Sutro Heights Land Co. v. Merced Irrigation District

296 P. 1088, 211 Cal. 670, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 747
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 25, 1931
DocketDocket No. Sac. 4290.
StatusPublished
Cited by38 cases

This text of 296 P. 1088 (Sutro Heights Land Co. v. Merced Irrigation District) 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
Sutro Heights Land Co. v. Merced Irrigation District, 296 P. 1088, 211 Cal. 670, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 747 (Cal. 1931).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

The complaint in this action asks for an injunction against the defendant prohibiting it from permitting water to flow or seep through its canals upon plaintiffs’ lands; for the abatement thereof as a nuisance, and for damages alleged to have been already sustained by reason of seepage of water upon plaintiffs’ said lands. By a separate cause of action plaintiffs also ask that defendant be compelled to install a drainage system for the purpose of relieving plaintiffs’ lands from the water which the plaintiffs allege has been caused to flow thereon through seepage from the canals of the defendant.

Plaintiffs allege in their complaint that they are the owners in severalty of three tracts of land, being parts of a tract of land formerly owned by Louis Titus and commonly known as the Titus ranch, all of which last-named tract, except the southwest quarter of section 18, township 7 south, range 11 east, M. D. B. & M., lies within and is a part of the Merced Irrigation District. The lands of the plaintiffs are practically contiguous and are in the extreme southwest portion of the district and comprise 2,500 acres or thereabouts.

The defendant is an irrigation district organized under the general Irrigation Act of 1897 (Stats. 1897, p. 254) and acts amendatory thereof. It comprises about 180,000 acres of land and is situated in the county of Merced.

In their complaint the plaintiffs allege that the defendant, the Merced Irrigation District, during the year 1922' constructed certain canals over and upon the lands of plaintiffs and particularly a certain canal known as the McCoy canal, the McCoy spillway, the Arena canal or spillway, and certain branches thereof, for the purpose of the carriage of water for the irrigation of the land within the said district, and also for the purpose of spilling the surplus water in the canals of said district into certain natural' and artificial drainage beyond the boundaries of said district. The complaint then continues and it is alleged therein:

*674 1 ‘ That the said land of the plaintiffs is extremely sandy in character and the canals so constructed and operated by the said district were and are likewise constructed through land of loose, sandy nature, and the said district constructed the said canals with banks made entirely of loose, sandy material, and so constructed the said canals that the banks were raised extremely high and the water in said canals was carried above the natural surface of the ground and against the loose, sandy banks of said canals, and ever since said time the said defendant has carelessly and negligently, and entirely disregarding the rights of the plaintiff's, maintained and operated the said canals so constructed in such a careless and negligent manner, and has carried water in the said canals and above the natural surface of the said ground and against the said sandy banks of said canals, and has carelessly and negligently permitted the said water to escape from the said canals and through the sandy banks thereof and to flow in large quantities outside of the said canals and through, over and upon the said lands of the plaintiffs, and to seep through the said banks in large quantities, and into and under the lands of the said plaintiffs; and the said defendant has carelessly and negligently failed to in any way control the said water or to confine the same within the said canals and has carelessly and negligently failed to properly line the said canals or to otherwise prevent the same from flowing and seeping out of the same, as aforesaid, and as a result thereof large quantities of water have so flowed and seeped out of the said canals and formed lakes and ponds upon the surface of the said lands of plaintiffs, and raised the water table in the said lands in other places on the same so near to the surface as to water-log the same and destroy the same for the growth of crops to which the same were otherwise adapted, and so as to kill and destroy the crops already growing thereon, and so as to make the said lands utterly unfit for agricultural purposes.
“That the said defendant still maintains and operates the said canals and threatens to continue to maintain and operate the same and threatens to continue to carry large quantities of water through the said canals, and to carry the same against the said sandy banks of the said • canals, and threatens to and will, unless enjoined by this court, *675 continue to permit the same to seep and flow out of the said canals and through the banks thereof and into, over and upon the said land of the plaintiffs and to still further flood and water-log the said land and raise the water table under the same; and the said trespasses of the said defendant are and will be continuous and will gradually entirely destroy the said property, and the whole thereof, and render the same entirely unfit for agricultural purposes, and will prevent the said plaintiffs from growing any crops whatsoever upon the same, and will also cause noxious growths upon the same, and will cause salts to accumulate upon the surface thereof, permanently injuring and destroying the same; and the said acts of the defendant interfere with the comfortable use and enjoyment of the said property and constitute a nuisance and a continuing trespass thereon.”

Then follow allegations as to the damage sustained by the respective plaintiffs.

To these allegations the defendant made certain denials and admissions. It also set up a number of affirmative defenses and pleaded the statute of limitations. Upon the issues thus made by the pleadings the case went to trial and at the conclusion of the evidence the trial court made and filed its findings of fact pursuant to the issues made by said complaint and the amended answer thereto including the affirmative defenses of the defendant. These findings are voluminous and are entirely too lengthy to be set forth in full herein. They are in favor of the defendant on every issue made by the pleadings, with one apparent exception, which we will later mention. The court found that for more than ten years prior to the year 1922' the Crocker-Huffman Land & Water Company had owned an extensive canal system in said county and as early as 1913 with the knowledge and acquiescence of the predecessors in interest of the plaintiffs they had constructed a certain canal known as the Arena spillway as a part of their canal system. In January, 1922, the defendant district purchased from the CrockerHuffman Land & Water Company its said canal system including said Arena spillway and has continued to and is now using said system as it was used prior to its purchase by defendant. That the predecessors in interest of plaintiffs owned in one tract the said lands through which said Arena spillway was constructed and the lands now owned by the *676 plaintiffs, and described in their complaint, from a date prior to 1910 continuously to the year 1921, and knew of the character of the land through which said Arena spillway canal was constructed and the manner of its construction and use, and acquiesced therein and controlled the water therein and diverted water therefrom and used the water so diverted during all of said period of time.

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Bluebook (online)
296 P. 1088, 211 Cal. 670, 1931 Cal. LEXIS 747, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sutro-heights-land-co-v-merced-irrigation-district-cal-1931.