Griseza v. Terwilliger

77 P. 1034, 144 Cal. 456, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 715
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 18, 1904
DocketSac. No. 1083.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 77 P. 1034 (Griseza v. Terwilliger) 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
Griseza v. Terwilliger, 77 P. 1034, 144 Cal. 456, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 715 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

CHIPMAN, C.

Plaintiffs allege that they are owners in fee as tenants in common of a certain ditch and the right to take water from Little Shasta River, Siskiyou County, the ditch being commonly known as the Musgrave & Linton Ditch, and of capacity of twelve hundred miner’s inches; that they have for thirty-seven years last past used the water flowing through said ditch to its full capacity when there was abundant water, and at other times six hundred and forty miner’s inches; that defendant claims an interest therein and adverse to plaintiffs; and that during the year 1900 she wrongfully diverted a portion of said waters from said ditch. Elizabeth J. Rohrer, as executrix of her husband’s will, filed a complaint in intervention, alleging that at his death, in 1886, he owned *458 a one-sixth interest in said ditch and water, and that said interest now belongs to his estate. She asked to have the title to this interest quieted against the adverse claims of defendant. There was no demurrer to either complaint, but defendant answered plaintiffs’ complaint (which by stipulation was taken as an answer to the intervention subsequently filed), admitting that plaintiffs owned some interest in the water-ditch and water-right described in the complaint; denies that plaintiffs are the sole owners of said ditch or of said water-right, and denies that they are owners as tenants in common; denies that she is without right, and alleges an interest to the amount of thirty inches of water in said ditch and water, and claims ownership through her predecessors for forty years. Further answering, defendant claims ownership in July, 1895, of certain lands commonly known as the “Terwilliger Home Place,” since which time she has used thirty inches of water of Shasta River upon her said lands for irrigating purposes; that said water has been taken and used “by means of certain ditches and flume which taps that certain water-ditch described in plaintiffs’ complaint”; that such use has been open, notorious, continuous, peaceable, and uninterrupted, and with the knowledge and acquiescence of plaintiffs, “for the full period of five years during the irrigating season next before the beginning of this action”; that defendant is the owner and entitled to the use of thirty inches of the waters of said Musgrave & Linton water-ditch and water-right. Defendant “prays that said action be dismissed and for her costs herein expended,” and asks no further relief.

The court found that plaintiffs (including intervener) and their predecessors, in conjunction with pne Andrew Soule, dug the ditch in question and diverted the waters of said river through said ditch to its full capacity—to wit, one thousand inches' measured under a four-inch pressure—about the year 1859; that when there was not an abundance of water in said river, they used through said ditch a less amount “down to and not exceeding 150 inches”; that this use ha's-been continuous for ■ irrigating and for stock and domestic purposes, “save some wrongful interruption by defendant during the five years last past,” etc.; that “plaintiffs, said intervener, and their predecessors in interest so constructed, *459 appropriated, used, and held, and at the time of commenceing this action plaintiffs and intervener so used and held, f undivided of the said ditch and water-right and the waters flowing therein.” The foregoing presents all the findings which are challenged as unsupported by the evidence.

As conclusions of law, the court found plaintiffs and intervener to be “the owners, as tenants in common, of three fourths of the ditch and, water-right described in the complaint as against defendant and all persons claiming or to claim the same, . . . and that defendant has no right, title, or interest in the said ditch or water-right or the waters flowing therein, or to any part of the waters flowing in said ditch”; that plaintiffs and intervener are entitled to a decree as prayed for, etc. Judgment passed accordingly. It should be observed that the one-fourth interest in the water not disposed of by the findings or judgment belongs without dispute to one Andrew Soule, one of the first appropriators of the water. Plaintiffs and intervener had the judgment, from which and from the order denying her motion for a new trial defendant appeals. Reference to plaintiffs hereafter in the opinion will include the intervener.

In her answer defendant admits the title of plaintiffs, denying only their sole ownership, and denying that they are tenants in common. She claims an interest in the ditch and water to the extent of thirty miner’s inches of water through her predecessors of forty years, and in her second defense claims this same amount of water by adverse use since 1895. In the trial of the case no issue seems to have been raised as to plaintiffs’ ownership, except as to this thirty inches of water. In view of the admissions of the answer and the course pursued at the trial, we do not think defendant’s point well taken that plaintiffs have failed to prove title. The point that they do not own as tenants in common, because, as is claimed, the evidence shows that each is entitled to a certain proportion of the flow of the water in the ditch, cannot be sustained, conceding its materiality. No special or other agreements having existed among the owners as to their proprietary rights constituting them something else, they were tenants in common, and their rights are governed by the rules of law regulating tenancy in common. (Bradley v. Harkness, 26 Cal. 69.)

*460 It appears that the Musgrave & Linton Ditch was begun by Samuel Musgrave and John Linton, and was completed by them, with the assistance of Andrew Soule and P. S. Terwilliger (defendant’s husband), about the year 1861. There is evidence that Terwilliger was to have one fourth of the water, and plaintiffs concede that he used water from this ditch up to a certain time, when they claim he abandoned all right to the ditch and water. He had an independent water-right from the same stream, by what was called the Dorris Ditch, which covered all his land, and there is evidence that he at one time brought water to his home place from this ditch, and that water can now be so brought. Practically the controversy revolves around the fact as to defendant’s present right to thirty inches of the water of the Musgrave & Linton Ditch for use at this home place, so called. Terwilliger died about the year 1895, and on July 20, 1895, conveyed the home place to his wife with appurtenances. She claims through this deed,—first, by reason of her husband’s original interest in the Musgrave & Linton Ditch; and second, by adverse use for more than five years immediately preceding the commencement of the action. As to the latter claim little need be said, for there is much evidence, though not without conflict, that her use was neither uninterrupted nor continuous, nor open, nor with plaintiffs’ acquiescence. There is evidence that during these years the water was frequently shut off from defendant’s land by plaintiffs, and she was forbidden to use it. There is abundant evidence to support the finding of the court against defendant’s contention of adverse use. The remaining question turns upon the admissibility and effect of certain testimony introduced by plaintiffs to which defendant unsuccessfully made objection as incompetent and irrelevant.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 P. 1034, 144 Cal. 456, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 715, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/griseza-v-terwilliger-cal-1904.