Mono Power Co. v. City of Los Angeles

284 F. 784, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2455
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 6, 1922
DocketNo. 3782
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 284 F. 784 (Mono Power Co. v. City of Los Angeles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mono Power Co. v. City of Los Angeles, 284 F. 784, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2455 (9th Cir. 1922).

Opinion

MORROW, Circuit Judge.

This is an action or proceeding brought by the defendants in error (plaintiffs in the court below) for the purpose of condemning certain land, water rights, and rights of way owned by the plaintiff in error the Southern Sierras Power Company (one of the defendants in the court below), situate in the east half of section 16, in township 5 south, range 31 east, Mt. Diablo base and meridian, in what is known as the Owens river gorge, in the county of Mono, state of California, for the use of the defendant in error the city of Eos Angeles, in the county of Eos Angeles.

The complaint as originally filed in the state court contained allegations usual in a bill for the condemnation of real property. It also contained allegations appropriate in an action to quiet title to certain other real property.

The first cause of action was for the condemnation of the property of the Southern Sierras Power Company, described as the east half of section 16, township 5 south, range 31 east, Mt. Diablo base and meridian; and the second was a cause of action to quiet title to the adjoining property described as section 9 in the same township, base, and meridian.

The defendants in error are citizens of the state of California, and the plaintiff in error the Southern Sierras Power Company is a citizen of the state of Wyoming. Upon this diverse citizenship the case was removed to the United States District Court for the Northern District of California.

[786]*786By reason of the separable controversy presented in the original complaint wherein the city of Bos Angeles seeks in equity to quiet title to its property in section 9, and by proceedings at law to condemn the property of the plaintiff in error in the east half of section 16, the defendants in error filed, in the United States District Court, their amended bill of complaint for the condemnation of the property of the plaintiff in error situate in section 16. This last-amended complaint states the cause of action now before the court.

The parties will hereafter be designated as in the court below — plaintiff for the city of Bos Angeles, and defendant for the Southern Sierras Power Company.

The allegations of the amended complaint are in substance as follows:

The plaintiff the city of Bos Angeles is a municipal corporation of the state of California, situate in the county of Bos Angeles.

That from time immemorial there has been, and now is, an unnavigable natural stream of water, commonly known and designated as “Owens river,” which has its source in the Sierra Nevada Mountains, in the county of Mono, state of California, and which flows in its natural channel in a general southeasterly direction and discharges into Owens Bake, in the county of Inyo, in said state.

That said Owens river, in its natural channel, flows down to and through the land sought to be condemned in this case.

That for more than a year prior to the commencement of this action, the said city of Bos Angeles had been operating and maintaining an electric system for generating, transmitting, and distributing electric energy for the use of the city of Bos Angeles and its inhabitants, furnishing approximately 40 per-cent, of the public street lighting of said city.

That it is necessary for the city to provide additional electric energy for the present and future needs of said city and its inhabitants for the purpose of heat, light, and power.

That in providing such additional electric energy, it is necessary, and the public interest and necessity require, that said city must take and condemn “all rights in or to the waters'of said Owens river flowing down to and through the aforesaid land or in any wise pertaining to said land, together with the right to divert, take, and store said water and utilize the same for the generation of electric energy”; also, a right of way and easement in, over, upon, and across that certain strip of land 200 feet wide, situate westerly from the Owens river on the east half of section 16 and extending from the northern to the southern boundary, for the purpose of constructing and operating tunnels, pipe lines, poles, wires, cables, etc., necessary for the transmission of the electric energy, together with all necessary means of ingress to and egress from said right of way.

That said public use and improvement is located in the manner which will be most compatible with the greatest public good and the least private injury, and the public use to which plaintiffs intend to apply the aforesaid property herein sought to be condemned is a more necessary use than that to which said defendants, or either of them, have appro-, priated or intend to appropriate the same.

[787]*787That on February 6, 1920, the Los Angeles city council and the board of public service commissioners adopted resolutions to the effect that it was for municipal purposes and the public interest to acquire such property by condemnation.

The prayer of the complaint is for a decree providing for such condemnation.

In their answer, defendants deny that the Mono Power Company is, or was at the time of the commencement of this action, the owner of the east half of section 16 above mentioned, b¡ut that the Southern Sierras Power Company had.been, since February 7, 1920, and was then, the owner of said land; deny that it was necessary for the city of Los Angeles to provide additional electric energy for the present and future needs of the city and its inhabitants; deny that it was necessary for the city to take and condemn the property and its water rights, the right to divert the waters of Owens river, or a right of way and easement over said land, or a right of ingress or egress to or from said land; deny that the property is so located that its application by the city to the public use mentioned in the complaint will be the most compatible with the greatest public good and the least private injury; deny that the use to which the city intends to apply the property is more necessary than the use to which it has already been appropriated by the plaintiffs in error.

Allege that all of the property herein sought to be condemned was, at the time of the commencement of this action, and ever since has been, and is now, appropriated to the use of the incorporated town of Bishop, situate in the county of Inyo, state of California, to the use of the incorporated cities and towns of San Bernardino, Redlands, and Rialto, situate in the county of San Bernardino, state of California, to the use of the incorporated cities and towns of Riverside, Corona, Perris, Hemet, San Jacinto, and Elsinore, in the county of Riverside, state of California, to the use of the incorporated cities and towns of El Centro, Calexico, Brawley, Holtville, Cahpatria, Imperial, and Niland, situate in the county of Imperial, state of California, and to the use of the following named municipal water districts, situate in the said county of Imperial, to wit: Imperial irrigation district No. 1 and Imperial irrigation district No. 2, and to the use of the inhabitants of each and all of the above-named cities and towns and to the use of each and all of the above-named counties and the inhabitants thereof.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
284 F. 784, 1922 U.S. App. LEXIS 2455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mono-power-co-v-city-of-los-angeles-ca9-1922.