Williams v. Rankin

245 Cal. App. 2d 803, 54 Cal. Rptr. 184, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1523
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 21, 1966
DocketCiv. 582
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 245 Cal. App. 2d 803 (Williams v. Rankin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Williams v. Rankin, 245 Cal. App. 2d 803, 54 Cal. Rptr. 184, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1523 (Cal. Ct. App. 1966).

Opinion

*805 CONLEY, P. J.

This case involves the riparian rights of all landowners on Walker Basin Creek, located in the Tehachapi Mountain area, some 30 miles southeast of Bakersfield. The creek has its source, at least as a flowing surface stream with easily decipherable bed and banks, some 500 yards northeasterly of the point where it leaves Walker Basin. Walker Basin was formed by the upthrust along Breckinridge Fault, which is on the westerly side of the basin. The basin itself contains alluvium, consisting of gravel, sands, and clays, which are surrounded by granitic-textured and metamorphic rocks of the Southern Sierra Nevada batholith. In geologic time, the Breckinridge Fault constituted a dam which induced the filling up of the basin with detritus from the mountains to the east, northeast, and southeast. In somewhat later periods, the creek cut across the Breckinridge Fault, and it has since acted as an outlet tending toward the draining of the basin. This formation, overlying impervious rock with an alluvium topping of considerable depth, constitutes a catchment area, containing, in normal times, a more or less considerable, but indefinite, quantity of water. The general slope of the basin is toward the fault in conformity with the line taken by the stream.

The court, after analyzing the multiform geological evidence, was of the opinion that there are two roughly connected subsurface catchment areas in the basin; although on the surface they appear to be unitized, the one to the west is the primary source of Walker Basin Creek and the one to the east is largely independent of the westerly area, as is shown by the fact that pumping from a well on the land to the east apparently has no effect on the water table in the westerly portion of the basin.

The ranches involved in the litigation from upstream down to the end of the flow are:

1) The Rankin Ranch, owned by the defendants and respondents, Helen C. Rankin and her three children;
2) The Pagliuso Ranch of plaintiffs and appellants;
3) The Tollhouse or Douglas Ranch, on which L. E. Williams and Edna C. Williams have a trust deed, all being plaintiffs and appellants herein;
4) The Bena Ranch of intervenors and appellants, Joseph Rosenberg, Samuel J. Young, Frank Winer and Samuel A. Wolf son.

The record reflects that the flowing stream does not pass below the Bena Ranch, but that there are other owners *806 of property overlying the Walker Basin though their lands are not riparian to Walker Basin Creek. There is a drop in elevation of 2300 feet between the most easterly or highest and the most westerly or lowest of the listed ranches.

The original complaint alleged that the Rankins, upstream from the lands of the plaintiffs, had recently constructed a dam where Walker Basin Creek leaves section 21, township 29 south, range 32 east, M. D. B. & M., at a point commonly known as the Narrows, and that by so obstructing the stream, the Rankins had interfered with the water rights of the defendants causing multiple damage to their riparian lands; the prayer sought the removal of the dam. Shortly afterwards, the owners of the Bena Ranch filed a complaint in intervention also aimed at the elimination of the dam constructed by the Rankins. Later, both the plaintiffs and intervenors filed amended pleadings by which they not only sought the removal of the dam but also asked for a determination of their respective riparian rights. As the case unfolded to the point of judgment, the existence of the dam became of so little relative importance that no point is made concerning it on the appeal. The trial court determined that the dam and the consequent minimal ponding of water on the Rankin Ranch to permit legitimate pumping by them was reasonable and not a violation of the rights of the other parties. The appeal deals wholly with the determination by the court of the respective usufructuary rights of the parties, as riparian owners, in the stream flow.

The decision as to the subject matter, is further narrowed by the determination of the court that there is no need for restrictive measures for, or against, any of the riparian owners during eight months of the year, that is to say, from October 1 to May 31 of the following year. During that entire period, there is an ample flow in Walker Basin Creek to meet completely the reasonable needs of all riparian owners. Furthermore, the issues, as presented, did not deal with a division of the flow of the stream except in the critical period, and there was no necessity of deciding matters not covered by the evidence. (48 Cal.Jur.2d, Trial, § 290, p. 292; Hudson v. West, 47 Cal.2d 823, 831 [306 P.2d 807].)

Thus, the essential judgment of the court specifically relates only to the months of June, July, August and September when, by reason of the heat and the lack of rainfall, the stream is at its lowest point of run-off. The basic grounds of the appeal by both the plaintiffs and intervenors, in the rather short briefs filed by each, are:

*807 1) That the court did not correctly ascertain the water rights of the appellants, and
2) That the court did not conceive, and incorporate in the judgment, proper provision for the physical solution of the problem.

We have concluded, however, that the trial court exercised extraordinary penetration of the complex technical testimony, and that the judgment is a legal and sensible adjudication of the intricate water problems involved in the litigation. In the process of reaching a decision, the court first ascertained the riparian ownership of lands by the several parties, which, in the case of the plaintiffs and the intervenors, was very much less in quantity than the allegations of their pleadings indicated. Before 1928, this investigation in itself would have furnished ground for the division of the ascertainment of the relative usufructuary rights of the parties. But by the constitutional amendment of 1928 (Cal. Const., art. XIV, §3), the People of this state insisted that California has an important interest in the use of the natural waters of our Pacific slope and gave directions to our courts, in eases of this kind, to consider the use made at any given time of our natural waters to the end that there shall be as great utilization, and as little waste, as possible. With these purposes in view, the trial court next inquired in detail as to the uses made of the water of the creek by the various owners of riparian lands.

The third gross step taken by the court was to devise an order implementing a physical solution of the problem during the only months where there was a conflict of demands by the riparian owners, and the solution was incorporated in the findings and judgment.

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245 Cal. App. 2d 803, 54 Cal. Rptr. 184, 1966 Cal. App. LEXIS 1523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/williams-v-rankin-calctapp-1966.