Felsenthal v. Warring

180 P. 67, 40 Cal. App. 119, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 74
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2861.
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 180 P. 67 (Felsenthal v. Warring) 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
Felsenthal v. Warring, 180 P. 67, 40 Cal. App. 119, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 74 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

FINLAYSON, P. J.

The controversy which resulted in-this action arose concerning the right to water flowing in Hopper Creek, in Ventura County, and the asserted right of defendants to reconstruct and maintain a ditch across plaintiff’s land.

Plaintiff owns 137% acres of land riparian to the' creek. Of this tract about thirteen acres are suitable for cultivation. Defendants own lands in the same vicinity, only a small portion of which is riparian to the stream.

[1] In 1870, when plaintiff’s land was still a part of the public domain, defendants constructed a dam in the creek at a place within what is now plaintiff’s private property. At what time the land now owned by plaintiff ceased to be government land does not appear from the record. From an intake in the dam that defendants thus constructed on what is now plaintiff’s property, they diverted water, through a ditch, *123 across the land, that is now plaintiff’s. A part of the ditch was in the bed of the creek and a part ran along and upon the westerly bank of the stream. The water thus diverted has ever since been used by defendants below the intake, on their lands, east and southeast of plaintiff’s land. In 1878 the channel of Hopper Creek was changed somewhat by the floods of that year. Thereupon defendants constructed a new intake about 350 feet farther upstream, and, at the same time, constructed an additional 350 feet of ditch extending from this new intake to the head of the ditch of 1870. Until the flood of 1914 the ditch, though repaired from time to time, remained approximately as it was when the work of 1878 was completed. The capacity of the ditch is sixty miner’s inches, continuous flow. It is made of earth, with an average width of two feet at the bottom and five feet at the top and an average depth of eighteen inches. From the foregoing it will be seen that, at the time when this action was brought, defendants had acquired an easement in plaintiff’s land, giving them the right to maintain the ditch, as so constructed, as a conduit for the amount of water that they rightfully might divert from Hopper Creek at the intake on plaintiff’s land, for use on their nonriparian lands under the flow of the ditch.

In 1914 a section of the ditch was washed away, as well as the bank along which that part of it had been constructed, making it necessary for defendants to rebuild. This flood of 1914 eroded the westerly bank of the stream so that now the bank is some feet farther west of where it previously had been. Shortly after the washout of 1914, but prior to the commencement of the action, defendants commenced the reconstruction of their ditch on plaintiff’s land, and finished the work of reconstruction some time after the action was commenced. Three hundred and fifty feet of this reconstructed ditch defendants constructed along the bank of the creek at a distance of from twenty-five to forty feet west of the old ditch line. The action was commenced while defendants were rebuilding the ditch and before its final reconstruction. At the time of filing the complaint a temporary restraining order was issued. This order was dissolved shortly after the filing of defendants’ answer. So that, before the entry of the final decree, defendants had completed the ditch along the new line, three hundred and fifty feet of which was, as we have stated, from twenty-five to forty feet west of where it formerly had been. *124 Plaintiff testified that, as located, the reconstructed ditch of 1914 would work less injury to his land than if located at any other place on his property, outside of the old location or in the creek bottom, where, he said, it would do him no injury whatever. There also is evidence to the effect that if the reconstructed ditch had been built in the creek bottom, defendants would have to construct it upon an artificial embankment which, in all probability, would be swept away by each recurring freshet. The narrow strip of plaintiff’s land—about 350 feet in length and six or more feet in width—so appropriated by defendants in 1914 for their reconstructed ditch, is good sandy loam, suitable for cultivation, upon which corn was growing at the time when this part of the reconstructed ditch was built. Its value, however, does not exceed twelve dollars, and the injury to plaintiff’s freehold caused by defendants’ appropriation of his land for the reconstructed ditch of 1914 will not exceed twelve dollars. It is no doubt true that, as claimed by defendants, they will sustain considerable loss if they are not permitted to divert from the creek and convey to their orchards, through a ditch on plaintiff’s land, the water heretofore so diverted and conveyed by them—a loss much in excess of the twelve dollars damage to plaintiff’s land by reason of the change in the line of the ditch.

The complaint sets forth two causes of action. In the first, plaintiff seeks a preventive injunction, enjoining defendants from completing the reconstruction of the ditch along the new line—twenty-five to forty feet west of the old line—and a mandatory injunction requiring defendants to place plaintiff’s land in the same condition as before the excavation of the new ditch, which, as we have seen, had been partially reconstructed. when the action was commenced. In his second count, plaintiff seeks to quiet his title to the waters of the creek. The court denied plaintiff any injunctive relief whatever; instead, it entered a decree adjudging defendants to be the owners of an easement over plaintiff’s land for the construction, maintenance, repair, and reconstruction of a ditch “substantially along the line of the present existing ditch”—that is, along the line of the ditch as reconstructed in 1914, twenty-five to forty feet west of the former ditch line. The court likewise enjoined plaintiff from asserting any right or title adverse to such easement and from interfering with the ditch. The decree declares that plaintiff is the owner of two and three-fifths *125 inches of water in the creek, for irrigation and domestic purposes ; that defendants are the owners of all the water of the creek flowing down to their intake on plaintiff’s land, up to sixty inches, excepting the two and three-fifths inches adjudged to belong to the plaintiff; that plaintiff be enjoined from taking more than two and three-fifths inches at any time when the amount flowing to defendants’ ditch shall not exceed sixty inches. From the judgment and an order denying his motion for new trial plaintiff appeals.

1. The court erred in denying appellant any injunctive relief and adjudging that respondents have an easement in appellant’s land for the construction, operation, and maintenance of a ditch along the new ditch line. Respondents’ right to maintain a ditch on appellant’s land was the right to continue the ditch that they were enjoying immediately before the flood of 1914. At that time they owned a certain fight of way for a ditch of a certain character, acquired either by prescription or while the land was still a part of the public unoccupied lands of the United States. [2] The right of respondents in regard to appellant’s land, whatever its source, was simply to continue the use thereof which they were enjoying at the time he acquired the land. Prior to the washout of 1914 the right of way had been definitely fixed and located along a certain definite and well-defined line. [3]

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Bluebook (online)
180 P. 67, 40 Cal. App. 119, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/felsenthal-v-warring-calctapp-1919.