Schirmer v. Drexler

66 P. 180, 134 Cal. 134, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 730
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 10, 1901
DocketSac. No. 921.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 66 P. 180 (Schirmer v. Drexler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schirmer v. Drexler, 66 P. 180, 134 Cal. 134, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 730 (Cal. 1901).

Opinion

GRAY, C.

This action was brought to obtain an injunction against further interference with certain water rights of plaintiff and for damages for previous interferences. The defendants appeal from a judgment in plaintiff’s favor and from an order denying a new trial.

The complaint alleges title and possession in plaintiff of certain described tracts of land, and “that for more thah sixteen years last past, and up to the time of filing the com *135 plaint herein, the plaintiff, Edward Schirmer, and his grantor, have been, and he is now, the owner and in the possession of . . . the right to use thereon, for irrigating and mining the same, twenty inches of the water flowing in that certain stream situated in said county and known as ‘Big Butte Creek.’” Then follows a long statement of facts, all intended to show that plaintiff had acquired a title to the water in controversy by the original appropriation thereof by his predecessors in interest, and the subsequent continuous adverse use thereof for sixteen years, and down to the commencement of this action. The allegations of the complaint also seem to tend in the direction of showing that plaintiff is the owner of an interest in a certain ditch and flume by reason of succeeding to the interest of one of the original constrúctors thereof, but the complaint contains no direct averment that plaintiff owns any of the ditches or the flume referred to therein, or that he owns any interest or right in either. The complaint also alleges that at frequent times during the sixty days immediately preceding the bringing of the action, the defendants had diverted the water from said flume and ditches, without any right so to do, and had deprived plaintiff of the use thereof, to his damage in the sum of eight hundred dollars. The complaint concludes with a prayer for said damages, and for an injunction compelling defendants to remove the dams they had placed in the ditch, and refrain from further interfering with the flow of the water therein.

The answer contains specific denials of the allegations of the complaint, together with affirmative allegations showing the title to the said water and ditch to be in the defendant L. P. Drexler.

The findings in the case, with reference to the various interests and rights in the said ditch and waters, are as follows: “That in the year 1876 the defendant James W. Peters and John Christy cleaned out and put in order, so that water could be run through, what was known as the Burson ditch, which headed in Butte Creek, on the westerly side thereof, and conducted the waters down to the point of diversion referred to in the pleadings, where the Cable ditch and flume conveyed it across Butte Creek to the ranch of the plaintiff, at which place it was used for mining purposes, off and on, till the year 1883, when it began to be used for household and irrigation purposes, which uses continued uninterruptedly, with the consent *136 of the owner thereof, until some time in June, 1899, when the defendant L. P. Drexler dammed up plaintiff’s ditch, and deprived him of the further use of said water; the Burson ditch was held by Peters and Christy, as partners, for about two years, when Christy sold his half to one Browning, and the latter and Peters were equal partners in it for about two years, when they quarreled, and Browning sold his half to one Isom De Long, and De Long and Peters used and were the owners of the ditch and the water right until March or April, 1881, when Peters claimed that De Long owed him (Peters) some sixty dollars for wrk done on the ditch in repairing it, and refused to let him have anything to do with the property till that sum was paid, and thereupon De Long gave the grantor .of plaintiff all of his (De Long’s) interest in and to the water right and ditch, and Cable, plaintiff’s grantor, used a portion of the water during the summer and winter of 1881-82 in mining; that in the fall of 1882 the said Cable moved from the place and abandoned the ditch, and did not return to the lands of plaintiff till some time in the fall of 1883, at which time he purchased the interest of one Christopher C. Maltby in and to said real estate, being the real estate set out in plaintiff’s complaint, and the following winter began to set out the orchard described in the complaint, and during that season planted at least five hundred trees, and continued to plant others, year by year, until he had an orchard containing the number of trees enumerated in the complaint; that in order to raise these trees it was necessary that they should be frequently irrigated, and without irrigation they would neither root nor grow; that, under an agreement made by the said Frank L. Cable with said James Peters, at or about the time said orchard was planted, the said Cable was to have all the water necessary for household purposes, and for the irrigation of such orchard as he, Cable, had or might set out, on condition that he, Cable, should assist in cleaning out the ditch each year, and that in pursuance of such agreement the said Cable planted said orchard, received said water, year after year, until June, 1899, and after the work of cleaning the ditch for that year had been performed by Cable, when defendant L. P. Drexler shut off the water running to the orchard of this plaintiff, as charged in the complaint; that by reason of obstructing the flow of said water to the lands of plaintiff, as aforesaid, the *137 orchard of plaintiff ceased to bear fruit, and a number of the trees died, and he has been damaged in the sum of $450, and if the obstruction is maintained during another fruit season, the entire orchard will be destroyed and rendered of no value; that on the seventeenth day of March, 1888, the said James W. Peters sold and conveyed to the defendant L. P. Drexler the said Burson water-ditch and water right, being the same ditch taken up and cleaned out by him and Christy in 1876, reserving to himself the right to use sixty inches, but not to sell the same to any other person for any purpose; that at the time of said sale by Peters to Drexler, the said Cable, plaintiff’s grantor, was using the water to the extent of ten inches, at least, the same being diverted from the main ditch by the •Cable ditch, and conducted to the residence and orchard of the said Cable for household and irrigation purposes, and thereafter continued to use the same for said purposes, year after year, until June, 1899, with the knowledge of the said defendant Drexler, during which time the said Cable yearly performed on said ditch the same, or about the same, amount of work in cleaning it out and assisting in keeping it in repair that he had done before the sale was made by Peters to Drexler; . . . that the said Cable ditch and flume carries and has carried for many years last past—to wit, more than twenty years—at least ten miner’s inches of water, measured under a four-inch pressure, and the same have been put to a useful purpose, and it requires that number of inches to successfully raise said orchard on plaintiff’s said land and to supply the house with water for domestic purposes. ... I further find that some time in winter of 1881-82, Frank L. Cable, the grantor of plaintiff, was the owner of the undivided one half of the Burson ditch; that he left Butte Creek, where the ditch •is, and went away, uncertain as to whether or not he ever would return, bút did return in the fall of 1883, and with the permission of James W.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 P. 180, 134 Cal. 134, 1901 Cal. LEXIS 730, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schirmer-v-drexler-cal-1901.