Yuba River Power Co. v. Nevada Irrigation District

279 P. 128, 207 Cal. 521, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 524
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1929
DocketDocket No. Sac. 4157.
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 279 P. 128 (Yuba River Power Co. v. Nevada Irrigation District) 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
Yuba River Power Co. v. Nevada Irrigation District, 279 P. 128, 207 Cal. 521, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 524 (Cal. 1929).

Opinion

PRESTON, J.

This case arises under the Water Commission Act (Stats. 1913, p. 1012) now being administered by the department of public works, division of water sights. To the issue made by the complaint a demurrer was interposed and sustained without leave to amend,. followed by judgment for defendants." Three- propositions are to be taken as true in disposing of the question in controversy; first, that appellant has fully complied with each and every provision of the above-mentioned act entitling it to receive .preferential right to appropriate certain amounts of water from the Yuba River; second, that unappropriated water sufficient to comply with the applications flows in the stream; third, that appellant is prepared to put the water sought to be appropiated to a beneficial use.

The question, then, for decision is this: Is appellant, who seeks to appropriate available water and in the status above described, authorized under section 738 of the Code of Civil Procedure, prior to the issuance of a permit, to bring an *523 action in equity in the nature of a suit to quiet title to determine the adverse claims to use of the water so sought as between itself and an upper claimant who threatens to invade the right of priority thus claimed?

Admittedly plaintiff has four applications pending and in good standing, one dated February 17, 1920, one dated September 10, 1920, and two dated April 9, 1923, to appropriate large quantities of the water of the Yuba River to be used for power and irrigation purposes. The allegations of the complaint are that the waters claimed are available in the stream and that plaintiff has the ability to make beneficial use of them; that defendants assert the right to appropriate and use said waters by diverting them from the stream at a point above plaintiff’s points of intended diversion ; that defendants assert and claim said rights in hostility and priority in time and right to plaintiff’s applications, but that said rights, if any such exist, are subsequent and subject to the applications of plaintiff; that said defendants are proceeding to divert and use the waters of said Yuba River sought by plaintiff, claiming that their rights are prior in time and right to said applications of plaintiff; that there are not enough unappropriated waters in said stream to satisfy the applications of plaintiff and at the same time to satisfy the asserted rights of defendants to appropriate and use said waters.

Section 738 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides: “An action may be brought by any person against another who claims an estate or interest in real or personal property, adverse to him, for' the purpose of determining such adverse claim. ...” The word “property” found in this section is a broad term and is specifically defined in sections 654 and 655 of the Civil Code. The word is also defined as follows: “The term ‘property’ is sufficiently comprehensive to include every species of estate, real and personal, and everything which one person can own and transfer to another. It extends to every species of right and interest capable of being enjoyed as such upon which it is practicable to place a money value. As applied to lands the term comprehends every species of title, inchoate or complete. It is supposed to embrace those rights which lie in contract—those which are executory as well as those which are executed.” (22 R. C. L., p. 43, sec. 10.)

*524 In McKeon v. Bisbee, 9 Cal. 137, 142 [70 Am. Dec. 642], dealing with a mining claim upon public lands, this court, as early as 1858, said: “Property is the exclusive right of possession, enjoying, and disposing of a thing; it is ‘the right and interest which a man has in lands and chattels, to the exclusion of others’; and the term is sufficiently comprehensive to include every species of estate, real or personal.” The court there sustained the execution sale of the interest of a miner in his mining claim.

' In People v. Eddy, 43 Cal. 331, 336, 337 [13 Am. Rep. 143], it is said: “The word ‘property’ is used in that section of the Constitution in its ordinary and popular sense, and this is the general rule in the interpretation of Constitutions and statutes, unless the context shows that the words are used in a technical or in some arbitrary sense.”

Respondents admit that by the filing of said applications plaintiff received “procedural priority” and concede that this “procedural priority” may itself be property in that it may be assigned or transferred, but it is insisted that such property right is a different right from an interest or estate in the use of the water applied for. This concession goes a long way toward demonstrating that the position of appellant herein is the correct one. But respondents contend that inasmuch as a broad discretion is resposed in the division of water rights by the statute in the matter of applications of this character, having the power at will, it is said, to approve, modify or reject them, the mere filing of an application is insufficient upon which to claim a right in either real or personal property. Moreover, it is contended that were a court of equity in a suit of the char- acter here to attempt to determine the rights of a mere claimant, it would assume to itself administrative functions, which it cannot constitutionally do.

The effect of an application in proper form has been declared by the statute to be as follows: “ . . . And any application so made shall give to the applicant a priority of right as of the date of said application to such water or the use thereof until such application shall have been approved or rejected by said commission, provided, that such priority shall continue only so long as the provisions of law and the rules and regulations of the water commission *525 shall he followed by the applicant. ...” (Sec. 17, Water Commission Act, Stats. 1913, p. 1022.)

Respondents seem clearly to have mistaken the status of appellant, who has complied with all the requirements of law and has found available water to appropriate. The granting of a permit is merely confirming evidence of the right theretofore existing. It is not the right itself. The application cannot be arbitrarily rejected. This is the plain holding of this court in Tulare Water Co. v. State Water Com., 187 Cal. 533, 537 [202 Pac. 874, 876], wherein this court sustained a proceeding in mandate to compel the state water commission to entertain a complaint having the purpose to direct the commission to issue the permit, saying that: “To conclude the rights of would-be appropriators by the extrajudicial and perhaps arbitrary action of a board of water commissioners would be to deprive such applicant of a valuable property right without due process of law.” (See, also, Rich v. McClure, 78 Cal. App. 209 [248 Pac. 275].)

The court in said cause (Tulare Water Co. v. State Water Com., supra) further clearly intimated that neither the question of priority between claimants nor the existence or nonexistence of unappropriated waters in a stream were questions to be finally determined by the water commission. The effect of this holding was sought to be obviated by the enactment of a new section, known as 1b (Stats. 1923, p.

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Bluebook (online)
279 P. 128, 207 Cal. 521, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yuba-river-power-co-v-nevada-irrigation-district-cal-1929.