Mammoth Gold Dredging Co. v. Forbes

104 P.2d 131, 39 Cal. App. 2d 739, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 466
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 1, 1940
DocketCiv. 6457
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 104 P.2d 131 (Mammoth Gold Dredging Co. v. Forbes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mammoth Gold Dredging Co. v. Forbes, 104 P.2d 131, 39 Cal. App. 2d 739, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 466 (Cal. Ct. App. 1940).

Opinion

THOMPSON, J.

The defendants have appealed from a judgment which was rendered against them in a suit quieting title to a tract of land consisting of eight acres of the Yuba River bed at a point about fifteen miles northeast of Marysville. The land was purchased for placer mining purposes. The deed was executed in October, 1914, and described the premises as “lying and being between the present high water mark on the right bank of the Yuba River and the center of said river commencing with the south boundary line of Sec *742 tion Number Twenty-one (21) in township number sixteen (16) North, of Range number six (6) East M. D. B. and M. and running to the southerly line of the Havey claim (also known as the Mt. Clair Placer Claim) situate in said Section number twenty-one (21) the length of the land hereby .conveyed being 1320 feet in length, more or less”. There was then a clear high water mark visible along the base of the permanent red earth bank of the river on the east.

The questions to be determined on this appeal are: 1. Did the grantor intend by the language of the deed to bound the demised land on the east by the permanent, perpendicular, high, red earth bank which extends along the margin of the clearly-defined gravel bed of the river, or by the temporary five-foot gravel bank adjacent to the diminished summer flow of the stream Í 2. By the use of the term “present high water mark on the right bank” did he intend to convey land to the clearly-defined water mark which was then visible on that bank, or only to a theoretical average high water mark of the river?

The appellants contend that the findings'and judgment are not supported by the evidence.

The Yuba River rises in the Sierra Nevadas and flows southwesterly into the Feather River in the vicinity of Marysville. It is a typical California mountain stream with a variable volume of water, depending upon the seasons and the amount of rainfall and melted snow which are supplied from its watershed. The river is at its highest level in the winter and spring months when the rain and the melted snow are running off. For many decades this river has annually carried great quantities of water as indicated by its permanent high banks and by the depth and broad expanse of the river bed. In the vicinity of the property in question the river bed is from 400 to 1,000 feet in width and is composed of a deep layer of sand, gravel and boulders containing Piedmont Deposit from which a considerable quantity of gold has been extracted by placer mining enterprises since the pioneer days of California. That gravel bed is 30 or 40 feet in depth. The stream frequently changes its course along the river bed in the dry months of the summer when the water is low. During that period of time the summer flow of water often forms temporary gravel banks along the *743 course of the stream eight or ten feet in height. Those temporary banks are usually washed away by the force of the greater volume of water during the wet seasons. The river, at its highest level, fills the entire channel from the red earth bank on one side of the stream to the bank on the other side. These permanent banks rise almost perpendicularly from the outer edges of the gravel bed to a height of 30 feet or more.

As the river reaches a point just west of the line between Nevada and Yuba Counties, where the town of Smart-ville is located, it makes an abrupt turn to the north for a distance of about a mile, describing a U-shaped curve called the Timbuctoo Bend, and then returns to its original southwesterly course, flowing into the Feather Biver at Marysville. The land which is involved in this suit is located about fifteen miles northeast of Marysville and consists of eight acres of the river bed on the easterly side thereof just beyond the turn of its course to the north, at Smartville. The land is adjacent to the southerly line of section 21, and extends northerly therefrom a distance of 1320 feet, thence westerly to the thread of the stream and back to the point of beginning. It is bounded along the easterly side by the visible high water mark on the base of the permanent perpendicular red earth bank of the river. The plaintiff owns all of the land on the westerly side of the river, opposite the land in question and there is therefore no dispute regarding that western line of the property. The entire controversy is over what constituted the “present high water mark on the right bank of the Yuba Biver” when the deed was executed in October, 1914.

The cause was tried by the court sitting without a jury. Findings were adopted favorable to the plaintiff in every essential respect. A decree was accordingly rendered quieting title in the plaintiff to the strip of land which is described in the findings and judgment by metes and bounds, extending to the visible high water mark on the base of the permanent red earth bank on the eastern side of the river. From that judgment the defendants have appealed.

The findings and judgment are adequately supported by the evidence.

Colonel E. A. Forbes, now deceased, the grantor of the placer mining property in question, was a lawyer of some promi *744 nenee, a member of the legislature and the owner of extensive grazing and farming lands in that locality. The gravel flat was purchased for placer mining dredging purposes. Other similar enterprises of that nature had been previously conducted in the bed of the Yuba River in that vicinity. We must presume that Colonel Forbes as a lawyer understood the legal meaning of the phrase, “present high water mark on the right bank” which he used in the deed. There can be no doubt the parties to that deed intended that conveyance to extend along the easterly side to the visible high water mark on the base of the permanent bank of the Yuba River, and not merely to the temporary five-foot gravel bank near the middle of the river bed which confined the greatly-diminished summer flow of water. The very purpose for which the land was purchased is proof of that fact. The flat expanse of that river bed was to be dredged for gold. At the location in question the summer stream followed closely the permanent river bank on the west side. The plaintiff owned the land on the western side of that stream. Most of the bare gravel bed which was then desirable for placer mining was located on the easterly side of the summer stream, which was then quite narrow. If the easterly line of the purchased property was to. extend only to the high water mark on the temporary gravel bank of the summer stream, then the plaintiff secured only a very narrow and comparatively useless strip of land for mining purposes. Moreover, the reservations in the deed refute that unreasonable theory. The grantor reserved the right to dig and maintain a canal “along the . . . right bank of the river on said (demised) land”, as a means of disposing of excess water used in operating an upper placer claim. At that location the summer stream flowed close to the westerly bank of the river. Almost the entire uncovered portion of the gravel bed at that point, which was over 400 feet in width, lay between the channel of the summer stream and the permanent bank of the river on the east.

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Bluebook (online)
104 P.2d 131, 39 Cal. App. 2d 739, 1940 Cal. App. LEXIS 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mammoth-gold-dredging-co-v-forbes-calctapp-1940.