McKissick Cattle Co. v. Alsaga

182 P. 793, 41 Cal. App. 380, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 379
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJune 5, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 1821.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 182 P. 793 (McKissick Cattle Co. v. Alsaga) 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
McKissick Cattle Co. v. Alsaga, 182 P. 793, 41 Cal. App. 380, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 379 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

HART, J.

This action was instituted by the plaintiff to enjoin the defendant from maintaining ón certain of the plaintiff’s lands a dam and a ditch, whereby water is diverted from Secret Creek to the lands of the defendant.

Findings and judgment were in favor of the plaintiff, and this appeal is prosecuted by the defendant from said judgment.

The plaintiff claims the exclusive right to all the waters flowing in said creek, both as a riparian owner and as an appropriator, and sets up both those claims in two different causes of action. The defendant, besides specifically denying by answer all the material facts alleged in the complaint, filed a cross-complaint, in which he sets up a claim to fifty inches of the water of the creek, measured under a four-inch pressure, by virtue of appropriation and also by prescription.

The facts, as disclosed by the findings, are these: The plaintiff is the owner of a little more than a quarter-section of land in township 26 and a number of other quarter-sections in township 32, in Lassen County, and has been the owner of said lands for many years. The waters of Secret Creek, above mentioned, in a well-defined channel, between well-defined banks, flow over and across said lands, the latter being, therefore, riparian thereto and susceptible of irrigation from the waters thereof. All the waters of said stream are necessary for the irrigation of said lands for the purpose ■ of growing crops thereon.

More than twenty-five years prior to the commencement of this action a grantor of plaintiff appropriated all of the waters of said stream by constructing dams in the channel thereof at various places in and upon said stream and constructing ditches leading from said dams to and upon said lands, and for more than twenty-five years prior to the institution of this action the plaintiff and its said grantor have appropriated and diverted, by the means above indicated, all of the waters of said stream and, except when *382 interfered .with by defendant, have continuously used said waters for the irrigation of crops of hay and grasses for pasture standing and growing on said lands; that, inasmuch as the climate of that section of the state in which said lands are situated is arid, it is absolutely necessary and, in fact, indispensable to the growing of hay and grasses on the lands of plaintiff to irrigate the same, and that properly to irrigate said lands, or so that they will produce crops of hay and grasses, it is necessary for plaintiff to use all of the waters of said stream. . ■ ,

The defendant is, and for more than ten years prior to the beginning of this action had been, the owner and in the possession of fractional portions of certain sections, in quantity amounting in the aggregate to a quarter-section, in said township 32. Over a corner of the said lands of the defendant the creek above mentioned traversed, and the said lands, although (as the court found) riparian to said creek, are not susceptible of irrigation from the waters of said creek without the necessity of going upon the lands of plaintiff for the purpose of diverting the waters from the stream to the lands of defendant by the construction and' maintenance of a dam on plaintiff’s lands and constructing and maintaining a ditch leading from such dam to defendant’s lands.

As above stated, the defendant in his cross-complaint claimed title to fifty inches of the waters of the creek by appropriation and prescription, and in this behalf alleged that in the year 1894 one Edward W. Tregaski, a grantor of defendant, at a time when said Tregaski was the owner of defendant’s lands, constructed a ditch at a certain point on plaintiff’s land connecting with Secret Creek and leading to defendant’s lands, and thereby appropriated and diverted to the latter lands fifty inches of the watehs of said stream “for a useful and beneficial purpose”; that at the time of the appropriation so made such waters were unappropriated and unclaimed waters flowing in said stream, and that said appropriation was made “peaceably, quietly, and without objection or interference by the owners of said lands upon which said diversion was made”; that ever since the time of said diversion, in the year 1894, the defendant’s said grantor and the defendant have continuously, in each and every year thereafter and until the year 1915, appropriated, diverted, and used fifty inches of said waters, meas *383 ured under a four-inch pressure, for the necessary irrigation of crops of hay, grain, and grasses growing upon defendant’s lands. It is then averred that in the month of April, 1915, the plaintiff willfully, wrongfully, and without right and against the consent of defendant, constructed a dam in said creek at the point where the ditch leading to defendant’s land tapped said creek, and by means thereof and a ditch constructed by said plaintiff turned the waters of said stream away from the defendant’s lands on to the lands of plaintiff, thereby depriving defendant of any use of the waters of said creek, etc.

As to the above allegations of defendant’s cross-complaint, the court, after finding that said Tregaski did not in the year 1894, or at any other time, build the ditch referred to or otherwise make an appropriation of any of' the waters of said stream to be used on defendant’s lands or for any purpose, further found:

“That prior to the winter of 1913 and 1914, there was an ancient channel heading upon the lands of plaintiff, lying on said stream above the lands of defendant, and that said ancient channel caught up the waste waters from the said lands of plaintiff so lying above on said stream, as aforesaid, and said Tregaski did construct a ditch from said ancient channel to and upon defendant’s said lands, and said Tregaski and said defendant down to the winter of said years 1913 and 1914, used the waters of said ancient channel and ditch as the same wasted or flowed from the said lands of plaintiff, situated on said stream above said lands of defendant, that, in the winter of the years 1913 and 1914, the natural channel of said stream, by reason of unusual flood or freshet, washed out to such an extent that no water would or could flow from said stream to the lands of defendant, or to the head of said ancient channel, except by defendant constructing a ditch over the lands of plaintiff on said stream, and above the lands of defendant, and constructing a dam in the channel of said stream on the lands of plaintiff in the channel of said stream above the said lands of defendant.
‘1 That in the year 1914, after said flood or freshet, defendant, for the pui'pose of causing the water of said stream to flow into said ancient channel, willfully and unlawfully, and without right, and without the consent of plaintiff, entered *384 upon the west half of the northeast quarter of said section 26, township and range aforesaid, and erected a new dam in the channel of said stream and constructed a new ditch leading from said dam upon and across a portion of the said west half of the northeast quarter of section 26, and to lands occupied and claimed by defendant lying west of said lands, and said defendant now claims the right to maintain said dam in the channel of said stream, and to maintain said ditch and take water therethrough across a portion of the said lands of plaintiff,- to and upon lands so claimed and occupied by defendant.”

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Bluebook (online)
182 P. 793, 41 Cal. App. 380, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 379, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mckissick-cattle-co-v-alsaga-calctapp-1919.