Stratton v. Railroad Commission

198 P. 1051, 186 Cal. 119, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 419
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1921
DocketS. F. No. 9579.
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 198 P. 1051 (Stratton v. Railroad Commission) 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
Stratton v. Railroad Commission, 198 P. 1051, 186 Cal. 119, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 419 (Cal. 1921).

Opinion

OLNEY, J.

A corporation known as the Empire Water

Company had been serving the .land owners in a certain tract with water for irrigation at the price of one dollar per *121 acre per annum. The company applied to the Railroad Commission for an increased rate, the application was granted over the objection of some of the land owners, and the latter have applied to this court for a writ of review annulling the order of the commission. The ground on which the writ is asked is that the relation between the water company and the land owners is not that of a public utility and consumers, so that the matter of rates between them is not within the jurisdiction of the commission. The question in the case, therefore, is as to the character of that relation.

It seems that in 1905 a corporation known as the Empire Investment Company, and which we will hereafter refer to as the land company, was the owner of a large tract of land lying on both sides of the Kings River and riparian to it. As such owner the company possessed the right to the use of the water of the river on the land. The company also owned certain shares of stock in a mutual water company entitling it to receive from that company certain water for its land. The land company desired to subdivide and sell the tract, and to facilitate the doing of this desired to put water upon the land. To accomplish this latter object it organized the water company, transferred to it what irrigation works had been constructed, agreed to finance it in the completion and extension of those works, and, without transferring its riparian right to water from the Bangs River, authorized and empowered the water company as its agent to divert the water to which it was entitled and supply the same 'to its land for an annual charge of one dollar per acre. The water company, on its part, issued all of its capital stock to the land company and agreed to assume the burden of distributing to the land the water which it was authorized to divert as the agent of the land company. The land company also transferred to the water company its water stock in the mutual company, the water deliverable by reason of such stock to be distributed in like manner and under the same arrangement as the water diverted from the river under the riparian right.

The arrangement so outlined was made by a deed and written contract between the parties. The deed expressly states tha,t it is not the intention to convey to the water company any riparian right, -but that such right shall remain a part of and appurtenant to the land, and the contract recites that *122 it is the desire of the parties to make a binding and permanent arrangement whereby the system for supplying the land with water may be maintained and water be delivered perpetually to all of the lands of the land company for use thereon by it and by persons succeeding to its title.

The foregoing arrangement having been made, the land company proceeded to subdivide and sell its lands, and succeeded in selling substantially all, or at least substantially all that were irrigable. In making sales, it represented to purchasers that every acre had a perpetual water right attached to it for which no charge in addition to the price of the land was made, and for whose enjoyment an annual charge of one dollar an acre for the purpose only of maintaining the irrigation system was payable. In the sales contracts and deeds the contract between the land and water companies was referred to and it was provided that with each acre went the riparian right to its pro rata of the water to which the entire tract was entitled. A number of years after the land had been sold, the water company applied to the Railroad Commission for an order increasing the annual rate of one dollar fixed by its contract, and the commission made the order now under attack.

[l] Such being the facts of the case, it will be noted at once that the water which the water company is engaged in distributing is not water devoted to a public use. The water taken is of two sorts,—that taken under the right given by the ownership of the stock in the mutual water company, and that taken under the riparian right incident to the ownership of the land. [2] It is settled in this state that water taken by a mutual water company and distributed to its stockholders is not taken for a public use, but that such a corporation is but the joint instrumentality of its stockholders by means of which each diverts and has brought to him the water to which he in his own private right is entitled. (See Thayer v. California Development Co., 164 Cal. 117, 135, [128 Pac. 21].) As to the water taken by the company under the riparian right, the case is even clearer. The water company did not have even the legal title to such right. It was expressly reserved to the land company and its successors in interest in the ownership of the land, and the water company was avowedly only an agent for making the diversion for the land owners under the riparian right which was *123 carefully preserved to each. This right, of course, is of a purely private nature. We might add that it is expresssly admitted by counsel in the case before us that none of the water received or taken by the water company and by it distributed to the land owners is water dedicated to a public use.

The fact, then, being that all of the water distributed by the water company is water received or taken by it under private rights, the case comes directly within the authority of Allen v. Railroad Commission, 179 Cal. 68, [8 A. L. R. 249, 175 Pac. 466] (the Lake Hemet case), and is controlled by it. There, as here, the owner of a large tract of land which he desired to subdivide and sell organized a water company, transferred to it certain water rights, and proceeded through the corporation to divert the water and bring it to the land. He then sold the land, and each purchaser desiring water thereon was required to purchase a “water certificate” from the water company whereby he was entitled to receive a certain amount of water upon the payment of a certain annual rate. The sole question in the ease was whether or not the water company in serving the land owners under these circumstances was serving them as a public utility company. It was held that it was not. We see no possible distinction between that case and this. The only differences pointed out are two. The first is that there the water company itself had the legal title to the water rights under which the water was diverted, while here it has not the title to the rights—the riparian rights—under which most of the water is taken. But this difference would seem only to emphasize the private nature of the arrangement. There would seem to be less reason for the view that the service performed by the company is a public service where it consists in taking water for the benefit of a land owner under a private right possessed by him and conveying the water to his land, than where it consists in taking the water under a right possessed by the company itself and distributing that water to the land owner.

The second point of difference pointed out is that in the Lake Hemet case the water company issued to each purchaser of land a water certificate.

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Bluebook (online)
198 P. 1051, 186 Cal. 119, 1921 Cal. LEXIS 419, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stratton-v-railroad-commission-cal-1921.