Orchard v. Cecil F. White Ranches, Inc.

217 P.2d 143, 97 Cal. App. 2d 35, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1479
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 18, 1950
DocketCiv. 4023
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 217 P.2d 143 (Orchard v. Cecil F. White Ranches, Inc.) 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
Orchard v. Cecil F. White Ranches, Inc., 217 P.2d 143, 97 Cal. App. 2d 35, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1479 (Cal. Ct. App. 1950).

Opinion

MUSSELL, J.

Action for declaratory and injunctive relief as to percolating ground water.

McClure Valley, situated in the southwest corner of Kings and the northwest corner of Kern Counties, embraces a water shed of approximately 93,000 acres or 150 square miles. It is surrounded by ranges and hills, except for an opening in the Pyramid Hills at the southeasterly end of the valley, which opening is known as “Dagany Gap.” It is approximately three-fourths of a mile wide and connects McClure Valley and the Kettleman Plains to the east and north.

*37 The elevation of the land in the valley drops from the north and west in the general direction of Dagany Gap, thence on to Kettleman Plains and on down to the Tulare Lake area in the San Joaquin Valley, a distance of about ten miles. The elevation of the floor of McClure Valley west of Dagany Gap is between 600 and 700 feet. It is 550 feet in the gap, between 400 and 500 feet in Kettleman Plains and 181 feet at Tulare Lake.

Plaintiffs own lands in the McClure Valley beginning about a mile and one-half west of Dagany Gap and extending north and west. The defendants’ lands adjoin those of plaintiffs west of the gap in McClure Valley and extend easterly through Dagany Gap and thence north and south on Kettleman Plains. At the time of the trial, the holdings of plaintiffs exceeded 4,600 acres and those of defendants were approximately 1,000 acres in McClure Valley, 320 acres directly in Dagany Gap and 4,000 acres on the Kettleman Plains.

On July 14, 1947, plaintiffs filed the action herein for declaratory relief, alleging, among other things, that all of their lands overlie an enclosed basin of percolating water; that three sides of the basin are surrounded by mountains, which constitute the drainage area which supplies the water to the ground waters of said basin; that across the fourth side, or end of the basin, there is a dike which impounds the waters percolating in said basin; that the defendants, on their land in McClure Valley, have a series of wells by means of which they pump from the percolating waters of said basin and transport the water so pumped through a conduit over said dike for the irrigation of lands outside of said basin and which do not overlie the percolating waters of the basin. It is alleged that the plaintiffs are pumping water from the pool for irrigation of their overlying lands and there exists a controversy as to the extent of the right of defendants to pump water from the underlying basin of percolating waters and transport the same for use on lands not overlying said pool. It is further alleged that plaintiffs are being deprived of their lawful use of said ground waters by the acts of the defendants and a decree is sought determining the rights of the parties in and to the underground percolating waters of the basin and for a permanent injunction restraining the defendants from pumping said underground waters and transporting the same to nonoverlying land.

A motion was made by plaintiffs for a reference of the issues *38 involved to the Department of Public Works, as provided in division 2, part 3, of the Water Code of California. The motion was denied. The action was tried by the court without a jury and from the judgment entered, both parties appeal.

The defendant Cecil F. White Ranches, Inc., was adjudged to have a prescriptive right to take from the underground percolating waters in McClure Valley not in excess of the maximum rate of 7,600 gallons per minute nor in excess of 11,040 acre feet per fiscal year and an injunction was issued against the defendants prohibiting them from taking of water in excess of the amounts above set forth and also required defendants to install and maintain measuring devices and to keep records, make reports to plaintiffs and to permit inspection of the measuring devices. It was further adjudged that plaintiffs and defendants had correlative rights to use the underground percolating waters located in McClure Valley and the court reserved jurisdiction to modify its judgment as to the use of the underground percolating waters on the respective lands overlying them in McClure Valley.

From the judgment so entered on May 20, 1949, plaintiffs appeal from the award of a prescriptive right of defendants to take annually 11,040 acre feet of water at a rate not in excess of 7,600 gallons per minute. Defendants appeal from that part of the judgment describing certain lands as not overlying the underground percolating waters and from the judgment granting an injunction providing for the installing of measuring devices, the furnishing of records and reports and the reservation of jurisdiction of the matter by the court.

The trial court found, among other things:

Finding (2) : There is a body of underground percolating waters in the basin of McClure Valley, State of California, with a natural outlet or spillway in the Southeast corner of said valley, which said outlet is about three-quarters (%) of a mile wide connecting and leading into what is commonly known as Kettleman Plains.
Finding (4): That the material and geological structural formation within Dagany Gap is sufficiently resistant to the movement of underground percolating waters so as to separate the field of underground percolating waters within McClure Valley from the field of underground percolating waters in Kettleman Plains and Kettleman Valley lying East of McClure Valley and East of Dagany Gap.
Finding (6) : That the natural flow of the surface water and movement of the underground percolating waters in *39 McClure Valley is from the North and West in a Southeasterly direction and that any surface water or underground percolating waters in excess of the amount necessary to maintain the underground percolating waters in McClure Valley escape through the natural outlet of said valley, Dagany Gap, into the watershed of Kettleman Plains.
Finding (10) : That defendant and its predecessors in interest since 1937 have maintained wells, which it has doubled in number since five years prior to the filing of this action, in McClure Valley and have used these wells to pump water from the underground percolating waters in McClure Valley and have transported said waters for use on distant lands in Kettleman Valley, which lands do not overlie the underground percolating waters in McClure Valley.
Finding (11) : That for the year next preceding July 13, 1942, which date is five years before the filing of this action, and for years prior thereto, defendants’ predecessors in interest pumped a maximum of 11,040 acre feet at a maximum rate of 7,600 gallons per minute water from the underground percolating waters in McClure Valley and transported the same and beneficially used the same on lands in the Kettle-man Plains distant from and not overlying the underground percolating water field in McClure Valley.
Finding (12) : That during the five years next preceding the filing of this action the defendant and its predecessors in interest continued to so pump and so use said water as aforesaid.

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Bluebook (online)
217 P.2d 143, 97 Cal. App. 2d 35, 1950 Cal. App. LEXIS 1479, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orchard-v-cecil-f-white-ranches-inc-calctapp-1950.