Lindsay-Strathmore Irrigation Dist. v. Superior Court of Tulare Cty.

187 P. 1056, 182 Cal. 315, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 518
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 20, 1920
DocketSac. No. 2983.
StatusPublished
Cited by91 cases

This text of 187 P. 1056 (Lindsay-Strathmore Irrigation Dist. v. Superior Court of Tulare Cty.) 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
Lindsay-Strathmore Irrigation Dist. v. Superior Court of Tulare Cty., 187 P. 1056, 182 Cal. 315, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 518 (Cal. 1920).

Opinions

SHAW, J.

—This is a proceeding in prohibition begun in this court to prevent further proceedings in an action pending before Judge Wallace in the superior court of Tulare County wherein Tulare Irrigation District and many others, corporations and individuals, are plaintiffs and LindsayStrathmore Irrigation District is defendant.

The ground of this proceeding, stated generally, is that by reason of the ownership by Judge Wallace of a certain lot of land 85 feet by 123 feet in size situated in the city of Visalia, the action is one “in which he is interested” and consequently one in which, under the provisions of section *318 170 of the Code of Civil Procedure, he is forbidden to sit or act as judge.

Said action was begun in said superior court on July 16, 1916, and it has proceeded to trial before Judge Wallace, who has signed and filed his decision in writing, stating his findings of fact and conclusions of law upon the issues in the case. It is alleged that he has been the owner of said lot for more than thirty years last past and still remains such owner; that it is situated over subterranean waters which add substantial value to the said lot, and that the judgment sought by the plaintiffs in the action will have the effect of protecting his interest as owner of said lot in the waters underlying the same. The defendant in the .action is engaged in [ramping water from land, which pumping operations plaintiffs- seek to enjoin, and it is claimed that said pumping will deplete the subterranean waters under said lot in the same manner as it will deplete the subterranean waters under the plaintiffs’ land and which the plaintiffs by said action are attempting' to preserve undiminished. If this claim is well founded, a judgment enjoining such pumping operations would protect the rights in said subterranean waters pertaining to said lot as fully as it would protect the rights of plaintiffs in the action, and under our decisions its claim that the judge is “interested” within the meaning of section 170 aforesaid would be well founded. (North Bloomfield etc. Co. v. Keyser, 58 Cal. 315.) The. question whether or not the judge is so interested in that action must be determined by a consideration,of the allegations of the complaint in the action. It will be necessary to set forth at some length the facts alleged.

The Kaweah River has its sources in the west slope of the Sierra Nevada Mountains in the eastern part of the county of Tulare. It flows down the" mountain slopes and reaches the plains at a point known as McKay Point, where it divides into several channels extending westerly from McKay Point for many miles, forming a fan-shaped comparatively level area containing many thousands of acres, which for brevity we designate as the Kaweah delta. With respect to this Kaweah delta, the complaint contains the following allegation:

“That upon said tract of land extending from said McKay Point, as hereinbefore alleged the said upper Kaweah *319 River Channel has from time immemorial deposited and distributed, and does now, by means of said channels and subterranean flow, deposit and distribute its waters thereon, in consequence of which vegetation has sprung up, agricultural products have been produced in large quantities, and upon which tract are located the cities of Visalia and Tulare, and other towns, and many hundreds of farms upon which are growing fruit trees, timber, alfalfa, and other agricultural crops, and upon which there are many thousands of people, and large numbers of live stock; that all of said farms and lands have required and do now require the whole of the waters of said Kaweah River, both surface and subterranean flow, for the irrigation thereof, and for moistening and keeping the same supplied with moisture from the underground flow thereof, and for watering live stock thereon, and for domestic and other beneficial uses of the persons residing thereon; that even during very wet or flood seasons, which occur but seldom, all of said surface and underground flow is needed and required for said tract of land, for the purposes above alleged.’-’

Also the following: “That at all times during the irrigation of lands in said tract or during times of growing crops or grasses thereon, or in the use thereof, the underground flow from said Kaweah River is necessary to furnish a foundation for the surface waters flowing in said channels and to keep up the supply thereof, and to hold up the underground water table beneath the surface of said lands, in order to make the same productive; that any lowering of said water table or underground flow during such time will greatly diminish the productive qualities of said land and also diminish the amount of surface water carried, during said time, in said channels.” (Italics ours.)

The land lying on the northerly and southerly sides of said Kaweah delta tract is slightly higher and is composed of more impervious material than that in said delta, so that the surface and underground flow of said Kaweah River is confined to said Kaweah delta tract. The waters of said river penetrate into and completely fill the lands of said Kaweah delta tract down to bedrock the whole width of said tract. In some places and at some times these waters appear as surface streams, but whether high enough to form such streams or not, they move down always as an under *320 ground supply slowly southwesterly toward the westerly portion of said tract.

The several plaintiffs respectively own various tracts of land situated in said delta and divers ditches and water rights pertaining to their lands, and rights to take water from the said streams, and they use the waters of the branches of said Kaweah River as aforesaid to irrigate lands within said delta and for domestic use thereon. Some of these water rights are rights by appropriation only and others are rights pertaining to the land as riparian to one or the other of said streams. Certain of said plaintiffs owning land riparian to some one of the said streams have for many years past maintained upon their respective tracts of land wells and pumping plants by means of which ■ each of them has at all times pumped and used water from said underground supply aforesaid for. irrigation, domestic, and other purposes. The lands of said plaintiffs so pumping water require the underflow of said Kaweah River underneath said land for irrigation and domestic use thereof, and the whole thereof is necessary to pass by and through said lands for said purposes. The whole of the said underground flow is necessary to support and to supply the surface streams from which the plaintiff^ divert water for irri- . gation and other uses. All of the lands of the plaintiffs are situated within said Kaweah delta and below the point therein wherein said defendant’s pumping plant now to be ‘ mentioned is situated.

The Lindsay-Strathmore Irrigation District is a public corporation organized under the act of 1897 and amendments thereto. (Stats. 1897, p. 254.). The area of the land embraced in said district is about fourteen thousand acres. It is situated about twelve miles southerly of McKay Point and the lands within its limits are higher in elevation than those of the Kaweah delta. It was organized to obtain water and furnish the same to the lands within its limits for the irrigation thereof.

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Bluebook (online)
187 P. 1056, 182 Cal. 315, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 518, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lindsay-strathmore-irrigation-dist-v-superior-court-of-tulare-cty-cal-1920.