Senior v. Anderson

62 P. 563, 130 Cal. 290, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 834
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 24, 1900
DocketL.A. No. 493.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 62 P. 563 (Senior v. Anderson) 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
Senior v. Anderson, 62 P. 563, 130 Cal. 290, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 834 (Cal. 1900).

Opinions

THE COURT.

Action to quiet title to a water right. Findings and judgment were for the defendants, and plaintiffs appeal from the judgment and from an order denying a new trial, and also from an order after judgment relating to costs.

A former judgment in this case in favor of the defendants was reversed upon plaintiffs’ appeal, and a new trial granted. The second trial was had upon the same pleadings, and the issues are therefore unchanged.

For a statement of the case and the issues involved see the opinion of this court upon the former appeal, reported under' the same title, in 115 Cal. 496.

The principal question of fact was then, and is now, the extent or quantity of the Hines’ appropriation. Upon the former appeal it was held that the quantity appropriated by. Hines was-so much of the water of the stream as was reasonably necessary for the use of the Hines tract of land at the time the action was-commenced. -The quantity of land then irrigated was not materially different from that now irrigated. The quantity of water then diverted through the Hines ditch and that now diverted, so far as the evidence shows, is the same, namely, seventy-seven and seventy-eight one-hundredths inches, measured under a four-inch pressure. Upon the former appeal, this court concluded, from the evidence, that more water was diverted upon the Hines ranch than was required or used for any useful purpose thereon. The evidence upon the second trial shows that there are now irrigated upon the Hines tract about forty acres in fruit trees, no alfalfa, and ten or twelve acres of wild or uncultivated grass land used for pasturage, and, as before, one hundred and eighty to two hundred acres of non-riparian lands, outside of the Hines tract, upon which citrus fruits are cultivated.

Upon the second trial, there was evidence tending to show that there were other portions of the Hines tract that were capable of irrigation from the Hines ditch, but under the decision upon the former appeal that fact does not affect Senior’s appropriation, which is to be determined by the quantity of water *293 reasonably required for the irrigation of the lands then irrigated upon the Hines tract, omitting, perhaps, the pasture land, which Mr. W. L. Hall testified he did not now irrigate because he did not have sufficient water, and had not for two years. Several witnesses testified that the whole of the water was necessary for use upon the Hines tract, and the court so found, though it was further found that: “While the amount of seventy-seven and seventy-eight one-hundredths inches, measured under a four-inch pressure, would be more than was necessary for the irrigation of the Hines tract, if the same flowed continuously, yet no such quantity of water continues to flow during any considerable portion of the irrigating season, and it is necessary to make use of all the water that would flow in said •conduits of the defendants, while the same continues to flow, to keep the lands in such condition as that the quantity of water usually flowing in the stream later in the season would suffice for the proper irrigation thereof, and the said amount flowing in said stream during the irrigation season is, in many years, .insufficient in quantity for the proper suppW of said lands.”

Many witnesses were examined and testified to the effect that the flow of water in the stream greatly diminished during the irrigating season, but no effort seems to have been made to ascertain by measurement the average flow of the water in different months of the season, nor the quantity in fact used upon the Hines ranch, nor upon the outside lands, nor whether the water was used upon the Hines land by continuous flow, or alternately, by time division, with the outside lands. It does appear, however, that the water system of the outside lands had a capacity of thirty inches, and said lands were entitled to five-eighths of the water, and the Hines place to three-eighths; and, in the absence of specific evidence to the contrary, we must assume that the water was in fact used substantially in those proportions. Of course, it is immaterial to the plaintiffs where the water legally appropriated by Hines was used, but the quantity of land irrigated from that source furnishes evidence tending to show whether the quantity of water diverted from the stream through the Hines ditch was more than was reasonably necessary for "beneficial uses upon the Hines land, since that was the measure of the extent of his appropriation. Plaintiffs also introduced *294 several witnesses who had experience in the irrigation of fruit lands in that vicinity who testified to the quantity of land that could, in their judgment, be irrigated with one inch of water-flowing perpetually, and these ranged from two acres of fruit land to seven or eight acres to each inch of water, and among-the witnesses who so testified were four of the defendants. This wide variance as to the quantity per acre is based partly upon the character of the soil, and partly upon the age of the trees, and the manner of using the water. This evidence tends strongly to sustain the contention of the plaintiff, and supported as it is by the fact- that five-eighths of the water is used upon one hundred and eighty acres of other lands, while the remainder sustains the trees growing upon the Hines ranch without injury, so far as disclosed by the evidence, and by the further fact that for two years or more what was supposed to be about one-tenth of the water diverted by 'both ditches was used upon plaintiffs’ land, would appear to greatly preponderate over the general expression of an opinion that the entire flow during the irrigating season was not more than sufficient for the proper irrigation of the Hines land upon which the water had been at any time used.

There was some testimony, however, of a different character, and furnishing a different basis of calculation.

W. L. Hall, one of the defendants, and also one of the owners of the Hines ranch and having the charge of it for himself and his co-owner, was asked by his counsel the following question: “When you say it would require forty inches to the acre to irrigate it during the year, do you mean by that that it would take forty inches of say twelve thousand five hundred or thirteen thousand gallons, or whatever an inch of water is, forty times that amount per acre during the year? Is that what you mean when-you say forty inches to the acre? A. Forty times thirteen thousand gallons, that is what I mean; and, dividing it up during the season, one-fifth of that would be eight inches to the irrigation; and that amount placed on the ground is what I. term forty inches during the season.”

Assuming that the witness correctly states the number of gallons required to put one inch of water upon an acre of ground, the number of inches measured under a four-inch pressure re *295 quired to put that quantity of water upon an acre of land is not difficult of computation. According to the “Statistician and Economist” for 1899-1900, page 549, one miner’s inch (four-inch pressure) will discharge in twenty-four hours 2,260.8 cubic feet, or 16,956 gallons. Deducting thirty-eight per cent for the difference between the theoretical and the actual flow (6,443 gallons), we have 10,513 gallons actual flow in twenty-four hours, or, for ten days, 105,130 gallons while each irrigation of eight inches on defendants’ basis would require eight times 13,000, or 104,000 gallons.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 P. 563, 130 Cal. 290, 1900 Cal. LEXIS 834, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/senior-v-anderson-cal-1900.