Pyramid Land & Stock Co. v. Scott

197 P. 398, 51 Cal. App. 634, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 710
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 3, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2260.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 197 P. 398 (Pyramid Land & Stock Co. v. Scott) 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
Pyramid Land & Stock Co. v. Scott, 197 P. 398, 51 Cal. App. 634, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 710 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HART, J.

This action was brought by plaintiffs to quiet their title as against defendants to the water of Long Valley Creek, a creek flowing northerly through the lands of all of the plaintiffs and defendants and thence into Honey Lake, in Lassen County, California.

Plaintiffs in their complaint claim as appropriators and as riparian proprietors. Defendants claim as appropriators and as riparian proprietors and by amendment to their answer claim prescriptive rights.

The court found that defendant Scott had an adverse right to 90 inches- of the waters of the creek and defend *636 ants Galeppi liad an adverse right to 310 inches of the waters of the creek. The court failed to find that the plaintiffs were appropriates, but did find that both the plaintiffs and defendants were riparian owners, and as to this the court found that plaintiff Pyramid Land and Stock Company has 1,200 acres of land riparian to said Long Valley Creek; that plaintiff P. M. Rowland has 400 acres of land riparian thereto; that plaintiff A. J. Hill has 560 acres of land riparian to said creek; that defendant C. A. Scott has 1,120 acres, and defendants Galeppi have 400 acres of land riparian thereto.

It was further found that the several defendants and their predecessors in interest have taken, ever since the year 1861, out of said stream and used for the necessary irrigation of their said lands all the water required to produce agricultural crops thereon; that the quantity of water so taken by defendant Scott and his grantors was 90 miner’s inches, and that the water so taken and diverted by the defendants, the Galeppis, and their predecessors in interest, was 3,500 gallons per minute, or 310 miner’s inches; that said several defendants have used the respective quantities of water mentioned for a useful and necessary purpose upon their respective lands, and have severally been in the open, notorious, continuous, exclusive, uninterrupted, and adverse possession and use of said water and all thereof, as aforesaid, holding and using the same adversely to the plaintiffs and each of them, and adversely to all other persons, for more than five years before the commencement of this action; that neither nor any of said plaintiffs was or were seised or possessed of the right to use said water or any part thereof within more than five years before the commencement of this action”; that the holding and use of said water was under a claim of right and title by said defendants, and exclusive and hostile to any right, title, or claim of possession or use by said plaintiffs or either of them, or their predecessors in interest or grantors, etc.; that said defendants have during all of said period paid all taxes of whatsoever kind or nature levied or assessed upon said lands and water rights, etc.

The evidence shows, and, indeed, it is practically if not expressly admitted that Long Valley Creek is one of those so-called wet season streams that flow an enormous lot of *637 water at the high-water season and toward the- end of the season run down to almost nothing—in other words, it is what is sometimes called a torrential mountain stream.

It was expressly stipulated by the parties at the trial that “the country in which all of the lands of plaintiffs and defendants are situated is an arid country, and that artificial irrigation is necessary.”

The judgment is that defendant Scott was entitled to 90 miner’s inches of water from, the creek and defendants G-aleppi to 310 miner’s inches from said creek, and that the “plaintiffs take nothing by their action.”

The plaintiffs appeal from said judgment. The points urged for a reversal are: (1) That the court erred in failing to make any finding as to the claims of the plaintiffs as appropriators; 2. That there is no evidence to support the finding that the defendants have acquired a right to use the water by prescription; 3. That there is neither evidence nor any finding which supports that part of the judgment that the “plaintiffs take nothing by their action.”

[1] The failure of the court to find upon the claim of plaintiffs, the lower riparian owners, that they had appropriated respectively a certain specified number of miner’s inches of the waters of Long Valley Creek is not material, since it is the settled law in California that, while the right to take water from a stream, as against riparian owners, may be acquired by prescription (Gallaher v. Mountain Valley Water Co., 101 Cal. 245, [35 Pac. 770]; Bathgate v. Irvine, 126 Cal. 144, [77 Am. St. Rep. 158, 58 Pac. 442]; Arroyo D. & W. Co. v. Baldwin, 155 Cal. 280, 285, [100 Pac. 874]), no such right may be acquired either by prescription or by appropriation by a lower as against an upper riparian owner in the same stream. In view, however, of the fact that the decree complained of here is grounded upon findings of a prescriptive title in the defendants to certain specified quantities of "waters in the creek in question as against the riparian rights of the plaintiffs, it is proper to say that the rule has been declared to be different as to upper riparian proprietors. In Bathgate v. Irvine, 126 Cal. 135, 140, [77 Am. St. Rep. 158, 58 Pac. 442, 444], the law upon this proposition is thus stated: “Plaintiffs contend that as lower riparian proprie *638 tors they acquired the right to all the waters of the creek by prior appropriation, notwithstanding defendant and his predecessors in interest were upper riparian owners long before plaintiffs made their appropriation. We understand the rule to be settled, and is no longer open to discussion in this state, that such right cannot be thus acquired. {Hargrave v. Cook, 108 Cal. 72, [30 L. R. A. 390, 41 Pac. 18].) [2] And it is equally well settled that no right to the water can be acquired by prescription where the lower riparian proprietor has taken the water out of the stream at a point on his own land and has used such water only as the upper riparian proprietor permitted it to pass down through his land to the lower owner; such use by the latter is not adverse in the sense required to give a right by prescription. {Hargrave v. Cook, supra.) Nor can the nonuser of the water by the upper riparian owner of land be invoked to strengthen the claim of appropriation or prescription by the lower riparian owner under like circumstances. {Hargrave v. Cook, stipra.) In appropriating the water which flows across his land, the lower proprietor invades no right of the upper riparian proprietor. The latter has no right of action to prevent such use, for he is in nowise injured, and the former should not be permitted to acquire a right in this manner which the latter is powerless to prevent. The case is quite different where the upper owner appropriates the water. The lotuer owner is injured at once and the law gives him a remedy, and, if he fails to avail himself of it, the appropriation may, by lapse of time, ripen into an absolute right.”

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Bluebook (online)
197 P. 398, 51 Cal. App. 634, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pyramid-land-stock-co-v-scott-calctapp-1921.