Rindge v. Crags Land Co.

205 P. 36, 56 Cal. App. 247, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 582
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 24, 1922
DocketCiv. No. 3721.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 205 P. 36 (Rindge v. Crags Land Co.) 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
Rindge v. Crags Land Co., 205 P. 36, 56 Cal. App. 247, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 582 (Cal. Ct. App. 1922).

Opinion

JAMES, J.

Plaintiffs brought this action to secure equitable relief of several kinds, all designed to protect rights asserted to be held by them to the use of waters flowing in Malibu Creek, in the county of Los Angeles. Defendant Crags Land Company owns land immediately above and adjoining that of plaintiffs. At a point on the former’s land Triunfo and Las Yirgines Creeks converge to form Malibu Creek, which latter flows thence and through the *249 lands of plaintiffs to the Pacific Ocean. It was asserted that the defendants had, by the erection of a dam on Triunfo Creek, interfered with the natural flow of the water feeding into Malibu Creek. It was also asserted that in another canyon called “Morrison,” wherein there was a spring which fed its waters into Triunfo Creek, defendants had cut off the supply at the spring by conducting the water away through a pipe and subjected it to their own uses. Plaintiffs claimed not only that their riparian right to use the waters of Malibu Creek had been interfered Avith by the acts complained of, but that a further right of the plaintiff May K. Rindge, as an appropriator of 100 inches of water from the stream, had been also affected to that plaintiff’s damage. The prayer in effect was that plaintiffs’ title to the water rights be quieted; that maintenance of the dam be enjoined, and that the court determine the relative riparian rights of the plaintiffs and defendants to the use of the waters which furnished the flow in Malibu Creek. The trial judge, after a lengthy hearing and the taking of a great amount of evidence, included in which were two views made by the judge of the lands, streams, and locations involved, entered findings and judgment. The court determined that the dam erected on Triunfo Creek did not interfere with the flow of the water naturally passing down that creek, nor with the surface or undersurface flows which contributed to make up the Avater which ordinarily reached the land of the plaintiffs and became a part of Malibu Creek. It determined that as to the spring in Morrison Canyon (that spring being upon the land of the defendants), the water thereof belonged to the defendant Land Company, and that, when allowed to run in its natural state and condition, this Avater was not sufficient in quantity to reach Triunfo Creek, and, hence, did not and could not furnish any part of the Avater eventually appearing in Malibu Creek. As the determination of the court regarding the Morrison Canyon water is fully sustained by the evidence, that subject may be here left out of a further discussion of the case. Referring now to the dam, as to Avhich the plaintiffs have made their first complaint: This dam was built across a narrow gorge on Triunfo Creek, the sides and bottom of which were of rocky material. The dam Avhen completed was about 50 feet in height and about 147 feet in length across the top thereof. The width at the *250 ¡bottom was a great deal less footage, owing to the slope of the canyon walls. The dam, when filled up to the overflow point, caused the water to back up through the canyon gorge for a distance of about 5,300 feet. No impediment was offered by the dam to a free overflow of the water once the reservoir basin had been filled. The dam was not used by the defendants for • any purpose other than to impound the waters held behind it, and none of those waters were taken from the damsite. It was the claim of the plaintiffs that the existence of the dam caused such an obstruction to the flow of natural waters in the Triunfo Canyon as to cause great loss thereof, and that the quantity of water which this creek furnished as a tributary to Malibu Creek, both surface and underground, became greatly diminished. The court, as we have stated, heard a great deal of evidence, that of many engineering experts included, which was to the point that the existence of the dam and consequent impounding of the waters caused no loss whatsoever to the running or percolating supply feeding into Malibu Creek— in fact, some of the testimony indicated that, by the existence of the dam and the collecting of storm waters, which, had they not been caught and impounded, would have run off into the sea, there would be a conservation of the supply and that the summer contribution of Triunfo Creek to the waters of Malibu Creek would be increased. We have examined a great deal of the evidence as it is shown in a voluminous record presented with this appeal. It would extend this opinion to an unnecessary length to attempt to present any comprehensive abstract thereof. It may be sufficient to say that there was evidence of a substantial kind sustaining the findings of the trial judge that the erection of the dam on Triunfo Creek in nowise caused the damage which plaintiffs, in their complaint and the amendments thereto, asserted had been sustained by them, or any damage whatsoever. Defendants had the right to maintain the dam in the manner described, being responsible and subject to restraint only in the event of a showing of real detriment suffered by plaintiffs. (Fisher v. Feige, 137 Cal. 39 [92 Am. St. Rep. 77, 59 L. R. A. 333, 69 Pac. 618]; San Joaquin & Kings River Canal & Irr. Co. v. Fresno Flume etc. Co., 158 Cal. 626 [35 L. R. A. (N. S.) 832, 112 Pac. 182]; Gallatin v. Corning Irr. Co., 163 Cal. 405 [Ann. Cas. 1914A 74, 126 Pac. 864].) *251 Appellants complain that the findings of the court are inconsistent wherein the issue as to the effect of the dam is determined. We think that sufficient appears in the findings to make it clear that the court considered all of the elements of possible damage and, so considering, intended to determine the issue adversely to the plaintiffs. Any inconsistency in findings must be reconciled in such a way as to support the judgment of the court. (American Nat. Bank v. Donnellan, 170 Cal. 15 [Ann. Cas. 1917C, 744, 148 Pac. 188].)

Plaintiff May K. Rindge claimed the right to water asserted to have been obtained under appropriations made by herself and predecessors to the extent of 100 miner’s inches. It was shown in evidence that, at a time when the title to all the property of the defendants was in the government, plaintiff and the predecessors of plaintiff had gone upon that land and established a point of diversion and performed necessary acts to complete an appropriation of water from Malibu Creek. Prom that time forward the water, under this claim of right by appropriation, was regularly taken from Malibu Creek and used for irrigation purposes upon the lands of said plaintiff and her predecessors. The point of diversion was changed on two occasions. There was evidence sufficient to show that while a much larger quantity of water was taken out at the points of diversion, not more than 4.95 inches was subjected to beneficial use, as a large part of the water entering the flume at plaintiff’s intake escaped by leakage and flowed back into the stream. The court’s findings agreed with this evidence and, as the extent of the appropriated right is measured by the quantity of water actually put to a beneficial use, the decision on that point must be deemed to be correct. (Santa Paula Water Works v. Peralta, 113 Cal. 38 [45 Pac. 168]; Riverside Water Co. v. Sargent, 112 Cal. 230 [44 Pac. 560] ; Leavitt v. Lassen Irr. Co., 157 Cal. 82 [29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 213, 106 Pac.

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Bluebook (online)
205 P. 36, 56 Cal. App. 247, 1922 Cal. App. LEXIS 582, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rindge-v-crags-land-co-calctapp-1922.