Tulare Irrigation District v. Superior Court

242 P. 725, 197 Cal. 649, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 273
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 28, 1925
DocketDocket No. S.F. 11700.
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 242 P. 725 (Tulare Irrigation District v. Superior Court) 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
Tulare Irrigation District v. Superior Court, 242 P. 725, 197 Cal. 649, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 273 (Cal. 1925).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

This is an application for a writ of prohibition to restrain respondent court and judge from making an order suspending a permanent injunction pending appeal.

It appears from the petition that on July 15, 1916, an action was commenced in the superior court of Tulare County by some of the petitioners, but not by all of them, against the Lindsay-Strathmore Irrigation District, the purpose of which was to obtain a permanent injunction restraining the defendant irrigation district from pumping water from a tract of land in Tulare County known as the Rancho de Kaweah and from conveying said water away from said lands and away from the watershed of the Kaweah River for use in the irrigation of lands in the defendant district. It was alleged in the complaint in said action that the Tulare Irrigation District is a political subdivision and body corporate, organized and existing under and by virtue of the Irrigation Act of 1887 (Stats. 1887, p. 29) ; that the defendant Lindsay-Strathmore Irrigation District is also a political subdivision and body corporate, organized and existing under and by virtue of the Irrigation Act of 1897 (Stats. 1897, p. 254), and situated wholly within the county of Tulare about twelve miles in a southerly and southeasterly direction from McKay Point, and embracing within its boundaries about 14,000 acres of land, divided into numerous private holdings; that from time immemorial the Kaweah River had flowed and does now flow from its source in the Sierra Nevada Mountains in the county of Tulare in a westerly direction to McKay Point where it forks or divides, the northerly channel being known as the St. John’s River and the southerly channel as the Lower Kaweah River and Mill Creek; that said river forms a distinct watershed on the western slope of said mountains until it reaches McKay Point; that from that point it spreads out through its numerous branches into what is known as the Kaweah delta, *653 until it is many miles in width from north to south and which comprises approximately 300,000' acres of land; that in this delta are located the cities of Visalia, Tulare, and other towns and many hundreds of farms upon which are growing fruit trees, timber, alfalfa, and other agricultural crops and upon which there are thousands of people and large numbers of livestock; that all of said farms and lands and people require the whole of the water of the Kaweah River, both surface and subterranean flow, for irrigation and domestic uses; that the underground flow is necessary to furnish a foundation for the surface water flowing in said river and its branches and the ditches and channels leading therefrom and to hold up the underground water-table beneath the surface of said lands in order to make the same productive; that the lowering of said water-table or underground flow will gradually diminish the productive qualities of said lands; that the lands adjoining said delta, including the lands embraced within the boundaries of the LindsayStrathmore Irrigation District, are higher than the lands in said delta and are composed mostly of adobe and clay; that water will not readily seep through the same and that the impervious condition thereof confines the surface and underground waters of said river to the said delta; that the Tulare Irrigation District is the owner of the Tulare Irrigation District canal leading out of the St. John’s River; that some of the petitioning ditch owners are appropriators of water from the Lower Kaweah River, some are appropriators from both of said rivers, and that the petitioners, other than the ditch companies, are the owners of the lands riparian to either one or the other of said rivers; that all of said owners and appropriators were such prior to 1915, and have continuously used said water except as such use has been interfered with by the defendant district; that within six months prior to the commencement of said action the defendant district contracted to purchase and went into the possession of, and claimed to own, a tract of land known as the Rancho de Kaweah, comprising about 1,100 acres and situated about four miles from McKay Point and lying on both sides of the Lower Kaweah River and within one-half mile from the St. John’s River; that said Rancho de Kaweah overlies the underground body of water-of said delta; that immediately after the defendant district took pos *654 session of said Rancho de Kaweah it bored three wells in different locations therein to a depth of 100 feet down into said underground body of water and obtained a large quantity of water therefrom; that said wells were bored for the purpose of the irrigation of lands within the boundary of the defendant district and conducting the same outside of said watershed; that said defendant threatens to and will, if not restrained by the court, bore thirty-seven more wells and construct pumping plants thereon for the purpose of pumping water from said wells for irrigation purposes on the lands of the district; that if the defendant be permitted to bore said wells and construct said pumping plant and take said water the water so taken will substantially diminish the quantity of water in said underground body of water otherwise available to the plaintiffs, to the irreparable injury and damage of the plaintiffs; that the defendant district has no right to take any of said waters away from said watershed or to diminish the surface or underground flow of said Kaweah River for the purpose of supplying the lands of the said district with water for irrigation or other uses.

It further appears from said petition that during the pendency of said action numerous other parties appeared as interveners and set forth their alleged rights substantially in the same form as the original plaintiffs in said action. The defendant in due time filed its answer to the complaint and to the complaints in intervention in which it put in issue generally and specifically the allegations of the complaint ; denied that the underflow waters of the Kaweah River are necessary to supply water for the irrigation of the lands of the complainants, and alleged that except immediately below the bed of said river and of said streams there is no underflow thereof; denied that any part of the underflow waters of said river were necessary or available for use in irrigating the lands of the complainants, and alleged that underlying the surface of the lands of the complainants of said delta is a broad body of diffused and percolating water many miles in width moving at right angles to the surface contours of said lands and at various depths beneath the surface of the same, which water does not constitute any portion of the underflow of said river or streams and eventually drains into the trough of the valley and is lost for any and all useful purposes; admitted that it owned the Rancho *655

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Bluebook (online)
242 P. 725, 197 Cal. 649, 1925 Cal. LEXIS 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tulare-irrigation-district-v-superior-court-cal-1925.