Mojave River Irrigation District v. Superior Court of San Bernardino County

262 P. 724, 202 Cal. 717, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 417
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1927
DocketDocket No. L.A. 9943.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 262 P. 724 (Mojave River Irrigation District v. Superior Court of San Bernardino County) 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
Mojave River Irrigation District v. Superior Court of San Bernardino County, 262 P. 724, 202 Cal. 717, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 417 (Cal. 1927).

Opinion

RICHARDS, J.

This is an application for a writ of prohibition directed to the respondents herein, the Superior Court of San Bernardino County and the judges thereof, preventing further action in a proceeding instituted in said *720 court under the provisions of section lb of the Water Commission Act (Stats. 1923, p. 162) for the purpose of a review of a certain order of the division of water rights, provided for in said act, granting to the Mojave Biver Irrigation District a permit to appropriate water from the Mojave Biver. The title of said proceeding was “Van Dyke et als., plaintiffs, vs. Department of Public Works etc. et als., defendants.” The so-called plaintiffs in said proceeding consisted of a large number of persons and corporations or associations claiming prior rights as riparian owners, or appropriators or adverse claimants to the recipient of said permit, and who were seeking, by said proceeding, to have said court review and reverse or modify the order of said division of water rights granting such permit. The defendants, so called, in such proceeding were the department of public works, the director of public works, the chief of division of water rights, operative institutions or individuals under said act; and in addition to these the Mojave Biver Irrigation District, the recipient of such permit. The sole authority under which the plaintiffs, so called, in said proceeding in the Superior Court were acting in instituting, and under which said court was acting in entertaining the same, is expressly pleaded as being derived from the provisions of said section lb of said act; and the sole question presented to this court for determination in the instant proceeding is that of the constitutionality of said secetion lb of said act. There is involved in this question, however, certain preliminary considerations, to which we shall first address ourselves.

The Water Commission Act, so called, was adopted by the legislature in the year 1913 (Stats. 1913, p. 1012). By the provisions of that act a state water commission was created and invested with the powers and duties prescribed therein. Among the powers with which the state water commission was thus entrusted was the power, conferred by sections 15, 16, and 17 of said act, of granting permits for the appropriation of unappropriated water flowing or existing in the streams, lakes, or other bodies of water within the state of California, upon proper application for such permits, and which permits when granted should give to the applicants thereof certain priorities as to the use of the water thus permitted to be appropriated upon compliance *721 with the provisions of section 18 of said act relative to the commencement, prosecution, and completion of such construction work as was required therein in order to render available the use or uses of the waters thus to be appropriated. The nature and scope of the powers thus conferred upon the said water commission came under review before this court in the case of Tulare Water Co. v. State Water Com., 187 Cal. 533 [202 Pac. 874], wherein this court was called upon to consider the question as to whether the said water commission, in the attempted exercise of the aforesaid powers in the granting or refusal of permits for the appropriation of water, was acting in a judicial or administrative capacity. The question was directly presented to the superior court when, upon the denial by the state water commission of an application for a permit to appropriate water from the Kern River for the purpose of irrigating agricultural lands, made to it by the Tulare Water Company, the latter presented to said court two applications for peremptory writs—one for a writ of review and the other for a writ of mandate. When said court denied both writs, appeals were taken upon both applications to the appellate court, from the decision of which, in both matters, the questions presented therein were in due course transferred to this court for determination. In a well-considered opinion, written by Mr. Justice Sloa.ne, it was decided that the powers with which the state water commission was invested under the foregoing provisions of the act in question, and the various amendments thereto made up to that time, were purely administrative and not judicial in character. As a result of this conclusion the writ of review was denied and the writ of mandate granted. In the concurring opinion of Mr. Justice Shaw the fundamental basis of this conclusion was tersely shown to rest upon the provisions of section 1 of article VI of the state constitution, whereby the entire judicial power of the state is solely vested in the judicial tribunals designated in said section; and as a result of which it is not within the power of the legislature to invest any other body with judicial power to establish and declare the right and title to private property. The decision of this court in that case has been consistently followed in the later eases, and particularly in the case of Department of Public Works v. Superior Court, *722 197 Cal. 215 [239 Pac. 1076], wherein a writ of prohibition was sought and issued in this court to prevent the superior court of the county of Siskiyou from entertaining a writ of certiorari for the purpose of reviewing certain proceedings taken by one of the divisions of the department of public works under the provisions of section 12' of said act, the action of this court in the issuance of said writ being expressly based upon its former decision in the case of Tulare Water Co. v. State Water Com., supra, and upon the concurring opinion of Mr. Justice Shaw in that case. The most recent expression of this court touching this subject is to be found in the case of Bank of Italy v. Johnson, 200 Cal. 1 [251 Pac. 784], wherein the principle declared in the foregoing decisions is fully approved. From these foregoing recent decisions of this court two conclusions may be said to be fully and firmly established. They are, that the powers with which the state water commission and the several departments and divisions thereof were invested under the Water Commission Act of 1913, and the later amendment thereto with relation to the issuance of permits or the denial thereof for the appropriation of water, were purely and wholly administrative and were not judicial in their character and exercise; second, that the courts of this state possessed no power to review the said acts of the water commission or any of its departments through the ordinary process or proceeding of a writ of review, as such writ is provided for in the state constitution and is defined and limited by the provisions of section 1067 et seq. of the Code of Civil Procedure. We do not deem it necessary in this case to enter upon a consideration or attempted differentiation between the foregoing cases and certain other decisions of this court having reference to the issuance of writs of review with respect to a limited class of proceedings of certain other subordinate departments of the state government with relation to the acts of which writs of review have been at times issued. It suffices here to say that as to the state water commission the foregoing decisions have foreclosed further discussion of the two propositions above referred to as decided therein.

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Bluebook (online)
262 P. 724, 202 Cal. 717, 1927 Cal. LEXIS 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mojave-river-irrigation-district-v-superior-court-of-san-bernardino-county-cal-1927.