Union C. Co. v. Madera Canal & Irrigation Co.

178 P. 967, 179 Cal. 774, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 604
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1919
DocketSac. No. 2664.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 178 P. 967 (Union C. Co. v. Madera Canal & Irrigation Co.) 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
Union C. Co. v. Madera Canal & Irrigation Co., 178 P. 967, 179 Cal. 774, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 604 (Cal. 1919).

Opinion

SLOSS, J.

This action was brought in the superior court of Madera County by owners of lands riparian to the Fresno River to determine the extent ¡of the right of the defendant to divert waters from said river. The suit was instituted in 1900 by California Pastoral and Agricultural Company, Limited, and others, then the owners of the lands alleged to be affected by the diversion complained of. A trial resulted in a judgment declaring that the defendant, Madera Canal and Irrigation Company, was entitled to divert and take from the Fresno River water to the extent of 250 cubic feet running per second when there was sufficient water to furnish that amount, and all of the waters flowing in the river at the point of diversion when there was less. The plaintiffs appealed from the judgment and from an order denying their motion for a new trial, and the judgment and order were reversed. (California Pastoral & Agr. Co. v. Madera Canal & Irr. Co., 167 Cal. 78, [138 Pac. 718].) The court below had found that the amount of water allowed had been diverted by the defendant for the statutory period and beneficially used in the irrigation of lands lying under the flow of defendant’s system of canals and ditches, but that a smaller amount would be sufficient to irrigate the lands which had been, during said period, irrigated by the defendant. In its findings, the court declared itself to be unable to determine the exact amount of water that would be sufficient for that purpose. Upon the appeal, this court held that the right of the appropriator was limited to the amount of water “reasonably necessary to be diverted from the river for the proper irrigation of the lands *776 irrigated by defendant by means of its system.” A finding of the amount reasonably necessary for this purpose was declared to be essential.

Following the judgment on the former appeals, the present plaintiffs were substituted as successors to the interest of the original complainants. There was a new trial, which resulted in a judgment declaring, (1) that the defendant is entitled to divert and take from the Fresno River water to the extent of two hundred cubic feet per second when there is sufficient water in the river to fiirnish that amount, and all of the flow when there is less; (2) that the plaintiffs are entitled to the full flow of all of the waters of the river in excess of the amount awarded to the defendant; and (3) that the defendant be enjoined from taking or diverting from said Fresno River any water in excess of the amount to which it had been declared to be entitled. The plaintiffs appeal fronuthe first part of the judgment, i. e., that declaring the defendant’s right to divert water to the extent of two hundred cubic feet per second.

The complaint alleged that “one hundred cubic feet of water flowing per second is all the water which was or is reasonably required for the irrigation of all of the lands irrigated from or under defendant’s said canals.” It is claimed that the court failed to find on the issue thus tendered. But finding XI made by the court fully covers and disposes of this matter. That finding declares, in effect, that for more than five years next' preceding the commencement of the action the defendant has continuously, openly, and uninterruptedly, and adversely to the plaintiffs and to all the world, appropriated, taken, and diverted from the Fresno River into and through its canals, water to the extent of two hundred cubic feet running per second when there was sufficient water in the river to furnish that amount, and when the water in the river was insufficient, has taken, diverted, and appropriated all the waters flowing in the river, and has distributed, sold, and used the same for the purpose of irrigation; that the water so appropriated and diverted has been by the defendant “distributed, rented, sold and used beneficially for the purpose of irrigating a large body of land, viz., about fourteen thousand acres, lying under and irrigable from defendant’s system of canals, and that the same and the whole thereof has been and is reasonably necessary for the due and proper irrigation *777 thereof.” The finding thus declares in terms that water to the extent of two hundred cubic feet per second is reasonably necessary for the irrigation of the lands served by the defendant, and this is, of course, a direct negation of the averment that one hundred cubic feet is all that is required for that purpose.

The principal question presented on this appeal is that of the sufficiency of the evidence to sustain the finding to which we have just referred. The appellants contend with great vigor that the evidence establishes that the company did not, during the five years preceding the action, irrigate in excess of ten thousand acres, and that a continuous flow of two hundred cubic feet would be adequate to irrigate land far in excess of ten thousand, or even of the fourteen thousand acres which the court finds to have been supplied by the defendant’s system. We see no occasion to go into a detailed analysis of the great volume of evidence embodied in the bill of exceptions, which contains over seven hundred printed pages. The earnestness and zeal of appellants’ counsel seems to have led them to the conviction that the court below should have given credence to the testimony supporting their contention, and rejected everything in conflict therewith. An argument based on such a view cannot, of course, receive favorable attention here. Questions of weight of.evidence and credibility of witnesses are for the trial court, and its conclusion on disputed issues of fact must be accepted as controlling on appeal, where that conclusion has the support of substantial evidence. We are satisfied that the finding attacked has such support in this case. On the essential elements involved there was a sharp conflict. There was abundant evidence tending to show that for the statutory period preceding the commencement of the action the defendant had actually diverted a flow equal to, or exceeding, two hundred cubic feet per second when that amount of water was flowing in the river. There was evidence to show that the amount of land actually irrigated by the canal system was almost, if not quite, equal to- fourteen thousand acres. This sufficiently supports the finding, which, as we have seen, fixes the amount at “about fourteen thousand acres.” The essential point in the finding is not whether the area irrigated equaled the exact amount stated, but whether the two hundred feet allowed to the defendant was reasonably necessary for the irrigation of the area actually supplied, be *778 that area a little more or less. On this last factor in the problem both parties introduced considerable evidence. I3uf6.ce it to say that the defendant presented abundaht proof in support of the conclusion that the quantity allowed by the judgment was not more than enough, if, indeed, it was enough, to properly supply the land which had been taking water from the system. In considering the evidence bearing on this issue, the court below was probably guided, as we must be now, by the views declared by this court on the former appeal. It was there said:

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Bluebook (online)
178 P. 967, 179 Cal. 774, 1919 Cal. LEXIS 604, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/union-c-co-v-madera-canal-irrigation-co-cal-1919.