of mining claims situated in said Cañón Creek Mining District, commonly known as the Dannenbrink group of mines, and for all of said period have been used on said mining properties for a useful and beneficial purpose; that said defendants claim some other right to said ditches and water-right from said Gwin gulch as against the plaintiffs herein, which said claim is without -any right whatever and is adverse to plaintiffs; that the defendants have no right or interest in said waters of Gwin gulch or said above-named ditches or any part or portion thereof.”

The defendants, in their answer, admit the plaintiffs’ ownership and possession of the Waste ditch, and that the plaintiffs were the owners of an undivided one-half interest in and to the Empire ditch, and were, with their co-owners, not parties to this action, the -owners of and entitled to three hundred inches of water of the “first flow” of said Gwin gulch diverted by and through said' Empire 'ditch. It is alleged in the answer that said Eagle ditch “is- now and for more than five years last past has been abandoned and unused and no water has been diverted by or through said ditch by plaintiffs or any other person or persons for more than five years immediately preceding the commencement of this -action.” The defendants- further allege and claim that they *590 are the -ownero of and entitled to seventy-two- inches of the “second flow” of the waters of Gwin gulch, appurtenant to two ditches of which they are the owners, viz.: the “Slack” ditch and the “Peek” 'ditch, the first mentioned of said ditches being located and connected with Gwin gulch about nine hundred and sixty feet below the intake of the Waste ditch and the Peek ditch about fifteen hundred feet below the intake of said' Waste ditch. The answer then alleges that the seventy-two. inches of water (measured under a four-inch pressure) which they have the right to use and divert from said Gwin gulch, as above stated, are so conveyed to the lands and premises of the defendants, “situated in the Gañón Creek Mining District, Trinity County,” and described as “lot 40, embracing a portion of township 24 north, range 11 west, M. D. M., land- other lands adjacent thereto”; that the waters so diverted by the defendants from Gwin gulch and used upon their said land “have been for over thirty years last past and now are being used by defendants for irrigation, domestic, mining and other useful purposes upon said premises above described, subject only to the prior right of plaintiffs and their co-owners to take and divert 300 inches of said Gwin gulch, measured under a four-inch pressure, by and through said Empire ditch.” It is admitted by the defendants that the plaintiffs ‘ ‘ are the owners of and entitled to the third right to use -and divert from said Gwin gulch 800 inches of water measured under a four-inch pressure diverted by and through said Waste ditch.”

The court found that the -defendants were and are the owners of the Slack and Peek ditches, whereby water from Gwin gulch was conveyed to their premises, above described; that the right to the waters of Gwdn gulch, owned by the plaintiffs herein, and appurtenant to said Waste ditch, is older than and superior to the right -or interest -of the defendants in and to any waters of said Gwin gulch, “and the only right defendants have to the Avaters of the said Gwin gulch is to such waters as have seeped or percolated or flowed through or over plaintiffs’ dam at the head of said Waste ditch, augmented by the drainage waters of the basin tributary to said G-win gulch beloAV the dam or intake at the head of said Waste ditch, both classes- of waters not exceeding at any time in the year seventy-two inches of water, *591

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
138 P. 751, 23 Cal. App. 587, 1913 Cal. App. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dannenbrink-v-burger-calctapp-1913.