Mound Water Co. v. Southern California Edison Co.

194 P. 1014, 184 Cal. 602, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 605
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 4, 1921
DocketL. A. No. 6142.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 194 P. 1014 (Mound Water Co. v. Southern California Edison Co.) 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
Mound Water Co. v. Southern California Edison Co., 194 P. 1014, 184 Cal. 602, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 605 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

defendants demurred to the complaint on two grounds:

1. That the court had no jurisdiction of the subject of the action.
2. That the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The court below sustained the demurrer without leave to amend and thereupon gave judgment for the defendants. The plaintiffs appeal.

The complaint contains five counts. They each relate to the alleged failure of the defendant, Southern California Edison Company, hereinafter called Edison Company, to furnish water to or for the stockholders of the plaintiff, Mound Water Company, hereinafter called Water Company, for use *604 upon their several and respective tracts of land in accordance with an agreement made on February 1, 1907, between the Water Company and a corporation known as the Ventura County Power Company, transferring to the latter the water sources and system of distribution of the former under which agreement the Edison Company, as successor in interest of the Power Company, holds such rights as it has in. the water in question. The plaintiffs Sexton and Harkey are holders of stock in the said Water Company and join as plaintiffs for that reason, claiming water rights under said agreement.

The complaint alleges the making of the agreement above mentioned between the Water Company and the Power Company and the subsequent execution of a deed by the Power Company to the Edison Company transferring to the latter all the rights of said Power Company under said agreement. The said agreement, and also certain so-called rules for distribution of water mentioned therein, are set forth as exhibits to the complaint and are expressly made a part thereof. The first count alleges that the Edison Company in June, 1918, refused to deliver any water to the plaintiff George S. Sexton, to which it is alleged he was entitled under said agreement and which he demanded. The second count alleges a similar refusal to deliver water to the plaintiff Harkey for use on his land under said agreement. The third count alleges that the Water Company on behalf of its stockholders, on June 1, 1918, demanded of the Edison Company that it should deliver to said stockholders, naming them, certain quantities of water specified for each, amounting to 150 inches, as the same should be demanded by said stockholders, and that said company failed and refused to furnish the water in accordance with said notice. The fourth count alleges that the present daily capacity of said water system was no greater than a constant daily flow of ninety miner’s inches of water, that said Edison Company proposed to supply therefrom to one Chrisman, who was not a stockholder of said Water Company, water sufficient for seventy-seven acres of land that was not entitled to water from said system, all of which was in violation of the said agreement; that the needs of the stockholders of the Water Company will require a constant daily flow of 150 miner’s inches for the season of 1918, and the same in future years, and that the result would be that the *605 stockholders of the Water Company would be deprived of water to which they were entitled from said system. The fifth count, in effect, alleged that the Edison Company, in violation of said agreement, had for the year preceding July 1, 1918, failed and neglected to develop more than a constant daily flow of ninety miner’s inches of water from said water system; that the same was capable of producing a constant daily flow of more than 150 miner’s inches, that the said plaintiff and its stockholders entitled to the use of said water, would, by reason of nonuser, lose .all rights to water from said system in excess of the constant daily flow so maintained by said Edison Company, and that the said stockholders entitled to the water needed the full amount of 150 miner’s inches to properly irrigate their lands upon which they are entitled to use said water. The prayer of the complaint is that the defendants be restrained from delivering or disposing of any waters of said water system to said Chrisman or to any person, other than to said Water Company, for the use and benefit of its stockholders upon their respective tracts of land set forth in the agreement referred to, until said defendants shall first have delivered the water necessary for the use and benefit of such stockholders, to wit, a constant daily flow of 150 miner’s inches as provided in said agreement, and that said Edison Company, by mandatory injunction, be ordered and directed “to develop from said Mound Water System not less than a constant daily flow of 150 miner’s inches of water for the use and benefit of the stockholders of said Mound Water Company.”

The theory of the complaint is that the waters which the respective stockholders claim the right to receive are private property, not dedicated to public use, that under the agreement inferred to said stockholders have the right to receive the same for use upon their respective tracts of land, and that the Water Company, as agent and trustee for them, has the right to maintain this action in their behalf. The soundness of this theory obviously depends upon the terms of the agreement set forth in the complaint.

The agreement purports to he tripartite in character. The Mound Water Company was named as party of the first part, Ventura County Power Company, as party of the second part, and twenty-seven persons described as stockholders of the Mound Water Company as parties of the third part. Said *606 stockholders, however, did not sign the agreement, but the covenants of the agreement appear to have been made in their behalf and for their benefit.

It first recites that the parties of the third part owned all of the issued stock of the Water Company and hold one share of stock for each acre of their lands, respectively. , It then sets forth the holdings of stock by each one of the stockholders, respectively, naming them, and describes the respective tracts of land owned by each stockholder, stating the number of acres in each tract. The number of acres correspond to the number of shares of stock owned by such stockholder. Then follows a recital setting forth the terms of the resolution adopted at a stockholders’ meeting of said Water Company, authorizing the execution of the agreement. It then declares that the Water Company, in consideration of the covenants' and agreements of the Power Company therein set forth, grants, sells, assigns, and transfers unto the Power Company all of the property embraced in and pertaining to the water system of the said Water Company, describing it at length, including the water sources and supply, and that in consideration thereof the said Power Company thereby granted, sold, assigned, and. transferred unto the Water Company for the use of its said stockholders and their successors in interest in the lands thereinbefore described as belonging to them and for use upon said lands, 150 miner’s inches of water from said system, to be delivered by said Power Company on said lands at twenty-five cents-per miner’s inch of the water furnished and used by said stockholders, respectively.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
194 P. 1014, 184 Cal. 602, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mound-water-co-v-southern-california-edison-co-cal-1921.