Wood v. Etiwanda Water Co.

81 P. 512, 147 Cal. 228, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 385
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1905
DocketL.A. No. 1328.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 81 P. 512 (Wood v. Etiwanda Water 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
Wood v. Etiwanda Water Co., 81 P. 512, 147 Cal. 228, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 385 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

VAN DYKE, J.

On November, 1893, plaintiffs commenced an action in the superior court of San Bernardino County against the Etiwanda Water Company and the California Improvement Company for the purpose of obtaining a perpetual injunction restraining the defendants from maintaining a pipe across the lands of the plaintiffs, and from diverting water from the East Canon, or Etiwanda Creek, through that pipe, the plaintiffs being the owners as tenants in common of a considerable tract of land, through which said creek flowed. Upon the trial of said action the court found that the stream of water known as East Canon Creek rises in the mountains above the lands of the plaintiffs, and in its natural course flows down through said lands; that in 1882 the Etiwanda Water Company constructed and used a flume in lieu of an open ditch, which many years before had been used by said defendant’s grantors for the diversion of said water, and that said flume was not an original diversion of water, but was a continuation of the diversion before made by the grantors of the defendant; that more than twenty years before the commencement of said action the defendant’s grantors appropriated and diverted all the water of said Canon Creek at a point near where the said creek flows from the cañón, for household and domestic use and irrigation upon lands then owned and possessed by them, and conveyed said water to their said lands for such use, and that ever since, and down to the commencement of - the said action, said defendant and its grantors have diverted and used said water *230 for said purposes, to the extent of one hundred and twenty-five inches, measured under a four-inch pressure, and all the water so diverted had been used for said purposes. During all of said time said defendant and its grantors were, and said defendant, Btiwanda Water Company, now is, the owner of the right so to divert and use the said water to the extent aforesaid. It is also found that defendant, in June, 1892, commenced to lay pipe across the plaintiffs’ lands, and that said pipe was substituted for said flume for a portion of the distance across said lands, and was constructed and laid substantially along the course of the old flume, which latter had been wholly disused, except the first portion thereof, and that said pipe-line was so constructed without the consent and against the wishes of the plaintiffs, and was without right; and as a conclusion of law the court found that the plaintiffs were entitled to judgment perpetually restraining the Btiwanda Water Company, defendant, from maintaining or using the pipe-line described in the pleadings, and referred to in said findings; and, as a further conclusion of law, found that the defendant, the Btiwanda Water Company, was entitled to judgment that it is the owner of the right to maintain the dam and flume described in the pleadings and referred to in said findings of fact, and to divert the water of Bast Canon Creek to the extent of one hundred and twenty-five inches, measured under a four-inch pressure.

The plaintiffs in that action appealed to this court from the portion of the judgment wherein it was adjudged that the Btiwanda Water Company was the owner of the right to maintain the dam and flume referred to. The defendant, however, acquiesced in the findings and decree in the lower court, and at once proceeded to, and did, remove the pipe, and thereupon restored the flume, as originally constructed, before the appeal was taken on the part of the plaintiffs. In the opinion in this court on the appeal (Wood v. Etiwanda Water Co., 122 Cal. 160, [54 Pac. 729], it is said: “The defendant, by its failure to appeal, has acquiesced in the finding and judgment that the pipe-line was constructed without right, and that it be perpetually enjoined from using it, a contingency that might have been anticipated by the defendant and the question made as to its right to construct a flume to take its place. Besides, it may well be questioned whether there is any *231 finding that will support that part of the judgment appealed from. The court found that the flume had been used from 1882 to 1892, that it was then ‘abandoned’ and destroyed, except a few feet near the dam, and unless it can be said as a conclusion of law that the flume having once existed, and having been voluntarily destroyed and abandoned, may be rebuilt and the servitude upon plaintiff’s lands be recreated or renewed at defendant’s will, there would seem to be no basis for the judgment appealed from. . . . The question of defendant’s right to reconstruct the. flume has been argued in the briefs, but as the question was not raised upon the pleadings, and the judgment in that regard being outside of the issues, and apparently not litigated upon the trial, that part of the judgment appealed from should be reversed, with leave to both parties to amend or supplement the pleadings as they may be advised.”

Instead of following the suggestion of this court in remanding the cause for further proceedings by way of amendments, or supplemental pleadings, the plaintiffs, in June, 1896, commenced another action, for the purpose of enjoining the defendant from constructing any flume or other conduit across the said lands of plaintiffs, or any portion thereof, and from diverting the waters from said stream to conduct the same across the lands of the plaintiffs.

The answer of the defendant, the Btiwanda Water Company, sets forth that in the year 1882 it had constructed an open flume, and by means of such flume and dam had diverted the waters of the creek; that said diversion had existed long prior to 1882, by defendant’s grantors and predecessors in interest, and was not a new or original diversion by the defendant ; that the flume had been constructed and used in lieu of an open ditch which many years before had been used by defendant’s grantors and predecessors, and that the appropriation and use of the. waters of the stream by the defendant and its grantors and predecessors in interest extended to and included the entire flow of the stream during the irrigation season of every year, and that the flume, as so constructed, was capable of carrying one hundred and twenty-five inches of water, measured under a four-inch pressure; that all the waters diverted by the defendant were actually used for a beneficial purpose during all said time.

*232 After the commencement of this present action, F. W, Wood, one of the plaintiffs, died, and by order of court Leona Wood, executrix of the will of F. W. Wood, deceased, was substituted in his place, and a supplemental complaint filed. In the answer to the supplemental complaint it is further alleged on behalf of the defendant that the use and substitution of the iron pipe for a portion of said flume was a temporary use and a temporary substitution only, and that the defendant never intended to abandon, and never did abandon, the right to maintain and use the said flume, or any part thereof, as the same had been constructed and maintained and used by it both prior and subsequent to the said temporary use of the iron pipe.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 P. 512, 147 Cal. 228, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-etiwanda-water-co-cal-1905.