Monolith Cement Co. v. Mojave PU Dist.

154 Cal. App. 2d 487
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 17, 1957
DocketCiv. No. 5400
StatusPublished

This text of 154 Cal. App. 2d 487 (Monolith Cement Co. v. Mojave PU Dist.) 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
Monolith Cement Co. v. Mojave PU Dist., 154 Cal. App. 2d 487 (Cal. Ct. App. 1957).

Opinion

154 Cal.App.2d 487 (1957)

MONOLITH PORTLAND CEMENT COMPANY (a Corporation), Respondent,
v.
MOJAVE PUBLIC UTILITIES DISTRICT, Appellant.

Civ. No. 5400.

California Court of Appeals. Fourth Dist.

Oct. 17, 1957.

Baker, Palmer, Wall & Raymond for Appellant.

Conron, Heard & James and Enright & Elliott for Respondent.

GRIFFIN, J.

Plaintiff and respondent Monolith Portland Cement Company, a corporation (hereinafter referred to as Cement Company), alleged in its complaint that it owned portions of section 28 and other sections of certain described real property in Township 32 South Range 34 East M. D. B. & M., and that defendant and appellant Mojave Public Utilities District (hereinafter referred to as the District), owned an adjoining 40 acres in the southwest quarter of the southeast quarter of said section 28, in said township, and alleged that all of the described property overlies an enclosed basin of confined water which is surrounded by mountains which constitute the drainage area that supplies the ground water in said basin; that said basin is oblong in shape and at its westerly (later corrected to read easterly) end the surrounding mountains come to a point at which there is a gap or a canyon through which flood waters escape only during times of heavy rains; that across said gap or canyon there is a dike and earth strata which impound the waters in said basin; that plaintiff, in 1920, acquired a cement plant and the waters *489 underlying its property and installed upward of $20,000,000 in equipment; that about January 1, 1947, defendant District drilled a well upon its 40 acres, produced water and used it to irrigate said land; that in September, 1950, it constructed an 8-inch pipe line from said well to transport water therefrom outside said basin to the town of Mojave a distance of about 11 miles; and that at all times plaintiff protested this action. It then alleged said defendant had another supply of water and that there was no surplus in this basin. A permanent injunction restraining defendant from diverting ground water from wells in this basin was sought, together with damages for such diversion. By agreement no further pleadings were filed until April, 1955. By an amended and supplemental complaint filed April 26, 1955, it was additionally alleged that defendant subsequently drilled another well on said 40 acres for the same purpose. A temporary restraining order was granted.

By answer the District denied generally the allegations of the complaint and admitted it had been using the water from well Number 1 since November, 1950, to supply the inhabitants at Mojave and the United States Navy at its marine base there, as well as the Southern Pacific Company, which company had previously installed pipe lines from its wells in that district to conduct water to Mojave for its purposes. The District claimed it was the sole owner of its water supply. Trial was had in 1956.

The reporter's transcript consists of about 3,000 pages and it indicates a full and fair consideration of the issues presented. The court orally announced the issuance of an injunction against defendant from exporting water from these wells in the Tehachapi Basin so long as the present overdraft exists. It found there was no surplus water available for appropriation, and retained jurisdiction of the case to "interpret, modify and enforce its decree."

In his memorandum opinion filed June 14, 1956, the judge recited generally the facts alleged in the pleadings and stated the significance of the "geological history of the Tehachapi and related areas goes only to the assistance it may afford the court in determining the present facts of geology and hydrology in the particular area under scrutiny."

Suffice it to say the evidence fully establishes the fact that the wells mentioned and involved in the pleadings were within the so-called Tehachapi Basin. The main question arises over the description pertaining to the easterly boundary of said *490 Tehachapi Basin. Apparently, where the water escapes eastward through the Monroe Meadows is what is known as Proctor Gap. Monroe Meadows, consisting of the formation there described, then continues eastward to a point known as Tehachapi Pass. Cache Creek comes from the north and drains partially into the Tehachapi Basin and partially into the Monroe Meadows thus described.

The judge, in his memorandum opinion, stated that:

"The Tehachapi Valley contains an enclosed basin of confined underground water, referred to throughout the trial as the Tehachapi Basin. ... The degree of confinement of water in the Basin is nearly total; perhaps one or two per cent of water once confined in the Basin escapes eastward through Monroe Meadows, and this escape is in the nature of a seepage, rather than as a definable underground stream. Escape of any greater amount of water to the east is prevented by the throttling effect of the clay and other deposits, impervious or nearly so, existing in the earth in increasing frequency and density from the vicinity of Eric southeastward, and by the rock walls and bed of Tehachapi Gorge. ..."

"Of the uncertain trickle of water reaching Tehachapi Pass east of the Meadows, some portion originates from the east branch of Cache Creek, and has never been confined in the Tehachapi Basin; a portion is from the seepage above referred to, and a portion is from Cameron Creek (emanating from the south) and other local topographic features of the Gorge and Pass."

"The 'sub-basin,' so called, of Cache Creek, is in fact no basin at all, but a minor watershed and drainage system having sufficient slope to deliver water from its catch of rain into the Tehachapi Basin west of the Knolls, or into the Meadows, to whatever extent the flow is to the east of the Knolls. If the term 'sub-basin' is actually germane to the discussion, then the Cache Creek area is a sub-basin of the Tehachapi Basin only to the extent, not precisely determinable, that Cache Creek waters supply Tehachapi Basin."

It is apparent from this opinion that the trial court did not intend to describe the east boundary of the Tehachapi Basin for the purpose of including within that description a well or wells of said District located and drilled in the Cache Creek north of the Knoll in section 27 of said township or wells formerly drilled in the area of the so-called Monroe Meadows so as to operate as res judicata in any subsequent action *491 brought by plaintiff company against said district to determine that question. In approving the judgment this exception should be noted.

The confusion exists because of the description of the easterly boundary of the Tehachapi Basin as used in the signed findings and the judgment. It appears that the main issue presented to the trial court in the instant action is whether the wells located on the 40-acre tract were in the Tehachapi Basin and whether there was surplus water therein at the time.

The findings describe the easterly boundary of the Tehachapi Basin as being at a point where the slopes of the Sierra Nevadas and the Tehachapis come to a point about 350 feet apart in the southeast quarter of section 34 (Tehachapi Pass) resulting in a hydrological dike. This description might indicate that the Monroe Meadows area was included in said basin and would involve the so-called Southern Pacific wells.

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154 Cal. App. 2d 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/monolith-cement-co-v-mojave-pu-dist-calctapp-1957.