Southside Improvement Co. v. Burson

81 P. 1107, 147 Cal. 401, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 413
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 1, 1905
DocketL.A. No. 1383.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 81 P. 1107 (Southside Improvement Co. v. Burson) 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
Southside Improvement Co. v. Burson, 81 P. 1107, 147 Cal. 401, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 413 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

SHAW, J.

The defendants, except William Horton, appeal from the judgment and from an order denying their motion for a new trial.

The plaintiffs, other than the Southside Improvement Company, are the stockholders thereof and owners of tracts of land entitled to water for irrigation from a certain water-ditch under the control of the improvement company, and the suit is brought on behalf of the plaintiffs and all other persons owning stock in the company, and as such having rights to water from said ditch, to quiet their title, to the water, to determine the amount to which they are entitled, and to enjoin the defendants from diverting from the said ditch more than a certain amount of the water thereof which the plaintiffs admit they are entitled to.

The principal question arising in the ease is the construction of the contract of December 18, 1886, set forth in the findings and known as the “Surdam contract,” and the several rights of the respective parties under its provisions to receive water of the Santa Clara River from the ditch now controlled by the Southside Improvement Company.

When this contract was made Surdam was in possession of something over one thousand acres of land situated below that of the predecessors of the defendants, and he desired to ob *403 tain a supply of water for the irrigation thereof and other uses thereon. Edwards, Guiberson, Horton, Morrison, and Swanson, the other parties to the contract, each owned or possessed a tract of land, and had been using for the irrigation thereof the water of the river, obtaining the same and conducting it to their land by means of a common dam and ditch. Edwards and Morrison each had one hundred and sixty acres, Horton and Swanson each eighty acres, and Guiberson one hundred and ninety-two acres, only seventy acres of which, however, could be irrigated from the ditch then in use. The land of Edwards was nearest to the point where the water was diverted from the river, and that of Guiberson furthest therefrom, and the latter was not contiguous to the river and had no riparian rights therein. The other tracts abutted on the stream. In pursuance of an arrangement between themselves, each had been accustomed to use the water during certain proportional parts of each week, excepting Sunday, corresponding to the interest which he appears to have claimed in the. water, Guiberson using it for only one day of the six. The ditch at its head had a capacity to carry at least two hundred inches of flowing water under a four-inch pressure, but decreased in its course so that at its entrance upon Guiberson’s land it could carry but twenty-five inches. Prior to that time the parties had posted a notice of appropriation at the point of diversion, claiming the right to one thousand inches of water to be taken from the river at that point. At the time of the posting this notice, however, the ditch was already constructed and in use, and no further works or means of diversion were constructed thereafter, nor was any change made in the dam or ditch in pursuance of the notice, and the rights of the parties, other than riparian, were therefore dependent upon the actual appropriation previously made and subsequently continued by means of the dam and ditch as originally constructed. The several tracts of land lay contiguous to each other along the line of the ditch, Edwards’s being the most easterly and Guiberson’s the most westerly tract. The ditch had not been constructed entirely across the land of Guiberson, but terminated at a point nine and a half chains from his westerly line.

By the “Surdam contract” the parties of the first part,— namely, Edwards, Horton, Morrison, Swanson, and Guiber *404 son,—agreed that Surdam should have the right and privilege to enlarge the ditch then owned and controlled by the first parties, and to divert water from the river into the ditch at its head, and increase the capacity of the ditch so that it would carry at least one thousand inches of flowing water under a four-inch pressure, and to extend the ditch beyond its lower end to and upon the lands lying westerly of Guiberson’s tract, that being the land then in possession of Surdam, and for which he wished to obtain the water, and to conduct the water, by means of said ditch, to the said lands of Surdam for irrigation and other uses thereon; that he should have the right to take the water of the river by means of said ditch at the point where it had been theretofore diverted by the said first parties, as stated in the notice of appropriation posted as aforesaid, which was referred to; and further, that he should have the right to enter upon the lands of the first parties for the purpose of working upon the ditch, keeping the same in good condition and repair and providing water therefor. It further declared that the first parties, and each of them, reserved their right, then existing, to take and apply for irrigation and domestic use, on their respective lands on the line of the ditch, all the waters of said ditch that might be required by them for said purposes, and that the right given to Surdam was upon the express condition that he should only have and use the water of the ditch after the first parties had been supplied with all the water they required for irrigating their own land and for domestic use, and that he was only to have the excess of water from the ditch over the quantity required by the first parties. Surdam promised that he would immediately take charge of the ditch and proceed to deepen, widen, repair, and enlarge the same, and open channels from the sloughs and the Santa Clara River to the ditch, and make proper headgates to carry at least a thousand inches of water under a four-inch pressure into the ditch, when the same could be had from the river, and that he would always keep the ditch in good and proper condition for conveying that quantity of water, and, at his own expense and cost, keep, construct, and maintain the ditch, and use, appropriate, and supply said water in said water-ditch, and all other rights and privileges given to him by the first parties, to the best advantage of the first parties in inri *405 gating their lands and for domestic use, and would only apply the water to his own use, or that of his assigns, after the first parties had been supplied with water from the ditch for their respective lands.

If the ditch at that time used by the parties to the Surdam contract had been extended, its elevation was such that the land of Surdam could not all be irrigated therefrom. Claiming to act in pursuance of the contract, Surdam proceeded to construct a dam further up the river than the one. previously constructed, and to construct therefrom a new ditch at a higher level than the old one, but substantially parallel thereto, and but a short distance therefrom, until it reached the. land of Guiberson, where, owing to the flat grade of the ground, it diverged a considerable distance to the south of the line of the old ditch, so that between the line of the old ditch extended to the westerly line, of Guiherson’s land and the line of the new ditch there were 46.70 acres.of his land, which could be irrigated by gravity from the new ditch, but which could not be irrigated by gravity from the old ditch. It is the right to irrigate this tract of land which is the subject of contention between the parties.

After the completion of this ditch Guiberson sold his tract of land to Edward Burson, and the other appellants, except C. W.

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Bluebook (online)
81 P. 1107, 147 Cal. 401, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 413, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southside-improvement-co-v-burson-cal-1905.