McFarland v. Superior Court

228 P. 1033, 194 Cal. 407, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 247
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 11, 1924
DocketS. F. No. 11041.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 228 P. 1033 (McFarland v. Superior Court) 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
McFarland v. Superior Court, 228 P. 1033, 194 Cal. 407, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 247 (Cal. 1924).

Opinion

LAWLOR, J.

This is an application for a writ of review of an order adjudging petitioners, who are, respectively, the officers and attorney of the Tranquility Irrigation District, guilty of contempt of court for the violation of a judgment of injunction issued by respondent court in a proceeding instituted therein and entitled “Miller & Lux Incorporated, a corporation, and the San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Company Incorporated, a corporation, v. J. G. James Company, a corporation, and the San Joaquin Valley Farm Lands Company, a corporation, No. 2006 of the files of said court.”

On August 14, 1923, the affidavit of W. H. Trump, the secretary of the San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Company, a corporation, was filed in the superior court of the state of California, in and for the county of Merced. This affidavit alleged that on the eighth day of January, 1917, the above-entitled court made and entered its final judgment in an action in which Miller & Lux Incorporated, a corporation, and the San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Company Incorporated, a corporation, were plaintiffs and J. G. James Company and the San Joaquin Valley Farm Lands Company, a corporation, were defendants; that said judgment has ever since said day been and now is in full force and effect; that by said judgment the San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Company Incorporated, a corporation, was entitled to take and divert from the San Joaquin River thirteen hundred and sixty (1360) cubic feet of water flowing therein per second at the head of its main and outside canals situated in the county of Fresno near the confluence of the San Joaquin River and Fresno Slough, and that by said judgment the defendants *410 and all' of the agents and attorneys thereof and all successors and assigns of the said defendants were forever enjoined, restrained, and strictly prohibited from pumping, taking, or diverting any of the waters of the San Joaquin River or any of the water of the San Joaquin River being or flowing in Fresno Slough from the channels of said river or slough until the said plaintiff, the San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Company, shall have received into the head of its canals thirteen hundred and sixty (1360) cubic feet of water; that the defendants, the J. Gr. James Company and San Joaquin Valley Farm Lands Company, a corporation, formed an irrigation district known as the Tranquility Irrigation District and conveyed to it all the canals, pumps, and works owned by them in the San Joaquin River or in Fresno Slough, and that the Tranquility Irrigation District is the successor and assignee of the defendants ; that the officers of the Tranquility Irrigation District had notice of the entry and existence of this decree and the terms thereof; that on the ninth, tenth, and eleventh days of August, 1923, “there was less than thirteen hundred and sixty (1360) cubic feet of water flowing per second in the San Joaquin River and Fresno Slough to the heads of said plaintiff’s canals,” and that the Tranquility Irrigation District on those days knowingly and intentionally took and pumped a large quantity of water of the San Joaquin River then flowing in Fresno Slough, well knowing that the plaintiff was not receiving and could not receive into its canals the quantity of water so adjudged to it and well knowing that the taking of the said water prevented the said plaintiff from taking, diverting, and using the quantity of water adjudged to it as aforesaid.

Upon this affidavit the trial court issued an order to show cause and ordering the Tranquility Irrigation District and its officers and attorney to appear before the court on September 4, 1923, to show cause why they should not be adjudged guilty of contempt and punished accordingly.

On September 4, 1923, the said R. C. McFarland, the engineer and superintendent of the Tranquility Irrigation District, filed his affidavit stating that the Tranquility Irrigation District takes its water from the Kings River and from the Fresno Slough; that the water diverted from the Kings River during a portion of the season is diverted by gravity, *411 and during another portion of the season the water used by the district is pumped from the Fresno Slough; that during the last two or three years the district has modified the diverting system from the Kings River so that the amount of water coming into Fresno Slough has been materially increased; that at all times and at the present time there is coming into the Fresno Slough above the point where the district pumps large amounts of water from sources other than the San Joaquin River; that the level of underground water, or the water-table, has been raised so that at the present time the surface of the water in Fresno Slough is only 0.80 hundredths of a foot above the water level; that the pumping of the Tranquility Irrigation District does not affect the flow of the water at the head of the canal of the San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Company; that every indication is that the water which would be pumped by the Tranquility Irrigation District is water coming from sources other than the San Joaquin River, and that the supply of water has been increased and developed by the action of the Tranquility Irrigation District; that the said district, in response to the demands of the plaintiffs, ceased to pump on the fourteenth day of August, 1923, and is not now pumping; that large amounts of water are being diverted into canals higher up the river than the intake of the canal of the San Joaquin & Kings River Canal Company, and higher up than the pumping plant of the Tranquility Irrigation District, which .said canals are owned and controlled by the plaintiffs; that the intake of the San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Company has been examined and that said canal is not taking all of the water flowing in the river, but a very considerable amount of water is flowing past said intake and on down the San Joaquin River, and that a large portion of the water diverted into said canal is being apparently wasted and turned out to flood grass land.

The answer of the said R. C. McFarland, W. A. Draper, the general manager and a member of the board of directors, respectively, of the district, and L. L. Dennett, the attorney thereof, denies that the district or the officers or attorney thereof violated the decree of the court, that the pumping by the district has in any way affected the flow of water to the canal of the San Joaquin & Kings River *412 Canal & Irrigation Company Incorporated, and alleges that as soon as they were notified that the water in the river had fallen below 1360 cubic feet per second the Tranquility Irrigation District ceased to pump; that the demand made by the San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irrigation Company was malicious and without any foundation, and that the Tranquility Irrigation District, in ceasing to pump in accordance with such demand, has suffered damage in an amount in excess of $100,000.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
228 P. 1033, 194 Cal. 407, 1924 Cal. LEXIS 247, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcfarland-v-superior-court-cal-1924.