Sierra Union Water & Mining Co. v. Baker

8 P. 305, 70 Cal. 572, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 848
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 31, 1886
DocketNo. 9763
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 8 P. 305 (Sierra Union Water & Mining Co. v. Baker) 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
Sierra Union Water & Mining Co. v. Baker, 8 P. 305, 70 Cal. 572, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 848 (Cal. 1886).

Opinion

The Court.

For the reasons given in the opinion heretofore filed, the judgment and order are affirmed.

The following is the opinion above referred to, rendered in Department Two on the 22d of October, 1885.

Thornton, J.

By a deed bearing date the fifteenth of February, 1871, the Sears Union Water Company, a corporation organized under the laws of the state of California, sold and conveyed to W. R. Morgan and Timothy Donahue, together with other property, the Trainor ditch, situate in Table Rock and Sears township, county of Sierra, and state aforesaid. The ditch is described in the deed aforesaid as conveying the water of Slate Creek and its tributaries to St. Louis, Sierra County, with all its ravines, dams, flumes, reservoirs, and water privileges

[573]*573“It is further understood and agreed that the so-called tail-water from Table Mountain township, which is furnished by the Sears Union water ditch, is a portion of the water to be furnished under this contract; and that in case of failure of the party of the first part to procure said tail-water during the period of this contract, that a reasonable deduction shall be made on account of such failure, to be mutually agreed upon between the parties hereto,” etc.

Pursuant to the first agreement, Morgan and Donahue constructed the ditch required to convey the water contracted to be delivered for the use of the Pioneer mine.

On the 20th of November, 1882, Morgan and Donahue assigned the two contracts of date of the 30th of September, 1880, and the 3d of January, 1882, above mentioned, to the plaintiff, and also conveyed all their property, including the Trainor ditch, located in the county of Sierra. In the same month, the Sears Union Water Company conveyed to plaintiff all its ditches and mining properties located in the county last named.

The action is brought to recover of defendant sixteen thousand dollars for water alleged to have been furnished him under the above contracts during the water season of 1883.

It is averred in the complaint that Morgan and Donahue duly performed all the conditions of the afore-mentioned contracts on their part to be performed until the assignment to plaintiff above set forth, and since that time plaintiff has duly performed such conditions.

The defendant denies the due performance of the terms of the contract by plaintiff or its assignors, and specifically denies the furnishing and delivery of the tail-water described in the last agreement, and of the other waters mentioned in the agreement, to defendant as agreed on, either by Morgan and Donahue, or either of them, or by the plaintiff, at any time since the third day of January, 1882.

[574]*574On the trial, the plaintiff requested the court to give the following instruction: “There is not in this state, strictly speaking, an absolute ownership of running water. Such water is in its nature incapable of ownership in the same sense in which one is said to own or possess other personal property. The ownership is of the use of the water. Under the deed of 1871 from the Sears Union Water Company to Morgan and Donahue, and the contract between Morgan and Donahue and the defendant, there was conveyed to the latter such tail-water as the said Morgan and Donahue had by virtue of the said deed. So long as such tail-water did or could flow into the Trainor ditch, the plaintiff here, as successor in interest to Morgan and Donahue, could not divert it.

“ But the plaintiff was not under the terms of that contract obligated to put such tail-water into the Trainor ditch near or at points where it did not naturally flow into it. When such water flowing down a ravine naturally passed underneath the Trainor ditch, the plaintiff was not obligated to build a new dam or ditch for the purpose of putting such water into the Trainor ditch. If the defendant Baker was entitled to the water, and desired to take it up at such points, it was his duty to put himself in a position to receive it, and until he did put himself in such position, he cannot complain if the plaintiff used the water.

“ Until the defendant Baker, the claimant of this water, was in a position to use it, the right to the water or water right did not exist in such sense that the mere diversion and use of it by the plaintiff was a ground of action, either to recover the water, or for damages for the diversion. • If from the evidence you find that the defendant was entitled to the use of certain tail-water, but that said water would or did naturally flow by or under the Trainor ditch, and the defendant never put himself in a position to receive that water, then in that case the plaintiff had a right to take up and use such water until [575]*575such time as defendant had placed himself in a position to receive it.”

The court gave that portion of the instruction concluding with the words “ could not divert it,” and refused the remainder.

The plaintiff reserved an exception to the refusal of the court to give the whole instruction as asked, and to its modification.

We cannot see that the court committed any error in giving that portion of the requested instruction which it did give of which the plaintiff can complain. The first three sentences in the direction given relate to the character of the ownership or property in water in this state; and while they may be correct statements of law, are totally irrelevant to anything contained in this case. There was no controversy herein between the parties as to the character of the ownership of water by Morgan and Donahue or by plaintiff, or whether it was conveyed to Morgan and Donahue by the Sears Union Mining Company; but the controversy related to- the point whether plaintiff or its assignors had complied with the contract by which they and it were bound to furnish and deliver certain water to the defendant.

How Morgan and Donahue got their title or ownership to the water they had agreed to furnish and deliver was a question certainly outside of the case. If they had agreed to furnish and deliver the tail-water mentioned in the instruction, they and plaintiff claiming under them were bound to do so; if they had not so agreed, neither they nor plaintiff were bound to furnish and deliver it.

We will add here that there is an incorrect statement in the postion of the instruction given. The statement referred to is, that under the deed of 1871 from the Sears Union Water Company to Morgan and Donahue, and the contract between Morgan and Donahue and the defendant, there was conveyed to the defendant such [576]*576tail-water as the said Morgan and Donahue had by virtue of the said deed. This statement, in point of fact and law, is incorrect.

We look in vain for any conveyance of any water by Morgan and Donahue to defendant. There is no such conveyance in the agreements between them, which have been, as to all material points,_ fully set forth above. Morgan and Donahue’s contract was to furnish and deliver and sell certain water to the defendant in the manner stated in the agreements, but nowhere was there a conveyance of any water to the defendant.

If the foregoing views are correct, and we think they are, the court below committed no error prejudicial to plaintiff in giving the portion of the instruction above set forth. It may be that defendant was prejudiced by the ruling of the court as to this matter, but we cannot see any prejudice to plaintiff.

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Bluebook (online)
8 P. 305, 70 Cal. 572, 1886 Cal. LEXIS 848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sierra-union-water-mining-co-v-baker-cal-1886.