Lagunitas Water Co. v. Marin Cty. Water Co.

125 P. 351, 163 Cal. 332, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 412
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 16, 1912
DocketS.F. No. 5778.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 125 P. 351 (Lagunitas Water Co. v. Marin Cty. Water Co.) 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
Lagunitas Water Co. v. Marin Cty. Water Co., 125 P. 351, 163 Cal. 332, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 412 (Cal. 1912).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from an order denying its application for an injunction pendente lite and dismissing the order to show cause why it should not be issued.

The application for the order was heard upon the complaint and affidavits produced on both sides.

The complaint alleged that plaintiff is the owner of an undivided one-third interest in a tract of land known as the *333 Berry Ranch, in Marin County (particularly described in the complaint) and that said tract is riparian to a natural watercourse known as Lagunitas Creek; that said creek rises upon the slope of Mount Tamalpais, flows thence in a northerly direction into the Lagunitas Reservoir owned by defendants, and thence through the premises of plaintiff for about seven miles; that the water of this creek at and above the easterly boundary line of the premises of plaintiff flows continuously during the year until the late dry season, .when the waters thereof above said point sink and flow underground, coming to the surface again upon the premises of the plaintiff; that said cr^ek, by itself and its tributaries, carries all the waters falling upon the watershed thereof east of the boundary line of the plaintiff, and all said waters falling upon said watershed are accustomed to flow in the channel of said Lagunitas Creek in well defined channels or tributaries thereof which join said Lagunitas Creek above where it enters the land of plaintiff at the eastern boundary thereof and upon and through the said premises of plaintiff; that said defendants have no right to the waters of said Lagunitas Creek other than the right to impound a sufficient quantity of said waters to fill said reservoir, known as the Lagunitas Reservoir, above referred to, which is situated near the headwaters of said creek; that defendants threaten to and will divert from said creek other waters than the said waters to which they are entitled as aforesaid unless restrained by decree of court.

It is then alleged generally that plaintiff has been greatly damaged and will be irreparably injured by the diversion of said waters by defendants.

A decree was asked establishing the right of plaintiff to the waters of said creek as a riparian owner; that defendants by final decree be perpetually enjoined from making such diversion or interfering with such right, and for a restraining order pendente lite.

On filing the complaint and an affidavit on behalf of plaintiff, an order to defendants to show cause why an injunction pendente lite should not issue was made. On the hearing thereof affidavits were presented on behalf of the respective parties. Those on behalf of plaintiff tended to support the allegations of the complaint, and averred that the particular method of diversion contemplated and threatened by defend *334 ants was the construction of a dam to bedrock across the creek near the eastern boundary of the lands of plaintiff for the purpose of impounding the waters of the creek, the effect of which construction, it was claimed in the affidavits, would be to prevent the flow of the water of the creek in its accustomed channel below the dam and on and through the premises of plaintiff.

The affidavits on behalf of defendants denied that the construction of the proposed dam was intended to or would divert any of the water of the Lagunitas Creek or its tributaries, or other waters than storm or freshet waters; averred that the Lagunitas Creek was not a living stream except during the winter or freshet season, and that shortly after the cessation of rains said creek above the site of the proposed dam became wholly dry; denied that any water of the Lagunitas Creek, at or above the point where the dam is proposed to be constructed, sinks or flows underground or comes to the surface on the land of plaintiff, but in fact that such waters as come to the surface on said land come from living springs thereon, the waters of which flow into the Lagunitas below the proposed dam site; further averred that if the waters above the dam were impounded there would still be at all times a sufficient water supply from the feeders upon the Berry Ranch to provide all the water for domestic, culinary, or irrigation purposes to which the owners thereof were entitled by virtue of their riparian rights.

In addition to affidavits of persons having official connection with the corporations plaintiff and defendant, there were also presented on behalf of either side the affidavits of expert civil and hydraulic engineers, who had examined the proposed dam site and the locality and water conditions surrounding it. Those offered by plaintiff supporting its claim that the watershed above the proposed dam site drained into the channel of the Lagunitas or into channels of streams tributary thereto and sunk, flowed underground and came again to the surface on the land of plaintiff, and that the construction of said proposed dam would cut off such flow through said lands, while those produced on the part of the defendants flatly denied the existence of any such conditions, or that the proposed dam could have that effect.

*335 In addition, defendants offered in evidence a conveyance made in 1871 by the predecessors in title of plaintiff to the defendant The Marin County Water Company, of certain tracts of land, one of which, designated and described as ‘‘ The Fish Gulch Tract,” was conveyed in fee. The other tracts were conveyed for a term of ten years, with the right, however, granted to said water company, for a period of fifty years, to divert and appropriate all waters flowing on the described tracts or in gulches or creeks therein. It was aserted by defendants that the waters which they intended to impound by their dam did not include any waters except such as flowed from the Fish Gulch Tract or catchment or surface waters on the tracts described in the above conveyance, and that as to those they were entitled to divert or impound them under the deed.

It is proper to say as to this deed, appellant claimed that it did not convey the lands where defendants contemplated constructing their dam, nor confer any rights to divert the water at that point.

Upon a hearing the only damage or injury which it was claimed plaintiff would sustain, unless defendants were restrained during the pendency of the action, was with respect to a tenant of plaintiff who had rented and was in possession of a portion of the land of plaintiff for dairy purposes and had about eighty head of cattle on the premises. It was averred as to such tenant that during the dry months of the year, from about July to December, he depended upon the waters of the Lagunitas Creek flowing through the dairy premises for his stock, and that if the construction of the proposed dam was not restrained said tenant would be deprived of the use of said waters for such purpose. It was not claimed that any of the waters of the creek were being used, or ever had been used, to irrigate any of the lands of the plaintiff, or for any other purpose than watering cattle.

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Bluebook (online)
125 P. 351, 163 Cal. 332, 1912 Cal. LEXIS 412, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lagunitas-water-co-v-marin-cty-water-co-cal-1912.