Fresno Canal & Irrigation Co. v. Park

62 P. 87, 129 Cal. 437, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1002
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 3, 1900
DocketS.F. No. 1577.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 62 P. 87 (Fresno Canal & Irrigation Co. v. Park) 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
Fresno Canal & Irrigation Co. v. Park, 62 P. 87, 129 Cal. 437, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1002 (Cal. 1900).

Opinions

McFARLAND, J.

This is an action to enforce a lien against certain land of the defendants Adeline B. Park and her husband, William Park, alleged to have been created by a certain instrument in writing made -by and between plaintiff and one Perrin, who was said defendants’ predecessor in interest in the land. The other defendants are made parties as claiming some interest in the premises. Defendants demurred to the complaint, and their demurrer was overruled. They declined to answer and judgment was rendered for plaintiff, and they ap *439 peal from the judgment. It is admitted by appellants that all special causes of demurrer were obviated by a stipulated amendment to the complaint: so that the only ground of demurrer to be considered is the general one that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

These facts appear from the averments of the complaint: The respondent is a corporation organized in February, 1871, for the purpose of straightening, improving, etc., the natural channel of Kings river and its branches, and taking water therefrom by means of canals and ditches for various beneficial uses, and, among others, for the disposition of the waters and “collecting annual rents and charges therefor.” On March 28, 1892, respondent and one E. B. Perrin executed a written instrument, which was duly acknowledged by the parties and was recorded on the 31st of the same month. Plaintiff’s canals and ditches run through an agricultural region, and do not furnish water within any city, town, or municipality. The covenants of this instrument necessary to be mentioned here are as follows: The respondent, in consideration of a certain sum of money then paid it by Perrin, covenanted to furnish to the latter from its main canal, or from a branch thereof, all the water that may be required for the irrigation of a described piece of land then owned by him, for a certain number of years commencing May 28, 1892, “not exceeding at any time one cubit foot per second.” The respondent agreed to put a suitable gate in the bank of the canal at the most convenient point for the conveyance of water to Perrin’s land; and Perrin agreed to construct a ditch from the gate to his land at his own cost, etc. Perrin agreed that he would not use the water, or permit it to be used, on any land other than that described in the instrument, and would not permit it to run to waste, and would provide means to carry any surplus water back to the respondent’s canal. It was declared that the water to be thus furnished was intended to be an appurtenance to and to run with the land, that the right thereto was to be transferable only with the land, and that respondent was to be bound by the instrument only to subsequent owners of the land. Perrin covenanted for himself, his heirs, assigns, and successors in interest, for the payment annually to respondent of the sum of one hundred dollars on *440 the first day of September of each of the years mentioned. It was agreed, also, that respondent might make a certain number of similar contracts with other persons, and that if at any time the aggregate quantity of water should be insufficient to supply all the contractors, Perrin, and each of the others, should receive his proportionate share. It was declared that the covenants of Perrin should run with and “bind the land.” The foregoing are, we think, all the covenants of the instrument which need' at present be mentioned.

It is averred that prior to September 1, 1897, Perrin conveyed a certain described part of the land to the appellants Adeline and William Park, who since then have been and are the owners in fee and in possession of the same. It is further averred that ever since the execution of said instrument the respondent “duly performed each and all of the covenants and agreements therein contained on its part to be performed”; and it is averred that there is due and unpaid upon said contract, and chargeable upon the said land conveyed to appellants as aforesaid, certain amounts due for several of the years, aggregating one hundred and fifty dollars and interest.

We are not embarrassed with the question whether or not the instrument upon which the action is founded creates a lien on the land in the hands of the appellant. In their opening brief counsel for appellants say: “It is admitted for the purposes of this argument that, if valid, this contract runs with and binds the land in the hands of appellants to the same extent that it would in the hands of the said E. B. Perrin.” Moreover, it was expressly held in Fresno etc. Irr. Co. v. Rowell, 80 Cal. 114, 1 and in Fresno etc. Irr. Co. v. Dunbar, 80 Cal. 530, that an instrument exactly like the one in question here—and to which the present respondent was a party—did create a lien enforceable against the land in the hands of a subsequent owner, although technically it did not “run with the land.” But appellants contend that the contract is, in all its parts, utterly void, and therefore without any legal effect even as between the original parties.

The theory that a contract like the one in question here cannot be legally made is of recent origin. Until within the last *441 few years no one would have thought of doubting that the owner of a water ditch could supply water to a customer for mining or irrigation purposes on such terms as the two might agree upon. It is now said that such a contract is forbidden by the present state constitution which was adopted in 1879. But the two cases above cited from 80 California—in which the present respondent was plaintiff and in which contracts like the one here in question, made by respondent with other parties, were upheld—were decided in 1889; and the case of Balfour v. Fresno etc. Irr. Co., 109 Cal. 221, where a similar contract (made also by respondent) was upheld, was decided as late as September 27, 1895. To the same effect are San Diego Flume Co. v. Chase, 87 Cal. 561, Clyne v. Water Co., 100 Cal. 310, Merrill v. Irrigation Co., 112 Cal. 426, decided in 1896, and Fairbanks v. Rollins, 54 Pac. Rep. 79, decided August 4, 1898. It is contended, however, that those cases should not be considered of any value as authorities here because in all of the said cases the court had entirely overlooked or forgotten prominent provisions of the constitution now called to our attention, and the learned counsel of the parties opposed to the present respondent in those cases failed, through dimness of mental vision, to see and call attention to the conspicuous wall of the constitution behind which, according to appellants’ contention, they could have safely put their client. It would be remarkable, indeed, if during the consideration of all these various cases, and down to 1898, the thought never suggested itself to either court or counsel that the novel and notable provisions of the constitution about water, now relied on, could be invoked as defenses to those actions; but, as such a thing is barely possible, we will give the question an independent investigation.

The parts of the constitution relied on by appellants are sections 1 and 2 of article XIV.

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Bluebook (online)
62 P. 87, 129 Cal. 437, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 1002, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fresno-canal-irrigation-co-v-park-cal-1900.