Wood v. Pendola

35 P.2d 526, 1 Cal. 2d 435, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 392
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 21, 1934
DocketSac. 4782
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 35 P.2d 526 (Wood v. Pendola) 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. Pendola, 35 P.2d 526, 1 Cal. 2d 435, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 392 (Cal. 1934).

Opinion

SHENK, J.

The plaintiff sued to quiet his title to an alleged appropriation right in the waters of Coyote Creek in Calaveras County, and for injunctive relief to enjoin the defendants’ interference with the right alleged. The defendants appeal from a judgment for the plaintiff.

The plaintiff based his right to recovery on a judgment for the plaintiff rendered on September 21, 1887, in an action commenced in the Superior Court in and for the County of Calaveras by Marinda Wood, the predecessor of the plaintiff, against Lorenzo Péndola, the defendants’ predecessor in interest, and which was affirmed on appeal. (Wood v. Pendola, 78 Cal. 287 [20 Pac. 678].) By that judgment the title of the plaintiff therein to the same right involved in the present action was decreed and the defendant there perpetually enjoined from interfering with that right. The defendants in the present action founded their claim of right on a final judgment of the Superior Court in and for San Joaquin County rendered on November 14, 1929, which established and determined the several priorities, quantities and points of diversion and use by the parties hereto to the waters of Coyote Creek, following an order of determination by the division of water rights, department of public works, pursuant to the provisions of the Water Commission Act. (Stats. 1913, p. 1012, as amended.) The order of the division of water rights established the right of Mrs. Marinda Wood to divert 0.875 cubic feet per second, priority, 1886, in the natural flow of Coyote Creek. The same order determined that Mrs. M. Pendola is entitled to divert 0.270 cubic feet per second priority, 1868, and 0.355 cubic feet per second, priority, 1885, from the natural flow of Coyote Creek. The trial court in the present'action found, and no showing is made that its finding is unsupported, that the right established in favor of Mrs. Pendola by the order of determination is the right involved in the present action, *439 and by the judgment of 1887 decreed to be the property of the mother of the plaintiff herein.

The ground of the appeal is that the court erred in basing its decree herein on the judgment of 1887 rather than on the judgment of the Superior Court in San Joaquin County rendered on November 14, 1929. The defendants rely on the rule that the last judgment in point of time involving the same parties and the same subject matter controls and determines the rights of the parties. If the judgment of November 14, 1929, entered in the proceedings in San Joaquin County, is conclusive and enforceable as against the plaintiff herein, the rule stated governs to effect a reversal of the present judgment. (California Bank v. Traeger, 215 Cal. 346 [10 Pac. (2d) 51]; 15 Cal. Jur. 104, 105, and cases cited.)

In opposing the effect of the rule relied upon by the defendants the plaintiff urges that sections 36a and 36b of the Water Commission Act are in violation of sections 1 and 5 of article VI, section 13, of article I, article III, and section 25 of article IV of the California Constitution.

The Water Commission Act was approved by the voters, pursuant to a referendum petition, at the general election held in November, 1914, and became effective in the same year. The main purpose of the act is to regulate the right to appropriate and the issuance of permits for the appropriation of unappropriated waters of the state, through the administrative offices of a state water commission thereby created. The act defines what are or may become unappropriated waters subject to appropriation. (Secs. 11, 20a.) By section 25 the commission is given power upon its own initiative or upon petition signed by one or more claimants to water of any stream system to proceed to determine the rights based on prior appropriation of all claimants on the stream system. Provisions for notice of the order granting the petition, investigation and compiling of data and information, execution of surveys, preparation of maps, etc., notice of hearing, and hearing of all _claims and contests which may arise out of conflicting claims, and the making of an order establishing the several rights by appropriation of the waters of the stream system by the water commission are provided in sections 26 to 36 of the act. Section 25 of *440 the act refers to a stream, stream system, lake or other body of water as a “stream system”.

In August, 1917, the state water commission on the joint petition of the Oakdale Irrigation District and the South San Joaquin Irrigation District granted an order for the investigation and determination of the rights of claimants to the use of waters of the Stanislaus River and its tributaries based upon prior appropriation. After investigation, notice and hearing on the claims of some sixty persons, including the claims of the parties hereto, to appropriation rights in said stream and its tributaries, the division of water rights, the successor of the state water commission, on September 21, 1922, made and entered its order.

Section 36a of the Water Commission Act provides for the filing of a certified copy of such order, together with the original evidence and transcript of testimony, duly certified, with the clerk of the superior court of the county in which said stream system or any part of it is situated. Pursuant to this provision there was filed with the clerk of the Superior Court in and for the County of San Joaquin a certified copy of the division’s order of September 21, 1922, together with the evidence and transcript. An order of the court setting a time for hearing was procured and served as therein provided.

Section 36b provides for the filing of notices of exceptions to the order by parties in interest who are aggrieved or dissatisfied with it, which notices shall be served in the manner provided on the state water commission and on adverse claimants. The section continues: "The order of determination by the state water commission and the statements or claims of claimants and exceptions made to the order of determination shall constitute the pleadings, but the court may allow such additional or amended pleadings as may be necessary to a final determination of the proceeding. If no exceptions shall have been filed with the clerk of the court as aforesaid, then on the day set for the hearing, on motion of the state water commission, or its attorney, the court shall enter a decree affirming said order of determination. On the day set for hearing all parties in interest who have filed notices of exceptions as aforesaid shall appear in person, or by counsel, and it shall be the duty of the court to hear the same or set the time for hearing, until such exceptions are *441 disposed of, and all proceedings thereunder shall he as nearly as may be in accordance with the" rules governing civil actions. ...”

By section 36c the court may employ experts to investigate and report and may take additional evidence or refer the case back to the commission for that purpose. After the hearing the court is directed to enter a decree determining the right of all persons involved in the proceeding, including the extent, priority, amount, purpose of use, point of diversion, and place of use, and the tracts of land to which the use is appurtenant and other necessary conditions, and may assess the costs. The section also provides for appeals as in civil cases.

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Bluebook (online)
35 P.2d 526, 1 Cal. 2d 435, 1934 Cal. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-pendola-cal-1934.