De La Beckwith v. Sheldon

97 P. 867, 154 Cal. 393, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 346
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1908
DocketSac. No. 1510.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 97 P. 867 (De La Beckwith v. Sheldon) 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
De La Beckwith v. Sheldon, 97 P. 867, 154 Cal. 393, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 346 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

STIAW, J.

The plaintiff appeals from a judgment in favor of the defendants. The appeal was taken within sixty days after the rendition of the judgment and the evidence is presented by a bill of exceptions.

We are of the opinion that certain findings are contrary to the evidence, and that the court below erred in excluding evidence offered by the plaintiff. To get a clear understanding of the matter it will be necessary to state as briefly as possible the facts alleged in the complaint.

Prior to November 30, 1901, the Central Irrigation District, a district organized under the act of March 31, 1897 (Stats. 1897, p. 254), was the owner of a large canal some forty miles in length, extending from a point near the northern side of Glenn County into the county of Colusa. It is not alleged, but it appears from the evidence offered and excluded, that this canal was not connected with the Sacramento River at its upper end, that it was not completed for its entire length and that it had been constructed at an expense of several hundred thousand dollars. The canal was so situated that it could be used in distributing water from the Sacramento River to irrigate many thousand acres of land situated in Glenn and Colusa counties, west of the Sacramento River. We will hereafter refer to it as the “Central Canal.” On November 30, 1901, the plaintiff’s intestate, Byron D. Beckwith, posted three notices of appropriation of water, each for a flow of 150,000 inches, measured under a four-inch pressure, of the waters of the Sacramento River, and had the same duly recorded, each stating that it was his purpose to divert the waters of said river at the point where the notice was posted, and distribute the same over a large part of the lands on the west side of the Sacramento River in the counties of Glenn, *395 Colusa, Solano, and Yolo. It was the purpose and plan of said Beckwith to acquire the said Central Canal, and the other property connected therewith, and use the same in the distribution of the water appropriated, by making a connecting canal extending from the proposed place of diversion to the upper end of the said Central Canal. Within sixty days thereafter he commenced excavation on the proposed canal and thereafter prosecuted the same with diligence. Plaintiff had not sufficient means to carry out this large enterprise, and in order to secure assistance therein, on September 20, 1902, he entered into an agreement with the defendants Willard M. Sheldon and J. D. Schuyler, whereby they were to become interested in the said property and enterprise. This agreement provided that the said parties should within sixty days form a corporation, to be known as the Sacramento Canal Company, with one million dollars capital stock; that Beck-with should thereupon convey to said corporation all water appropriations made or owned by him of the waters of the Sacramento River, and all rights of way and canals in which he had any interest connected with or to be used in connection therewith; that work was to be commenced at once toward obtaining rights of way and selling water-rights, and that Sheldon and Schuyler would furnish funds therefor and for all other necessary purposes in carrying on and operating the proposed corporation; that Beckwith was to receive ten thousand dollars and one third of the capital stock of the corporation as compensation for conveying said property to the corporation, and that each party was to be employed by the said corporation while they remained stockholders therein. At the* same time Sheldon and Schuyler advanced to Beck-with four hundred dollars as a part of the money due him under the contract, and Beckwith executed to them a deed, conveying to them all of his water-rights and other property referred to in the contract, in trust, to be by them conveyed to the said corporation as soon as the same was formed. Thereupon, Sheldon and Schuyler took charge of the Beck-with rights and on January 12, 1903, they obtained a lease from the Central Irrigation District to Sheldon for the period of fifty years of all the said Central Canal and the property connected therewith. They did not organize a corporation under the name of the Sacramento Canal Company. On Feb *396 ruary 20, 1903, Sheldon, Schuyler, and others incorporated the Central Canal and Irrigation Company for the purpose of securing in its name the water-rights and properties of Beckwith, and in pursuance of said purpose Sheldon and Schuyler secured, in the name of said corporation, rights of way and other property for the formation of the irrigation system, including the rights of way and property of Beckwith aforesaid. On February 22, 1903, Sheldon posted two notices of appropriation of water of the Sacramento River, each for five thousand cubic feet per second thereof, at substantially the place where Beckwith had previously posted one of his notices, and for the appropriation of substantially the same water previously appropriated by Beckwith. This ivas done fraudulently for the purpose of acquiring an independent claim or right to the said appropriation and water-rights. Sheldon and Schuyler thereupon represented that they would not be able to carry out the original contract according to its terms, because it was necessary to interest other persons therein and to give such other persons a larger interest therein than the original contract contemplated. In consequence of these representations Beckwith and the said defendants, on April 8, 1903, executed another contract. This contract provided that the prior contract of September 20th should be canceled and annulled, that Sheldon and Schuyler should proceed to organize the corporation to be named the Sacramento Canal Company, and should cause it to issue bonds not exceeding one million dollars, bearing interest at five per cent, that all the water-rights, rights of way, and all other things held by either of the parties thereto, or in their interest, connected with the said canal scheme, should be by them conveyed or transferred to said corporation when organized, and that thereupon Beckwith should receive, for the property which he should thereby convey to said corporation, the sum of fifty thousand dollars in said bonds at par, which should be in full payment and satisfaction of all his rights and demands upon the corporation, or upon the other parties to the contract, or upon the property so to be conveyed to said corporation. It will be noted that at that time Sheldon apparently still held the lease of the Central Canal and a claim to water under his notices of appropriation of February 22, 1903. This contract was executed by Sheldon and Schuyler without any *397 intention of performing the same. They wholly and entirely refused to comply with said contract or any part thereof, and did not at any time organize any corporation as provided for therein, but they secured in their own name and in the name of the Central Canal and Irrigation Company, valuable rights of way, easements, and property connected with and necessary to the said proposed enterprise, and made numerous contracts for rights of way and for the distribution of the water to be divertéd from the river in the name of the Central Canal and Irrigation Company, and made conveyances or agreements for sale of the water to be diverted by them through the canals of the said Central Canal and Irrigation Company.

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Bluebook (online)
97 P. 867, 154 Cal. 393, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 346, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-la-beckwith-v-sheldon-cal-1908.