Yolo Water & Power Co. v. Superior Court

185 P. 195, 43 Cal. App. 332, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 760
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedSeptember 22, 1919
DocketCiv. No. 2034.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 185 P. 195 (Yolo Water & Power Co. v. Superior Court) 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
Yolo Water & Power Co. v. Superior Court, 185 P. 195, 43 Cal. App. 332, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 760 (Cal. Ct. App. 1919).

Opinion

THE COURT.

The opinion filed in this matter on the seventh day of August, 1919, ruling upon the demurrer to the petition is vacated and set aside and the following opinion of the court in said matter is hereby substituted therefor: The application is for a writ of prohibition to prevent said court and the judge thereof “from hearing, entertaining, *334 passing upon, proceeding with, trying and deciding” any and all matters and issues in a certain action pending in said court wherein the people of the state of California is plaintiff and the said Tolo Water and Power Company is defendant. The petition herein shows that said company constitutes a public utility, engaged in the sale, rental, and distribution of water for irrigation; that in pursuance of said purpose it is diverting and distributing the waters of Clear Lake flowing down Cache Creek for the irrigation of certain farming neighborhoods in the counties of Tolo, Colusa, and Solano, amounting to more than two hundred thousand acres; that said lands are owned by several hundred different proprietors and are planted and devoted to various agricultural products; that artificial irrigation is needed for the proper growth and maturity of these different crops; that there is no other source from which sufficient water can be obtained to irrigate these lands; that for the purpose of conserving, storing, and distributing said waters said petitioner has constructed a large concrete dam across Cache Creek, a natural outlet of said Clear Lake, at a point just where the waters of Clear Lake are discharged into said Cache Creek, and has incurred other expenses, in the aggregate of over two million dollars, for the improvement and development of its irrigation system, the acquisition of property and other purposes connected with the scheme for which the company was incorporated and is being operated.

It further appears that on the third day of July, 1919, the district attorney of Lake County filed a complaint in the superior court of said county in the name of the people of the state of California against petitioner, in which it alleged that the defendant therein has committed, and is about to commit, a public nuisance in taking said waters from said Clear Lake, and the plaintiff prayed for the issuance of a preliminary and, also, for a final injunction “restraining and enjoining said defendants from building any dam across the arm or slough of Clear Lake at the point where the pumps of said defendant are now located, or any other point in said arm or slough, and from dredging or deepening or widening said slough or arm of said lake, or from lowering Grigsby riffle at the end of said arm or slough, and from drawing off the waters of said lake any faster than the same would naturally flow therefrom.” Notice was given *335 petitioner for the hearing of a motion for the issuance of said preliminary injunction on the eighteenth day of July, and it is alleged that said court and the judge thereof will proceed to hear, entertain, and determine said motion, and that, if said injunction be granted, the petitioner will be unable to carry on its business and will be unable to supply water for the irrigation of the lands within its system, resulting in the destruction of crops and entailing a loss thereby to the owners of over a million dollars.

It further appears that during the year 1918 the government of the United States, acting through its food commission, urged, advised, and requested many persons producing crops of rice to increase the acreage of land devoted to such production in order to supply the needs of the government of the United States and its allies in the war with Germany and other central powers; that in pursuance of said advice more than ten thousand acres of land subject to irrigation from petitioner’s system were planted in rice with the understanding that said food commission would take all necessary steps to secure water for the irrigation of said lands, and to this end, at the instance of said food commission, the Railroad Commission of the state of California directed and permitted petitioner to install a pumping plant and system which would enable it to pump water from Clear Lake to its canals, ditches, aqueducts, and other utilities for the purpose of supplying sufficient water for the irrigation of said ten thousand acres of rice to such an extent that the level of said lake would be and was reduced to more than 1.9 feet below the low-water mark thereof; that as a result of this reduction it became necessary to refill said lake to the ordinary low-water mark before any water would, without pumping, be available for distribution and sale to said persons during the irrigation season of 1919. It further appears that this would have been supplied by the ordinary rainfall if the seasons had been normal, but that in consequence of the unusual lack of rain in the years 1917,1918, and 1919, it was necessary for petitioner to use pumps to supply the water for the irrigation of said lands and thereby lower the surface of the lake about twelve inches below the low-water mark of said lake. It further appears that at the time the owners of the land devoted to rice culture were preparing their lands for planting rice, it was believed that there would *336 be sufficient water to supply petitioner’s system during the year 1919 without the necessity of resorting to pumping from said lake, but after said persons had made preparation to plant they were advised and informed that there would not be sufficient water to irrigate the rice without pumping, and thereupon said persons consulted and conferred with the Railroad Commission and with petitioner, and said Railroad Commission issued a letter permitting and directing said petitioner to pump water from said Clear Lake during the year 1919 for irrigation of said land, should such pumping become necessary in order to irrigate and mature crops on the lands supplied with water from the system of petitioner, and they also conferred with the board of supervisors of Lake County, and the members thereof, and were informed and lead to believe that there would be no objection to, nor interference with, pumping water necessary to mature and irrigate their crop during the year 1919.

The foregoing recital of the allegations of the petition herein, though not complete, is deemed sufficient to point the application of the legal principles upon which the parties hereto rely. It may be stated that the questions for our determination arise from said petition and a general demurrer thereto.

An opinion was filed by this court and an order entered overruling the demurrer to the petition and directing that an alternative writ issue returnable before this court on the fifteenth day of September, 1919. In the meantime respondents filed a petition for a rehearing, which was denied. In the opinion filed denying the petition for a rehearing, we said:

“The order made in overruling the demurrer is obviously not a final judgment in the case and respondents will have an opportunity, upon the return of the alternative writ, not only to traverse any and all allegations of the petition, but also to present whatever views they may desire upon the sufficiency of the petition itself. We assure respondents that the whole matter will be re-examined in the light of all the reasons and authorities that may be presented by counsel on both sides.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
185 P. 195, 43 Cal. App. 332, 1919 Cal. App. LEXIS 760, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yolo-water-power-co-v-superior-court-calctapp-1919.