Jones v. Van Nuys

118 P. 541, 161 Cal. 158, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 409
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 13, 1911
DocketL.A. No. 2688.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 118 P. 541 (Jones v. Van Nuys) 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
Jones v. Van Nuys, 118 P. 541, 161 Cal. 158, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 409 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment entered against him after demurrer sustained to his amended complaint.

Kate W. Dobbins is made a party defendant under an allegation that she is a proper party plaintiff who refused to join with plaintiff as such and hence is made a defendant. No relief is asked against her, the real parties to the action being the plaintiff and the defendant I. N. Van Nuys.

The complaint alleged the making of a contract, or water deed, on June 3, 1880, between James Foord of the first part and William H. Stephens, Kate W. Dobbins, Henry P. Tallant, *160 and V. S. Owen, of the second part, and the instrument was set out in full in the complaint.

It provided that in consideration of certain amounts of money which had been paid by the parties of the second part to the agreement, to said Foord (Stephens, $2000; Kate W. Dobbins $1714.28, and Tallant and Owen jointly $2285.73) “the said Foord does hereby grant, bargain, sell, and convey to the said parties of the second part, to be owned and held and enjoyed by them in proportion to their said respective payments and to their heirs, representatives, and assigns forever, all the water now flowing and hereafter to flow from three wells located on said grantor Foord’s land in said county and hereinafter described (5 acres) the said wells being each found by driving into the ground an iron pipe of seven inches in diameter. Also the full and perfect right to conduct the water from said wells by means of pipes which shall be inserted into the said wells at a point not less than two feet nor more than three feet below the surface of the groirnd immediately around such well, and which conducting pipes shall be so inserted or attached as not to interfere with the free use of a sand pump in said wells, and as not to create a siphon.”

Then follow provisions granting the right to the second parties to conduct their water-pipes to their tracts of land through the land of Foord, but at their own expense, and other provisions regarding said pipes, their repair and removal at the expense of the grantees all immaterial to the question of the construction of the contract here involved, so far as requiring any detailed statement.

It is then further provided in the contract that: “The grantor stipulates and covenants that the total quantity of water flowing from said three wells measures at this date more than 110,000 gallons in each successive twenty-four hours (measured by cubic feet and the gallon estimated at 231 cubic inches) and for himself, his heirs, representatives, and assigns, he covenants and agrees with the grantees, their heirs, representatives, and assigns, that if at any time or times hereafter the water flowing from said wells shall so decrease as to measure less than 105,000 gallons in each period of twenty-four hours and shall so continue for a period of thirty days, he and his said heirs, representatives,' and assigns shall and will from the water rising or flowing from or upon said five acres, or *161 that can be developed or obtained from said five acres, immediately and at the expense of said grantor, his heirs, representatives, and assigns, increase the stream of water for the grantees to the flow of 110,000 gallons in each period of twenty-four hours so as to deliver to them the quantity stipulated for. But the grantor, his heirs, representatives, and assigns shall not be obliged to furnish and deliver to the grantees more than two thirds of all the water that may be flowing on or from said five acres, or that can be developed or obtained by putting down as many wells as can be safely made without interfering one with another, and to a depth of from twenty to fifty foot, at least one half of said wells to be fifty feet deep. Provided, however, that if at any time or times hereafter one third of all the water flowing or developed or to be developed in the manner aforesaid, and at the expense of the grantor, shall still fall short of 110,000 gallons in each twenty-four hours, and the grantor shall fail to furnish the grantees that quantity, then the grantees shall have the right to demand that of the said wells then on the said five-acre tract one or more shall be so deepened as to obtain such supply for the grantees and one third of the expense thus incurred shall be paid by the grantees, and the remainder by the grantor, And if in such case the- grantor shall fail or refuse to make such deepening as would be necessary to furnish the grantees with the said 110,000 gallons in twenty-four hours, then the grantees shall have the right to enter upon said five acres audio make said deepening, and two thirds of the expense thereof shall be adjudged a legal charge against the grantor, his heirs, representatives, and assigns to the extent of the value of the said five acres of land and no further, and against said five acres of land and against whomsoever shall own the same or any part thereof and to the same extent and no further. And all the water so added to the flow up to the said 110,000 gallons for each twenty-four hours shall go and belong to the grantees, their heirs, representatives, and assigns in like manner and in the same proportions as the original quantity heretofore conveyed in the operative part of this conveyance. The grantor shall bear the expense of'removing from said wells all accumulations of sand so far as may be necessary or desirable and of repairing and removing and renewing the pipes forming said wells, whenever necessary, and he shall do said *162 repairing, removing and renewing whenever necessary to the preservation of the flow of water.”

Foord then covenants that all the property interests and rights conveyed to the parties of the second part and stipulations in their favor shall survive and pass to their heirs, representatives, and assigns; that the covenants and stipulations shall run with the said five acres of land and are declared a burden thereon and in whomsoever’s hands the same may come, and that all persons who take said five acres, or any part thereof, shall be held personally responsible to the extent of the value of said five acres herein charged with the performance of all the covenants and stipulations made in favor of the parties of the second part. Then follows a description of the five acres of land, referred to as wholly swamp, with a particular description by monuments and distances of the exact location on the tract of the three wells mentioned in the contract or deed, followed by a final provision therein that the parties of the second part mentioned as grantees shall take as between themselves, their proper interests as tenants in common and not as partners, and in proportion to their said payments—Stephens seven twenty-first parts, Dobbins six twenty-first parts, and Tallant and Owen the remaining eight twenty-first parts.

The complaint after alleging that the contract above referred to was duly acknowledged by the parties thereto and recorded, proceeds to allege that plaintiff is, and for more than four years has been, the assignee of the interest therein reserved to said Henry P. Tallant and V. S. Owen, and to six seventeenths of the interest of said Kate W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
118 P. 541, 161 Cal. 158, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 409, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-van-nuys-cal-1911.