Inyo Consol. Water Co. v. Jess

119 P. 934, 161 Cal. 516, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 459
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 11, 1911
DocketL.A. No. 2638.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 119 P. 934 (Inyo Consol. Water Co. v. Jess) 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
Inyo Consol. Water Co. v. Jess, 119 P. 934, 161 Cal. 516, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 459 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The court below sustained a general demurrer to the. second amended complaint. Plaintiff refused to amend further. Thereupon judgment was given for defendants. Plaintiff appeals.

The first count of the complaint purports to allege a cause of action, under section 738 of the Code of Civil Procedure, to determine the alleged conflicting claims of the plaintiff and defendants, respectively, to the right to use the waters of Cottonwood Creek, in Inyo County, and to the right to divert such waters for use. The complaint alleges that the city of Los Angeles has a prior right to divert and use 180 miner’s inches of said waters. The alleged conflicting claims do not relate to that water, but solely to the excess of the stream above that quantity. It appears from the briefs that the demurrer to this count was sustained upon the theory that it does not show that the plaintiff owns or possesses any subsisting interest in, or right to, the water or the use thereof. This constitutes the question to be determined.

The plaintiff claims its right under and by virtue of five notices of appropriation posted and recorded by George Chaffey, as provided in section 1416 of the Civil Code. Plaintiff has succeeded to Chaffey’s rights. Two of the notices were *518 posted on June 24, 1905, the other three on July 31, 1905. The notices state, and the fact is, that the places of intended diversion, and part of the route of the conduit to be constructed to convey it to the place of use, are and then were within the Sierra Forest Reserve of the United States. No diversion works or dams had been built or begun in pursuance of the notices, or either of them, at the time the action was commenced, which was on July 16, 1907. In excuse for this delay the plaintiff relies on the extensions of time to begin that work given by section 1422 of the Civil Code, and by the amendment of March 21, 1907, to said section 14.16. The amendment took effect on May 20,1907. (Stats. 1907, p. 780.)

Section 1416, as it stood prior to 1907, provides that a claimant must begin the diversion works within sixty days after the notice is posted and diligently pursue the same to completion. There are certain exceptions not necessary here to notice. By section 1419 a failure to comply with this requirement forfeits claimant’s right, as against a subsequent claimant who does comply. Section 1422, in effect, is that if the fact is, and the notice so states, that the proposed place of diversion or any part of the diverting canal is within a forest reserve or other United States government reservation of public land, the claimant may commence the diversion works within sixty days after he shall have received a grant of license from the proper public officers to occupy and use such reserved lands for that purpose, provided that, within sixty days after the posting of the notice of appropriation, he shall have begun the necessary surveys required to precede the application for such license, and shall have diligently prosecuted such surveys to completion, and, upon such completion, shall have also applied to the proper officer for such license and prosecuted such application with reasonable diligence. Facts are alleged showing that the provisions of this section have been fully complied with, and that the applications for said licenses or grants of authority to occupy and use said reserved lands, are now being considered by the officers of the United States authorized to make such grants, but that they have not yet been determined, and, consequently, that plaintiff is unable to proceed with said diversion works.

The effect is that plaintiff is relieved from the requirement of sections 1416 and 1419 that such works must be commenced *519 within sixty days after the posting of the notices of appropriation in order to preserve the claimant’s statutory rights under the notice. As to these claims, the time limited has been extended and has not yet expired. The plaintiff’s rights to begin and complete the diversion works are the same as they would be if the original sixty days had not expired. His present right to maintain this action is also the same.

Respondents contend that this right is not a vested right, that it is not property, and that it cannot be protected against adverse claimants by a suit to determine conflicting claims. In this behalf they cite Kelly v. Natoma Water Co., 6 Cal. 105; Maeris v. Bicknell, 7 Cal. 261, [68 Am. Dec. 257]; Kimball v. Gearhart, 12 Cal. 50; Nevada etc. Co. v. Kidd, 37 Cal. 309; and Mitchell v. Amador etc. Co., 75 Cal. 482, [17 Pac. 246]. These cases all involve water-rights existing prior to the enactment of the code in 1872, prescribing a statutory mode of acquiring a right to the use of running water. They lay down the rule that a right to the use of running water does not vest in possession at common law, until there has been an actual diversion and beneficial use of the water. But they all recognize, and some of them declare, that, before any actual diversion or use of the water, a claimant may acquire an incipient, incomplete, and conditional right to the future use of the water, by beginning the construction of the works necessary for such diversion and' use, and, in good faith, diligently prosecuting the same toward completion.

Thus, in Nevada Co. v. Kidd, 37 Cal. 310, referring to such an embryo claim to water and to a hostile use before its completion, the court says: “There is, in fact, as yet, no present water-right to be affected. The party has merely acquired the possession and site for his dam and canal, and a right, by diligently pursuing his object, to acquire a future right to the possession of the water, which, when acquired, shall, for the purposes of priority and of redressing any injuries that may thereafter acertie, date by relation from the first act in selecting the location and making the elaim.” (Italics ours.) Such claimant had no immediate right to the control or use of the water, because he was not yet ready to take it. And he had no right to damages from any one who used the water while he was making his dam and ditch. It does not follow, from this, that he had no right at *520 all. On the contrary, it was declared that as soon as he began work on his dam and ditch, with the avowed intent thereby to take and use the water, he acquired a prior right respecting the water. In Maeris v. Bicknell, 7 Cal 261, [68 Am. Dec. 257], the facts were that plaintiffs’ grantors, not intending to use the water, but for the purpose of draining it away from their mining claims, had constructed a ditch which carried the water away, but they had made no actual use of it. Meantime, defendants diverted the water above plaintiffs’ ditch and had used it. The court said: “Unless the grantors of plaintiff had constructed their ditch with the intention of using the water for mining or other useful purposes, or after its construction they had actually so applied it,- the defendants could not know that they ever would so apply it, or intended so to apply it. If, at the time plaintiffs’ ditch was made, such intention had existed and been avowed,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
119 P. 934, 161 Cal. 516, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 459, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inyo-consol-water-co-v-jess-cal-1911.