Trask v. Moore

149 P.2d 854, 24 Cal. 2d 365, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 241
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 16, 1944
DocketSac. 5587
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 149 P.2d 854 (Trask v. Moore) 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
Trask v. Moore, 149 P.2d 854, 24 Cal. 2d 365, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 241 (Cal. 1944).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

The defendants appeal from a judgment quieting title in the plaintiff to “that certain water distributing system including the pipes, situate in the Modesto High School Tract now in the possession of defendants and formerly connected to wells and pumping plants located upon Lots 7 and 8 in Block ‘D’ and Lots 22 and 23 in Block ‘B’ of the Modesto High School Tract”; directing the defendants to “reconnect the said pipes and the said distributing system to the aforesaid wells and pumping plants in as nearly as possible the manner *367 in which the same were at the time the defendants disconnected the same”; and decreeing that the ‘‘plaintiff is entitled to an accounting by defendants of all moneys received by said defendants from the operation of said pipes and distributing system from November 18, 1940, to the date of reconnection . . . as herein ordered.” The notice of appeal further recites that the defendants as cross-complainants appeal from the judgment in favor of the cross-defendant Baley.

There is no dispute concerning the material facts of this case: On February 21, 1939, and for several years prior thereto, the cross-defendant Baley was the owner of the four lots mentioned in the judgment as situated in the Modesto High School Tract, an unincorporated residential district adjacent to the city of Modesto. Upon this property were located two wells and pumping plants from which there extended a series of pipes furnishing water to approximately seventy neighboring homes at a monthly rate. On the date mentioned Baley executed to the plaintiff as security for his promissory note a deed of trust covering these four lots ‘‘together with the rents, issues and profits thereof; also all appurtenances including water rights in which trustor may have an interest, whether represented by stock of any water company or otherwise, benefiting the property herein described.” Thereafter, and on March 1, 1939, Baley sold these same lots to the defendants Moore, and by a separate conveyance he transferred to them the water distributing system. Upon default in the payment of the aforesaid promissory note the property was sold under the deed of trust, the plaintiff became the purchaser thereof at the sale, and the trustee’s deed was executed and delivered to her on November 18,1940. Some six months prior to these foreclosure proceedings the defendants Moore had disconnected the water distributing system from the pumping plants on the premises in question and attached it to a well and pumps installed on other lands owned by them. Under these circumstances the plaintiff brought the present action to have the distributing system reconnected and for an accounting with respect to the defendants’ operation thereof since the date of her purchase of the property at the trustee’s sale. The portion of the distributing system here involved lies entirely outside of the bounds of the lots described in the deed of trust and consists largely of pipes and mains placed in the streets and alleys of the Modesto High School Tract.

The trial court’s findings and its judgment rendered in favor *368 of the plaintiff, as in part above noted, establish that it took the following view of this case: (1) That the distributing system involved, although lying without the limits of the land described in the deed of trust, passed to the plaintiff as an appurtenance of the lots which she purchased at the trustee’s sale; and (2) that while “the Railroad Commission of the State of California did not authorize Ealey to execute said note and said deed of trust on said property,” the distributing system in question was not a public utility so as to require the commission’s order of authorization prior to the valid execution of the security instruments. (Pub. Util. Act, § 52(d); Stats. 1915, p. 115, as amended; Deering’s Gen. Laws, 1937, Act 6386, p. 3167.) Application of settled legal principles to the undisputed facts disclosed by the record herein sustains the trial court’s decision as premised upon the above two determinative points.

The first matter for consideration is the interest in the water system acquired by the plaintiff under the deed of trust. It appears from the record that for some time prior to the daté of execution of said security instrument the water piping system in question had been annexed and physically connected with the pumping plants on Ealey’s lots; that the piping as laid throughout the streets and .alleys was merely an extension and continuation of the apparatus for the production and distribution of the water supply—a part of it, and not separable from it without destroying the efficiency of the whole; and that the waterworks as so constructed were functioning as an integrated system when the loan arrangements between the plaintiff and Ealey were consummated, as above detailed. Appurtenances are things belonging to another thing as principal and which pass as incident to the principal thing. (Bouvier, Law Dict., Sub., Appurtenances.) Here the principal thing was the pumping works, and the piping system attached thereto was an incident to the main machinery—the pumps and the wells. Such pipe extension was necessary to the enjoyment of the principal thing and indispensable in the supply of water to the neighboring homes in the tract. By being so joined and essential to the function of the apparatus as a whole, the distributing system contained and combined in itself all of the elements and attributes of a fixture or appurtenance to real estate. (Civ. Code, § 662; 6 C.J.S. p. 133, et seq.)

Analogous considerations as to structural appendages were *369 involved in the case of Western Elec. Co., Inc. v. Colley, 79 Cal.App. 770, 775 [251 P. 331], where it was stated that “a power line, consisting of poles set in the ground and wires strung thereon, would pass as appurtenant to one’s land upon the owner executing a conveyance of the soil upon which the poles of the power line stood or were imbedded.” In line with this principle are cases from other jurisdictions holding that electric transmission lines and similar structures, though extending beyond the real estate upon which the mechanical plant is situated, constitute an appurtenance to the plant so as to be encumbered by a lien attaching to the realty: Wells v. Christian, 165 Ind. 662 [76 N.E. 518]; Badger Lumber Co. v. Marion Water etc. Co., 48 Kan. 182 [29 P. 476, 30 Am.St. Rep. 301, 15 L.R.A. 652] ; Roebling’s Sons Co. v. Nebraska Electric Co., 106 Neb. 255 [183 N.W. 546]; Hughes v. Lambertville Electric Light etc. Co., 53 N.J.Eq. 435 [32 A. 69]; Dreisbach v. Ross, 195 Pa. 278 [45 A. 722]; National Foundry & Pipe Works v. Oconto etc. Water Co., 52 P. 43; Stearns Lighting & Power Co. v. Central Trust Co., 223 P. 962 [139 C.C.A. 442], Thus, the fact in the present case that the water pipes and mains were laid in various streets and alleys will not change their character or make them any the less an appurtenance to the mentioned Ealey premises. The record herein does not touch in any way upon Ealey’s authority— either affirmatively or negatively—for so laying the piping system in the tract in question.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
149 P.2d 854, 24 Cal. 2d 365, 1944 Cal. LEXIS 241, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/trask-v-moore-cal-1944.