Gutierrez v. Wege

79 P. 449, 145 Cal. 730, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 615
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1905
DocketL.A. Nos. 1640, 1641.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 79 P. 449 (Gutierrez v. Wege) 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
Gutierrez v. Wege, 79 P. 449, 145 Cal. 730, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 615 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

*732 GRAY, C.

This action is brought to quiet title to the waters of Casitas Creek, a small stream having its rise in a spring on the land of defendant and flowing for some distance into the adjoining land of plaintiffs. The judgment in the-case is as follows:—

“1st. That the defendant owns and is entitled to the sole- and exclusive use of all the waters flowing from that certain spring situate upon the N. W. £ of the S. W. ^ of section 29, described in defendant’s amended answer, and to all waters flowing in said Casitas Creek above the reservoir situated near the south line of said land and in the bed of said creek;
“2d. That of the waters arising and flowing in said creek below said reservoir, the plaintiffs as riparian owners are entitled to 40/41 thereof, and the defendant as riparian owner is entitled to the remainder;
“3d. That the defendant and his agents and employees are-perpetually restrained and enjoined from hereafter obstructing or polluting, in any wise, the said Casitas Creek below said reservoir; and
“4th. That neither party recover his costs or disbursements, in this action. ’ ’

There are two appeals before us from this judgment; the plaintiffs appeal from the first paragraph thereof, and defendant appeals from the second, third, and fourth paragraphs.

We are of opinion that the first paragraph of the judgment,, wherein it is decreed that the defendant “owns and is entitled to the sole and exclusive use of all the waters,” etc., is not warranted by the evidence taken at the trial.

Something upwards of five years before the commencement of the action defendant had constructed a reservoir on his land in the channel of the creek in question through which ran the waters from the spring. From this reservoir he had constructed small ditches on each side of the creek through which he conveyed water for the purpose of irrigating a few acres; of his land, not more than four or five acres at the outside-Defendant had also dug out the spring and developed moro water than naturally flowed from it. He had also laid pipes from the spring to his house, and by that means conducted water thereto for domestic use. He had also been accustomed to water horses and cattle at the creek below the reservoir, *733 and, perhaps, above it. The evidence, however, failed to show that he had used all the water flowing in the spring and stream above the reservoir at all times for a period of five years prior to the' commencement of the action. The defendant himself testified that “there was water sometimes that I did not use at all during the months of August and September.” The defendant’s wife testified, in speaking of her husband’s use of the water: “He only used the water two different periods of the year; when he is not using it for irrigation it runs in the creek.”

The foregoing evidence is undisputed, and is inconsistent with the finding of the court to the effect that for more than six years the defendant had adversely diverted and used all the waters of the spring and creek above the reservoir. Indeed, the evidence goes no farther than to show that the defendant had been making such reasonable use of the water for domestic purposes and for irrigation as he was entitled to do by reason of his being a riparian proprietor. The riparian owner, so long as his use of the water is within his rights as ■such riparian owner, gets no right or interest in the water additional to his riparian interest, even though such use extend for a period beyond five years. A use of the water strictly within his legal rights, and with which no other person has a right to interfere, cannot be called an adverse use for the purpose of conferring a property right or ownership in the water, under the statute of limitations. It is clear then that the defendant was not the owner of the water by adverse use. It is also plain that he was not the “owner” nor entitled to the “exclusive use” of the water by virtue of being a riparian proprietor. As such riparian owner the water was parcel of the land, and he as against other riparian owners was entitled only to a reasonable use of the water upon the riparian lands, with no power to convey it elsewhere to the detriment of the riparian owner below him on the stream. Even if we were to admit that the defendant had acquired a right as against the lower riparian proprietor by adverse use, still that right would be measured by the use that the water had been put to, and the defendant here would still not be the .absolute owner of the water, to do with it as he pleased, nor would he be entitled to the use of it to any greater extent than he had already used it. This is illustrated in the recent *734 case of Southern California Investment Co. v. Wilshire, 144 Cal. 68.

Nor can it be said that the defendant owns “all the waters”' flowing above the reservoir by reason of the fact that the waters of the spring percolated in the soil and the flow therefrom had been increased by digging out the spring.

It must be admitted from the record that before the defendant worked upon this spring at all the waters found their way, in some measure at least, from the spring to the channel of the creek and flowed down the latter to plaintiffs ’ land. It may be that the fact that the defendant as a riparian proprietor had worked upon the spring and increased its flow would entitle him to a greater portion of the water on a fair division of the same than would otherwise fall to his lot. But. he certainly did not by increasing the flow become the owner of all the flow. Nor was he the owner in any sense except as a, riparian proprietor of any water which naturally found its-way from the spring to the creek. And this is so whether the water percolated directly into the creek through the soil or reached the creek in one or more running streams. The spring supplying the stream was itself a part of the stream, and the defendant had the same right in the spring and no greater right therein than he had in the stream below. He had no. different or better right to cut off the water in the spring or above the spring than he had to cut it off or divert it from the stream. Any interference with the supply of the stream was an interference with the lower riparian owner’s right to have the water continue to run in the stream to his land. The defendant was entitled only to a reasonable use of the waters-of all parts of the stream including the spring; the part of the judgment complained of gives him more than this and is-wrong.

The appeal of the defendant is also well founded, at least in part. It is not consistent with the law of riparian rights in this state to enjoin a riparian owner from “obstructing in any wise” the riparian stream. It is necessary that he should “obstruct” it, in some measure at least, in order to make any use of the water either for irrigation or for domestic or house-use. At certain stages of so small a stream as this, even the-watering of a few cattle might consume the entire stream and thus obstruct and prevent the flow thereof down to plaintiffs’" *735 land.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P. 449, 145 Cal. 730, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gutierrez-v-wege-cal-1905.