Stepp v. Williams

198 P. 661, 52 Cal. App. 237, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 281
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 14, 1921
DocketCiv. No. 2230.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 198 P. 661 (Stepp v. Williams) 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
Stepp v. Williams, 198 P. 661, 52 Cal. App. 237, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 281 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

HART, J.

The defendants own certain lands in Modoc County, California, upon which there is a spring, the waters of which flow over and across the lands of defendants; plaintiffs claim a four-fifths interest in the spring and in the waters flowing therefrom under an alleged oral grant from Chas. W. Williams, deceased, the predecessor in interest of defendants. Plaintiffs brought this action to quiet their alleged title to the waters of said spring, and for an injunction restraining defendants from interfering with the said waters claimed by plaintiffs. Defendants, Judith E. Williams, both in her individual and representa *239 tive capacity, and Gary Williams, answered said complaint, denying the allegations of the complaint as to the grant of said waters of said spring, and by way of cross-complaint alleged the ownership of said spring and the lands on which the same is located, and a right and title to said spring by reason thereof, and by reason of their riparian rights and by prescription.

The court, in substance, found as follows: The spring, the right to the waters of which is in controversy here, is situated on the lands of the defendants, who, as to said lands, are the successors in interest of one Charles W. Williams. Continuously from and including the year 1882 to the time of his death on the twenty-fifth day of February, 1918, said Williams was the owner and in the occupancy of the land on which the spring in question is situated.

In the year 1883 Charles W. Wells, who was and at the time of the commencement of this action deceased, but in the year just named the husband of Emma S. Stepp, one of the plaintiffs herein, made homestead entry of certain land and also a desert land entry of certain other land, and after due proceedings received a patent therefor from the United States government, all said lands, as well as the plaintiffs’ land upon which the said spring is located, being situate in Modoc County. The plaintiffs are the successors in interest of said Wells in the homestead and desert entries above mentioned. The said lands of plaintiffs “are all of a dry, barren nature, and would not produce crops in paying quantities without artificial irrigation, and the said lands would be of little or no value without such irrigation, and at the times said lands were entered by said Charles W. Wells said lands were of this character, all of which was well known to said Charles W. Wells”; that either in the year of 1882 or of 1883 said Williams “told Charles W. Wells, husband of said plaintiff, Emma S. Stepp, that he, the said Wells, could have the said spring and the waters running therefrom, except a small quantity of water required by the said Charles W. Williams, not exceeding forty inches, measured under a four-inch pressure.” Wells and his wife, plaintiff Stepp, relying upon the offer of the waters of said spring so made to Wells by said Williams, thereupon “commenced the construction of a levee around said spring to restrain the *240 waters thereof from flowing on to the lands of said Charles ■W. Williams, and commenced the construction of a ditch leading from said levee and spring to the lands of said Charles W. Wells and said Emma S. Stepp, . . . and diligently prosecuted the work of constructing said levee and ditch until the same was completed, and upon the completion of said levee and ditch said Charles Wells diverted and appropriated all the waters of said spring and the stream issuing therefrom, except forty inches, measured under a four-inch pressure, so reserved by said Charles W. Williams, and by means of said ditch conveyed the same to the aforesaid lands of said Charles W. Wells and plaintiff, Emma S. Stepp, his wife, and applied the same to a beneficial use in the irrigation of said lands and the production of valuable crops, and for stock and domestic purposes, as hereinbefore found”; that the ditch so constructed by said Wells 'and his said wife was of an average width of five feet and of an average depth of two feet, and was and is between six and eight miles in length; that it required a period of five years to complete the construction of the ditch, during which time said Wells devoted “all the time and money he was able to devote to the construction of the same,” and the cost of the original construction of the dam and ditch was approximately $2,000; that after being told by said Williams that he might have the said spring and water said Wells proceeded to clear a portion of his lands, and planted an orchard, consisting of two or three dozens of fruit trees, and also planted about three hundred acres of said lands in crops of hay, grain, and alfalfa, all of which required artificial irrigation, and for which said Wells had no supply of water except from the said spring; that said Wells expended large sums of money in improving the said property by fencing the same and constructing other improvements thereon, “all of which said improvements would be useless unless said Charles W. Wells was able to cultivate said lands and irrigate the same and produce crops thereon; that all of said facts were known to and by the said Charles W. Williams and said . . . Williams was at all times apprised of the work that said . . . Wells was doing and having done in the construction of said ditch and dam, and in the clearing and cultivating of said lands, and the diversion, *241 appropriation, and use of said waters of said spring by-said . . . Wells, as aforesaid”; that the use of 100 inches of the waters of said stream and spring by the said Wells was at no time interrupted by said Williams.

That the original amount of water “appropriated and diverted” by Wells from said spring “under grant of right” from Williams was “at least 125 inches, measured under a four-inch pressure,” but Wells, on the sixteenth day of May, 1884, granted by a deed of conveyance to one Wm. IT. Nelson, the owner of certain lands over which the said ditch was constructed, “or was to be constructed,” an undivided one-fifth interest in and to said ditch and the said water right, since which time Wells and his successors in interest have claimed, diverted, and used as their own, “and under their own right,” 100 inches of said spring and stream, measured under a four-inch pressure, “over and above any and all interest in and to the waters of said spring which they had theretofore deeded to the said William H. Nelson.”

That the plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest, for over thirty years from the time of the completion of the dam and ditch by means of which they diverted and used the waters of said spring to the time of the commencement of this' action, have “continuously, uninterruptedly, openly, notoriously, under a claim of right, and adversely to the defendants and their predecessors in interest, and adversely to said Charles W. Williams, and with the knowledge and acquiescence of said . . . Williams, diverted, appropriated, claimed, and used, 100 inches of the waters of said spring and stream . . . upon the aforesaid lands for the irrigation thereof and for the production” of the crops above mentioned and for stock and domestic use; that during all said time said number of inches of water “have been necessary and indispensable for the proper irrigation of said lands and for the production of said crops,” etc.

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Bluebook (online)
198 P. 661, 52 Cal. App. 237, 1921 Cal. App. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stepp-v-williams-calctapp-1921.