Hartson v. Dill

90 P. 530, 151 Cal. 137, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 404
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 7, 1907
DocketSac. No. 1211.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 90 P. 530 (Hartson v. Dill) 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
Hartson v. Dill, 90 P. 530, 151 Cal. 137, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 404 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This is an action for damages for the alleged wrongful diversion of water, and to quiet title to rights asserted to the use thereof.

Judgment went for the defendants in the trial court, and this appeal is from said judgment and an order denying the motion of plaintiff for a new trial.

The waters involved are those of the Susan River in Lassen County. A portion of the waters of that river leave the main channel and pass down what is known as the “Dill” and “Van Noten” sloughs to their junction, where they form what is known as the Big Slough. The waters flowing into said Big Slough are taken therefrom by all of the parties to this action for irrigation and domestic use. The defendants by - means of dams in the Big Slough and ditches leading therefrom first take the waters from said slough, and lower down through what is known as the Hartson Slough, a minor slough diverging from said Big Slough, the plaintiff takes *139 such waters as defendants are not entitled to. The defendants also, by dams constructed at points near the head of the "Dill” and "Van Noten” sloughs, prevent the waters of Susan River, between June 20th and August 1st of each year, from passing into such sloughs and thence into the Big Slough, and by means of ditches divert it directly from the river to their lands. These dams at the heads of the sloughs are so arranged that all, or nearly all, of the waters can be made to pass down the sloughs or down the river at pleasure. The sole point involved in this case is as to the right of defendants to exclude said waters, during the above dates, from entering the Big Slough and reaching the lands of plaintiff by way of the Hartson Slough diverging therefrom.

This general statement is all that is necessary to be made for the purpose of considering the question arising on this appeal, because, in our judgment, the rights of the respective parties to the use of the waters here involved are to be determined by the construction to be given to the terms of two separate decrees of the superior court of Lassen County, entered in suits between these same parties, and relative to their respective rights to the use of these„same waters.

It appears from the record that, in 1890, dissensions having arisen between them as to their rights to the use of these waters, the defendants here (plaintiffs there) brought an action against various parties, including the plaintiff in this present suit—J. D. Byers, Mrs. A. Dill et al. v. Charles Hartson et al.—to have their rights determined. Upon a stipulation entered into between the parties, a decree was entered in 1893, in which, among other things, it was determined "That plaintiffs (defendants here) severally own the water-rights connected with said river and the sloughs making therefrom as described in the complaint and as against the defendant Hartson have the right to divert and use said waters upon their said lands as heretofore appropriated by them as alleged, subject to the rights of the defendant Hartson as hereinafter specified. That plaintiffs also own dams and bulkheads across those sloughs above their said lands known as and called the Dill and Van Noten sloughs, which sloughs unite and form what is commonly known as the Big Slough. That said dams and bulkheads are at the heads of said sloughs where the same leave said river. That plaintiffs have the *140 right to maintain said dams and bulkheads and thereby to regulate the flow of the water down said sloughs for the use of the plaintiffs or any one or number of the plaintiffs, and have the right to exclude all the waters of said river from said sloughs from and after the tenth day of May in each and every year, and to compel during said time all of said water to flow down the main channel of Susan River onto their several lands. That from the twentieth day of June to the c'first day of August in each year they have the right to use said sloughs or any part of said sloughs as a waterway through which to turn from their said several lands all or any portion of said waters, and that the defendant- shall not in any manner interfere with the exercise of any of said rights by plaintiffs or any of the plaintiffs.” The decree then sets forth the ownership of certain lands by Hartson, and proceeds' : “That a branch from the aforesaid Big Slough (the Hartson Slough) runs to and across the defendants’ said land, that prior to the tenth day of May in each and every year the defendant Hartson is entitled to have one fourth of all water flowing down said - Big Slough to a point thereon where the plaintiffs have a bulkhead.

“That from the tenth day of May to the twentieth day of June in each and every year the said Hartson shall have one fourth of the water flowing down to said point, provided that his said one fourth shall not exceed at any part of said time fifty inches of water measured under a four-inch pressure or its equivalent, one cubic foot per second, and provided further that in times of extreme drouth, when plaintiffs require the water, his said one fourth shall not during said time exceed twenty-five inches of water so measured.

“That from the 20th day of June to the first day of August in each and every year the said defendant (Hartson) may have all the water which the plaintiffs or any of the plaintiffs shall turn from their or any of their said lands down said slough towards this defendant’s said premises. That from and after the 1st day of August in each year the said defendant shall have one fourth of all water permitted by the plaintiffs to flow down said slough to the point of division as aforesaid.”

In 1898 the defendants in this present suit brought another action in said superior court against the plaintiff here—Mrs. *141 A, Dill et al. v. Hartson—which again involved their respective rights to these waters, and a decree in the exact terms of the prior one was entered in 1899.

Now, the main question involved in the present suit is as to the interpretation to be put upon the provisions of both these decrees. The contention of the defendants in the lower court was, and is here, that under the terms of the decrees referred to above, they had a right during the period from June 20th to August 1st of each year, to exclude, if they saw fit, the waters of the river from entering the Big Slough, and thence passing down it to plaintiff’s land through the Hartson Slough. The trial court put this interpretation upon the decree, and we perceive no room for any other interpretation. It is provided in both decrees so plainly that it is not open to any other view, that, during the period named, the defendants in this suit have the right not only to take out waters from the Big Slough, but, if they choose to do so, to take them directly from the channel of the Susan River, and, for that purpose, to exclude or prevent their passage into the Big Slough. As to the waters of said river, the only right that is given plaintiff by the terms of the decree, during that period of time, is to take and use a proportion of all such waters of the river as the defendants may turn down or into Big Slough towards the lands of plaintiff. If the defendants should turn or permit the waters of the river to run down the slough, plaintiff had the right to use it under the decree.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P. 530, 151 Cal. 137, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hartson-v-dill-cal-1907.