Robinson v. Cuneo

290 P.2d 656, 137 Cal. App. 2d 573, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1226
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 6, 1955
DocketCiv. 8598
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 290 P.2d 656 (Robinson v. Cuneo) 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
Robinson v. Cuneo, 290 P.2d 656, 137 Cal. App. 2d 573, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1226 (Cal. Ct. App. 1955).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, P. J.

This is an appeal from a judgment denying appellant any recovery on his complaint and, responsive to a cross-complaint, quieting respondent’s title to an easement or right of way for an irrigation ditch across the land of appellant. The judgment further adjudicated the relative rights of the parties to use of water flowing in the ditch.

Appellant and respondent are owners of adjoining agricultural land. The respondent’s land lies to the southwest of the land of appellant. The ditch crosses appellant’s land, the flow of the water being from the east to the west. The water originates in the Merced River to the east and flows across intervening lands to the easterly boundary of appellant’s property. At that point and adjacent to appellant’s land is a sump or dredge pond into which the water from *575 the ditch empties. The dredge pond was left when the land to the east of appellant’s land was dredged. The dredging operation destroyed the old existing ditch but the testimony is that it was sufficiently restored as the dredging progressed so that the water still flows from the river in approximately the same way and along the same course as it did before the dredging was done. From the pond the water flows into the ditch, crosses appellant’s land and goes onto the land of respondent where it is used for irrigation purposes. In 1951 appellant leased his land to a tenant for cotton cropping on shares, intending to irrigate the crop with water brought to his land by the old ditch from the river. He claimed that the respondent so interfered with his rightful use of water as to cause the loss of the cotton crop and he sued for the damages that ensued.

Respondent answered the complaint and though he did not deny that appellant had some right to the use of water, yet he claimed that he had not interfered with such right and for that and other reasons was not responsible for the loss of the cotton crop. He also cross-complained, seeking to quiet his title to an easement across appellant’s land for maintaining the ditch and flowing water along it. At the close of the trial the trial court viewed the ditch and thereafter made findings to the following effect: That appellant’s title to his land was subject to an easement over and across the same for the use, maintenance, repair and control of an irrigation ditch; that this easement for more than 20 years last past had been owned by and in the possession of respondent; that the right of way for the ditch included a strip of land for a distance of 10 feet in width from the bottom “of the outside of each bank of said ditch”; that respondent had not prevented appellant from using his right to water; that respondent was not responsible for the loss of the cotton crop; that such right as appellant had to use water from the ditch was subject to the prior and superior right of respondent and limited to such water as might be flowing in the ditch in such quantities and at such time that its use by appellant would not interfere with or restrict the use of said ditch or the water therein by respondent.

Appellant contends that the findings of the trial court as to the respective rights and interests of the parties in the irrigation ditch across the appellant’s land and in the waters that might flow therein are not supported by the evidence. The decree itself is somewhat ambiguous. It adjudges that *576 respondent, at the time the action was begun, was and still is the owner of and entitled to possession of an easement or right of way for the use, maintenance, repair and control of an irrigation ditch across appellant’s land. We think this part of the decree was substantially supported by the evidence. We do not construe the decree in its use of the word “control” as indicating a control exclusive of the rights of appellant as owner of the fee or as exclusive of his rights in the use of the ditch and the water therein upon his own land, whatever those rights may be, but rather as a statement of the secondary easements that go with a primary easement over the property of another. The decree next declares that the easement includes a strip of land on which the ditch is located and in addition thereto a strip of land for a distance of 10 feet in width “from the bottom of the outside of each bank of said ditch.” There was no recorded description of the easement as it existed over the lands of appellant which used this specific description as to lateral extent. However, there were grants in evidence inferentially referring to the same ditch as it was located and maintained over other lands which support the trial court’s finding that across the appellant’s lands it had the same lateral extent. There was also evidence that in cleaning out the ditch the operator of the dragline had done no more than to restore it to its original dimensions, which, of course, included space on both banks whereon to deposit material which had accumulated in the ditch and was being removed therefrom. In view of the fact that the ditch was in some places excavated to dimensions of 8 feet across the top, 6 feet across the bottom and a depth of 4 to 6 feet, it is a reasonable deduction by the trial court that spoil banks of the dimension fixed by the court were necessary to the proper exercise of the easement rights. In addition to the foregoing the trial court inspected the ditch and since the easement found to exist included the secondary easements of keeping the ditch cleaned and of piling the spoil on the banks thereof we think the whole record substantially supports the conclusion of the trial judge that the easement had the lateral extent adjudged. The decree further adjudged that the claim of appellant “in and to said easement and right of way is without any right whatsoever and that said cross-defendant, Fred G. Robinson, has no right, title, interest, claim or estate in or to said easement or right of way or any part thereof and that said Fred G. Robinson be and he is hereby enjoined and debarred from asserting any claim what *577 ever in or to said right of way or easement across said land and premises adverse to defendant and cross-complainant.” If by the foregoing it was intended to be adjudged that the appellant as owner of the servient tenement had no right, and was enjoined from claiming any right to the use of the easement strip in such way as not to interfere with the easement rights, then the decree would be against the law.

The owner of the servient tenement still owns the fee, even if a right of way be established across it, and as such owner he may make any use of the easement strip not inconsistent with the full easement rights of the easement owner.

Such easement owner owns no part of the land itself and has no right to exclude the owner from the use of any of the land, except insofar as a use interferes with his easement rights. However, we do not construe the decree as doing more than adjudging that the rights of the respondent as owner of the easement are not to be interfered with by the owner of the servient tenement. We hold that nothing more was intended and nothing more was adjudged. (Hannah v. Pogue, 23 Cal.2d 849, 856 [147 P.2d 572

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Bluebook (online)
290 P.2d 656, 137 Cal. App. 2d 573, 1955 Cal. App. LEXIS 1226, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-cuneo-calctapp-1955.