Peoples Ditch Co. v. Foothill Irrigation District

297 P. 71, 112 Cal. App. 273, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 982
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 27, 1931
DocketDocket No. 365.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 297 P. 71 (Peoples Ditch Co. v. Foothill Irrigation District) 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
Peoples Ditch Co. v. Foothill Irrigation District, 297 P. 71, 112 Cal. App. 273, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 982 (Cal. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

JENNINGS, J.

Plaintiffs appeal from the judgment of the trial court denying an injunction.

Both appellants and respondents are appropriators of water from Kings River. Kings Eiver is a natural watercourse having its source in the Sierra Nevada Mountains and flowing westerly and southwesterly through the Kings Eiver alluvial fan. At a point approximately forty miles from the place where it leaves the foothills the river divides, one branch flowing in a southerly direction and the other flowing northwesterly through lands served by members of respondent Murphy Slough Association. At approximately the point where Kings Eiver emerges from the foothills there is a government gauging station, also a gauge observer’s station and various devices for measuring and rating the water of the stream. This point is called Piedra and the diversions from Kings River by all parties to the present action are downstream from Piedra. The diversions of appellants Peoples Ditch Company and Last Chance Water Ditch Company are upstream from the diversions of the respondent Murphy Slough Association and the diversion of appellant Lemoore Canal- and Irrigation Company is downstream from the diversions of respondents. The distance from Piedra to the head of the ditch of the Peoples Ditch Company is approximately thirty-five miles. The diversion of the respondent Murphy Slough Association is approximately ten miles further downstream.

From time to time various efforts have been made by those having appropriative rights to the water of Kings Eiver to allot the water of the stream among themselves. On May 3, 1927, an agreement entitled "Water Bight Indenture” was entered into by the parties to the present action by which a monthly flow schedule establishing, the quantity of water allotted to each party at the times specified was approved and adopted. On the same date, for the purpose of carrying into execution the plan and schedule of the "Water Eight Indenture” an agreement entitled "Administrative Agreement” was executed by the parties to the former agreement. In both of these instruments, it is clearly and specifically stated that the respondent Foothill *275 Irrigation District had not theretofore diverted and appropriated water from Kings River but that said Foothill Irrigation District desired, if it could lawfully accomplish it, to become a diverter from the river.

On November 28, 1924, an agreement was entered into by the Murphy Slough Association and the Foothill Irrigation District by which the Association agreed that the Irrigation District might enter upon Kings River at some convenient' diversion point and take from the river such quantity of the water up to 250 second-feet as the Murphy Slough Association should, during the term of the agreement, be entitled to divert therefrom subject to the right of the Association to demand and receive all of the water in excess of 100 second-feet; and the further right of the Association to receive its total entitlement of water during the month of November in each year. In exchange for the river water thus proposed to be diverted by the Foothill Irrigation District the Irrigation District agreed that it would acquire a certain tract of water bearing land in proximity to the intake of the Murphy Slough Association’s canal and would bore wells and erect pumping plants thereon and would deliver to the Murphy Slough Association an amount of water pumped from such wells equal to the quantity that the Irrigation District should divert from Kings River and ten per cent of such quantity in addition thereto. This agreement was throughout the trial referred to as the “Exchange Agreement”. The evidence produced at the trial of the cause shows that the Foothill Irrigation District proposed, in accordance with the provisions of the exchange agreement, to enter upon Kings River at a point called Avocado, upstream from the diversions of the appellants and distant approximately twenty-five miles from the head of the Peoples Ditch Company canal, and there to divert from Kings River such quantity of water as it should be entitled to take by virtue of its contract with the Murphy Slough Association. It is this proposed diversion. which appellants sought by this action to prevent.

At the conclusion of the trial, the court found specifically that the proposed diversion by the Foothill Irrigation District might be made without injury to the appellants herein and rendered its judgment denying injunctive relief. Appellants contend that this finding of the trial court is not *276 supported by the evidence. Upon this important phase of the case the evidence was in direct conflict but a careful examination of the transcript discloses that there is ample evidence of substantial character to support the finding complained of. In accordance therefore with the familiar and well established rule that an appellate court will not disturb findings of the trial court where there is a conflict in the evidence, the finding of noninjury to appellants by reason of the proposed diversion by the Foothill Irrigation District must stand.

It is however most zealously contended that the proposed diversion may not lawfully be made even though the finding of the trial court that it may be accomplished with-, out injury to appellants is sustained. It is said that section 1412 of the Civil Code which permits a change in the point of diversion by an appropriator of water if others are not injured thereby is limited in its application to a change in the place of diversion of the entire quantity of water entitled to be taken and that it has no application to and does not ■permit a change in the place of diversion where it is proposed to split the appropriation. In support of this contention the case of Consolidated Peoples Ditch Co. v. Foothill Ditch Co. et al., reported in 205 Cal., at page 54 [269 Pac. 915, 921], is cited by counsel for appellants. This decision of the Supreme Court is obviously so thoroughly relied upon by counsel for appellants that careful consideration of it, is warranted. The facts of the case are as follows: An irrigation district purchased stock in certain corporations which owned accrued rights of appropriation of the water of a stream and which possessed ditches for the diversion of such water as each corporation had become entitled to receive among the owners of capital stock of, each. The irrigation district then contracted to purchase an interest in a ditch which took off from the river above the points of intake of plaintiffs’ ditches and proposed to divert by this ditch an amount of water equaling the aggregate amount of water to which by virtue of its ownership of stock in the several corporations it would have been entitled to reeéive. The plaintiffs succeeded in securing a preliminary injunction the granting of which was sustained by the Supreme Court. It was decided by the Supreme Court that the owners of stock in those corporations in which the irrigation district *277 had become a stockholder were equitable owners of that proportion of the properties of each of such corporations which their respective stock ownerships bore to the entire subscribed capital stock of each corporation and that only to that extent were such stockholders owners of the water rights which the corporation possessed and over whose distribution it exercised exclusive control.

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Related

Speka v. Speka
268 P.2d 129 (California Court of Appeal, 1954)
Peoples Ditch Co. v. Foothill Irrigation District
11 P.2d 86 (California Court of Appeal, 1932)

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Bluebook (online)
297 P. 71, 112 Cal. App. 273, 1931 Cal. App. LEXIS 982, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peoples-ditch-co-v-foothill-irrigation-district-calctapp-1931.