Sulloway v. Sulloway

117 P. 522, 160 Cal. 508, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 540
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 5, 1911
DocketSac. No. 1763.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 117 P. 522 (Sulloway v. Sulloway) 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
Sulloway v. Sulloway, 117 P. 522, 160 Cal. 508, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 540 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

Mary Sulloway, the mother of the. parties to this action, gave to plaintiff by her last will certain real property in section 7, T. 40, N. R. 4 W., Mt. D. M., in Siskiyou County, being the S. % of the S. E. % of the S. W. % of said section. By the same will she gave to defendant certain real property in said section, including the N. % of the S. E. % of the S. W. % °f said section. By the same will she provided as follows: “I . . . give and devise unto my sons John W. Sulloway and Charles F. Sulloway, and request that they use jointly the water or irrigating ditch that now conveys water upon and to section 7 in township 40 north of range 4 west M. D. M., as I desire them to be joint owners of the said ditch and water-right.” The decree *510 of distribution made May 15, 1902, in the matter of her estate, gave to plaintiff - the land devised to him by the will, the only portion thereof located in said section 7 being that above described, “together with the undivided one half of the water-right and ditch now used to convey water upon section 7 in township 40 north of range 4 west M.' D. M.,” and gave to defendant the land devised to him by the will, and also -the undivided one half/ etc., of the water-right and ditch by substantially the same language as that used in reference to plaintiff. It is not claimed that there is any material difference between the effect of the language of the will and that of the decree of distribution in this respect. The ditch referred to entered the S. W. % of said section 7 at a point on land given to defendant, and traversed a portion of the N. % of the S. E. % of said S. W. %, but did not reach plaintiff’s portion of said S. W. %, ending, according to the findings, at a point “near to” the northerly boundary line of plaintiff’s portion, and according to the evidence, some “100 to 300 feet north of the north boundary of plaintiff’s land.” The extension of said ditch from its then terminus across defendant’s land to plaintiff’s land is the only means whereby plaintiff can conduct his waters upon such land and secure the use and enjoyment of his moiety in such water-right and water ditch without working damage to defendant’s land; and without such extension plaintiff’s rights in the water and water ditch will be rendered utterly valueless. Plaintiff’s said land is agricultural in character, and capable, with proper irrigation, of producing large crops of hay, grain, grasses, and vegetables, but without irrigation it is of no value except for grazing purposes during a small portion of each year. The use of this water is necessary for such irrigation. Defendant never disputed the right of plaintiff “to use his half of said ditch and water-right as the same existed at the death of said Mary Sulloway, but did deny the plaintiff the right to erect a ditch across any part or portion of defendant’s lands, or to make a ditch or part of a ditch where there was no ditch at the time of the death of said Mary Sulloway.” Plaintiff, in October, 1904, did extend “said ditch” from its terminus across defendant’s land to his northerly boundary line, and by means thereof conducted water to such land, and made a beneficial use thereof on such land. Defendant subsequently stopped *511 such use. In September, 1908, plaintiff repaired said ditch ■and extension and was attempting to make use thereof when defendant filled up a portion of such extension, and has ever since refused to allow plaintiff to obtain any use of the water or water ditch in the way proposed. The facts we have stated are alleged in plaintiff’s complaint and established by the findings of the trial court.

By his complaint, plaintiff asked to be let into possession, use, and enjoyment of his moiety in said water-right and water ditch, and of the extension of said ditch across defendant’s land to his land for the purpose of conducting his moiety of said water to his land, that the court decree a perpetual easement to exist upon defendant’s land in favor of his land in said extension of said ditch and that defendant be restrained from interfering with the same.

The case came on for trial February 8, 1909, and plaintiff introduced the testimony upon which he relied, and rested. Defendant introduced no evidence, and the matter was continued to February 11, 1909, for argument. At the argument, defendant made the point that there was no evidence to show the amount of water owned or used by Mrs. Sulloway in her lifetime, or the capacity of her ditch, or the size or capacity of the proposed ditch which plaintiff claimed would be necessary to erect across defendant’s land. Plaintiff asked the court to open the ease and permit him to introduce testimony on these points, and, defendant objecting on the ground that the witnesses had been allowed to go, and that the proposed evidence would not be material under the pleadings, the court denied the application of plaintiff. The case was then submitted and on March 6, 1909, judgment was given in favor of defendant that plaintiff take nothing by his action.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from such judgment and from an order denying his motion for a new trial.

It is to be observed that what plaintiff sought by his complaint, so far as an extension of the old ditch was concerned, was an adjudication of his right to maintain and use a ditch which had been already constructed and maintained by him over defendant’s land. It was the ditch already laid out and constructed by plaintiff over defendant’s land as to which a decree was sought, in other words, the ditch already marked out and constructed by him on the lands of defendant. No *512 more definite description of the route of the ditch was essential in the complaint, under the circumstances. Defendant, by his answer, admitted the construction of this ditch by plaintiff, his own filling up of the same, the subsequent cleaning out of the ditch by plaintiff, and his own second filling up of the same. Defendant made no claim in the lower court, and makes no claim here, that the route actually selected for the ditch was not the most reasonable and practicable route that could have been selected, nor did he claim by his answer that, so far as size or capacity was concerned, there was anything unreasonable in the ditch as constructed by plaintiff. His claim was simply that the particular portion of the S. W. ^4 of section 7 given by the mother’s will to plaintiff had never been irrigated by water from said ditch prior to the mother’s death, and that therefore plaintiff had acquired no right to extend the ditch from its terminus over defendant’s land, for the purpose of obtaining water for such irrigation.

It seems very clear, in view of the facts stated, that plaintiff was entitled to extend the water ditch from its terminus on defendant’s land, over such land, to the northerly boundary of the land in section 7 that he had acquired under his mother’s will, for the purpose of using on such land the moiety of the water to which he was entitled under the will. The will and the decree of distribution made thereon are, in view of the circumstances, susceptible of no other construction than that he was thereby granted such right. If this be so, it can make no difference that the land given him by the will had never been irrigated with water from this ditch in the lifetime of Mrs. Sulloway.

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Bluebook (online)
117 P. 522, 160 Cal. 508, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sulloway-v-sulloway-cal-1911.