Estate of Thomas v. Bryant

81 P. 539, 147 Cal. 236, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 386
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1905
DocketL.A. No. 1508.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 81 P. 539 (Estate of Thomas v. Bryant) 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
Estate of Thomas v. Bryant, 81 P. 539, 147 Cal. 236, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 386 (Cal. 1905).

Opinions

BEATTY, C. J.

This is an appeal by Elizabeth Thomas, widow of the deceased and residuary legatee under his will, from that part of the decree of distribution of his estate, which gives to Mrs. Charles Bryant and her children eight shares of the capital stock of the Trabuca Water Company, and .directs the executors to transfer the same, to them.

The will contains the following clause: “I hereby give and devise to my beloved sister, Mrs. Charles Bryant, of the state of Iowa, and her children, share and share alike, those certain six acres of land situate in Orange County, state of California, purchased by me from Albert Puller in the year A. D. 1897 or 1898.” After other special devises, all the residue of the property, both real and personal, was left to the appellant, the surviving wife. The decree distributed to the respondents the six acres of land mentioned in the above clause of the will, describing it particularly, and adding thereto the following: “Together with the water-rights incident and appurtenant thereto or thereto belonging or appertaining, including eight shares of the capital stock of the Trabuca Water Company which were, used upon the said land and which are found herein to be incident and appurtenant to and belonging to it.” And it further directs the executors to indorse and transfer the certificate for said stock so that the same could be transferred upon the books of the company to respondent. The question is whether the eight shares of stock were appurtenant, as a right to so much water, to the six acres of land left to the sister and her children, and consequently were, real property, or whether they were personal property in the same sense as other corporation stock. If they were appurtenant to the land, the decree was correct, otherwise not.

The facts relied upon in support of the claim that the capital stock in question is appurtenant to the six acres of land are as follows: In January, 1892, the six acres belonged to one J. P. Puller, who, with some fifteen other landowners in the vicinity, owned as appurtenant to their several tracts of land the right to the use of the waters of Trabuca Creek for the purposes of irrigation. By agreement or acquiescence of all *239 the owners, each was entitled to receive in his regular turn all the water of the creek for a “run” of a certain number of hours, according to the area of the land irrigated by him, until all the owners had had one turn, when the course of delivery was repeated in the same order. The several parties so owning said water as appurtenant to the respective tracts of land, for the purpose, of greater economy and convenience in the systematic management of the ditch and the payment of the expenses incident thereto, and for the just distribution of the waters of said creek according to the. recognized rights of the several owners, incorporated the Trabuca Water Company. For convenience the stock of the corporation was divided into a number of shares equal to the. aggregate number of hours’ use of the water necessary to give one turn to each of the owners. Thereupon, in March, 1892, all the owners conveyed to the corporation, by deed of grant, the ditches then in use for the conveyance' of the water, and all their water-rights in the waters of Trabuca Creek. This deed contains the clause: “Also the right to use the. waters of Trabuca Creek for supplying said ditch. And any rights which may have accrued to said .parties by their use of the waters of said creek for irrigation.” In payment for this conveyance the corporation issued to each landowner a certificate, of stock for a number of shares equal to the number of hours to which he had been entitled to use the water on his land in a single “turn.” Each share of stock was understood by the. incorporators to represent one hour’s run of water. It was understood by the incorporators at the time, and the custom of the corporation ever since seems to have been in accordance with such understanding, that no dividends were to be paid upon the stock, but that each owner of stock was entitled to all the water in his turn for a number of hours equal to the number of shares of stock held by him.

This understanding and practice were within, and entirely consistent with, the purposes for which the corporation was formed, which were, as stated in its articles of incorporation, “to locate, develop, buy, sell and distribute, water for irrigating, manufacturing and domestic purposes, upon the lands described as follows: . . . Also, to acquire such real estate as may be necessary for reservoirs, pumping works, rights of way, water ditches, and for piping and furnishing water to *240 the town of San Juan Capistrano.” The corporation has never undertaken to do all the things that it might lawfully have done without transgressing the .terms of its charter, but on the other hand it has neither done nor attempted to do anything ultra vires. It has acquired from those who joined in its formation and who owned lands within the defined district water-rights and rights of way, for which it has paid by issuing its stock. With money raised by assessment it has established a pumping plant and it has developed and.pumped water in periods of scarcity. It has sold no water to outsiders, and consequently has made no cash dividends, but has distributed to its stockholders in proportion to the shares held by them respectively all the water at its disposal. It has, in other words, made a dividend in kind. All this has been' done, not in pusuanee of any by-law formally inscribed in the records of the corporation, but solely in accordance with a common understanding of the stockholders, which, so far as these parties and this controversy are concerned, is no more to be questioned than if it existed in the form of a by-law.

The certificates of stock issued by the corporation were, all in the form of that which is in controversy here, which is as follows:—

“No. 36, 8 shares, capital stock $36,000—360 shares $100
ea°k- “Capistrano, Cal., June 4, 1897.
“This certifies that C. W. Thomas is entitled to eight shares of the. capital stock of the Trabuca Water Company, transferable on the. books of the company by indorsement hereon and surrender of this certificate.
“Richard Egan, Secretary.
“J. E. Bacon, President.”

No by-laws were adopted or certificates of stock issued in conformity with section 324 of the Civil Code as amended in 1895, providing that shares of stock in a water company, when the section is complied with, shall be appurtenant to the land described in the certificate. But in this connection it is proper to note the fact that the corporation was formed, and its practice of distributing water to its stockholders established, more than three years before the passage of this amendment, and while it is true, that nothing can be claimed by respondent under this law, it remains equally true that if before its enact *241 ment the water-right became appurtenant to the tract devised to her by other lawful means the law has no invalidating effect upon the right so acquired.

The original certificate for the eight shares allotted to the six-acre tract in controversy was issued to J. P. Fuller at the time when he and others conveyed their water-rights to the ■corporation, in March, 1892.

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Bluebook (online)
81 P. 539, 147 Cal. 236, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estate-of-thomas-v-bryant-cal-1905.