Freeman v. Bouton

8 P.2d 1041, 121 Cal. App. 388, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1139
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 1932
DocketDocket No. 4437.
StatusPublished

This text of 8 P.2d 1041 (Freeman v. Bouton) 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
Freeman v. Bouton, 8 P.2d 1041, 121 Cal. App. 388, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1139 (Cal. Ct. App. 1932).

Opinion

*389 PLUMMER, J.

This causeis before us upon an appeal from an order of the trial court dated July 22, 1929, filed nunc pro tunc as of May 2, 1929, denying a petition theretofore filed by the appellant on the ninth day of February, 1927, praying that an order be made modifying a decree adjudging water rights and providing for the division of certain waters, dated July 29, 1929, as amended by an order dated December 23, 1920.

The contention on the part of the appellant is that the orders made by the trial court for the purposes of carrying out its decree settling water rights between the parties hereto, and providing for the division thereof in pursuance of such decree, are erroneous in that the appellant was decreed to be the owner of 14/30ths of the water flowing in the ditch referred to in these proceedings, and that upon the division thereof, as made pursuant to the orders of the court, the quantity of water delivered to the appellant by the method of division pursued and the boxes installed, the appellant has failed to receive his proper proportion of said waters to the extent of .53 cubic feet per second.

In making the diversion of the waters according to the orders of the court, the commissioner appointed so to do inserted in the box diverting the water to the appellant a 6%-inch plank, which reduced the flow of water into appellant’s ditch to the extent just mentioned. The real cause of the controversy is the fact that the plank just referred to was installed in the box diverting the water to the plaintiff’s ditch to equalize the loss of water by evaporation, and to give to the respondents in this action the quantity of water to which they were entitled, such quantities being delivered to their ditches without any diversion having first been made between the intake of the main ditch and the place of the installation of the boxes delivering water to the respondents.

While a number of cases have been called to our attention, and the argument of counsel has taken a rather wide range, a setting forth of the findings of the court as originally made and entered in this cause, and the decree of the court entered in pursuance thereof, and the orders made, and the fact that the order from which this appeal is *390 prosecuted, was made upon conflicting testimony, is all that is. necessary to a determination herein.

The findings, decree and orders to which we have referred do not support appellant’s contention that he is entitled to 14/30ths of the water flowing in the main ditch known as and called in the transcript, “Bramlett, Bristol & Benton water ditch”, but that the appellant is only entitled to the residue after certain quantities have been diverted therefrom, based upon measurements when no diversions are being made between the intake of such ditch and the point of diversion. Whether the findings are supported by the testimony in the main case, and the decree properly supported by the findings, are questions which we must take as definitely settled.

Finding XV of the main case, as set forth in the record before us, is as follows:

“The court further finds and decides that in order that the waters of said ditch shall be proportionately divided and distributed in accordance with the findings aforesaid, subject to natural losses in transit, that division boxes and measuring gauges be installed in said Bramlett, Bristol and Benton ditch in the manner hereinafter specified, the expense thereof to be borne ratably by plaintiffs, defendants Bramlett and Northern California Power Company, Consolidated, i. e.
“1. A measuring gauge at a point on the main ditch immediately above the first diversion therefrom, commonly known as the ‘Old Bramlett diversion’.
“2. A division box and gauge at the point where said ditch divides into the north and south forks hereinabove described so as to automatically cause to flow in the south fork of said ditch 8/24ths of the whole flow of' said Bramlett, Bristol and Benton ditch as measured at said forks when no diversions have been made from the main ditch above said forks.
“3. A division box and gauge in the north fork of said ditch at the west line of the lands of defendants Bramlett, such gauge to be rated so as to register and discharge at said point for the use of plaintiff Frank Freeman and defendant Northern California Power Company, Consolidated, 4/24ths of the whole flow of said Bramlett,. Bristol and Benton ditch as measured at the forks above mentioned *391 when no diversions have been made from the main ditch above said forks.
“4. A division box and gauge at a point on the north fork of said ditch at or near where the county road now crosses the west line of the plaintiff John Meyer in the S. B. ]4 of Section 29, Twp. 30 north, range 1 Bast, or at any other point west of the west line of the lands of the said Bramletts which will give the requisite grade to carry the Northern California Power Company, Consolidated’s, share to the highest land on the properties purchased from T. II. Benton and lying south of Digger Creek. Said division box to so divide the waters of said north fork at said point of division that the Northern California Power Company, Consolidated, will receive % thereof, and the plaintiff Frank Freeman, will receive ]4 thereof.”

Subdivision 2 of the finding just set forth specifies that the 8/24ths referred to is to be diverted from the main ditch and measured at the forks where the box is to be located “when no diversions have been made from the main ditch above said forks”. The forks being designated as the place for the location of the measuring box delivering the 8/24ths.

In the conclusions of law the same provision appears for the division which we have just mentioned. In paragraph IV of the conclusions of law, where it speaks of the waters to be divided between Freeman and the Northern California Power Company, Consolidated, now the Pacific Gas and Electric Company, it is distinctly set forth that they are entitled to have flow in what is called the north fork of said ditch, a certain quantity of water, to wit, 4/24ths of said main ditch, as the waters come down and pass the west line of the lands owned by Bramlett and Bramlett, now owned by the appellant Bouton.

The decree following the findings and conclusions of law decrees the division of the water as follows: “That the plaintiffs are the owners of the right to divert from Digger Creek in Tehama County, California, through the Bramlett, Bristol and Benton Water Ditch described in the complaint and into the south fork thereof eight twenty-fourths of the waters carried by the said ditch and which said ditch is entitled to carry, and that they have the right to divert through said -ditch and by means of the south fork thereof *392 and to use upon their lands described in the complaint their said portion of the waters of said ditch.”

Paragraph III, in further decreeing the division of the water between certain owners, provides for its passing the west line of the lands which are now owned by the appellant in a certain quantity before the diversion of the quantity therein mentioned is made.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
8 P.2d 1041, 121 Cal. App. 388, 1932 Cal. App. LEXIS 1139, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/freeman-v-bouton-calctapp-1932.