Beatty v. Clark Colony Water Co. , 28 Cal. App. 745 ( 1915 )


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  • RICHARDS, J.

    This is an appeal from a judgment in favor of the plaintiffs and from an order denying a new trial in a proceeding instituted to obtain the issuance of a writ of mandate.

    The substantial facts upon which the proceeding was predicated, and which are in the main undisputed, are these: The plaintiff, Margaret Jane Beatty, became in the month of August, 1910, and has since continued to be the owner and in possession as her separate property of lot 232 in Clark Colony, a subdivision of the Rancho Arroyo Seco in the county of Monterey. The plaintiff, James Beatty, being her husband, is joined with her in the action. The defendant, Clark Colony Water Co., is a co-operative corporation composed of the owners of lots in said subdivision, and organized for the purpose of supplying to each of these lots and to the owners thereof a certain amount of water for irrigation during each year. To the owner of each lot in said tract certificates of stock are issued, wherein the corporation agrees to deliver to the owner thereof water for the proper irrigation of his lot or lots so long as the assessments annually levied upon such shares of stock to cover the cost of such delivery are duly paid. The plaintiffs alleged, and the defendant, by its failure to deny the same, admitted that the defendant had been accustomed at all times to distribute water to its stockholders other than these plaintiffs from about the 15th of December of each year up to and about the 1st of June of the succeeding year, in sufficient quantities to each of said stockholders *747 to fill the checks on the land of each from three to four different times during each of said irrigating seasons, and to deliver a volume of water over the whole area of each lot so irrigated nine inches thick each time said irrigation is made; and that said amount of water, commonly known as “9 acre inches of water,” delivered each of said three or four times that said land is irrigated, is necessary sufficiently to irrigate during each season the said lands of said Margaret Jane Beatty. The plaintiffs further alleged and the defendant denied that on or about the first day of December, 1910, and many times since, the said Margaret Jane Beatty demanded of said defendant that it deliver her water sufficient for the irrigation of her said lots, but that the defendant has refused and neglected and still refuses and neglects to deliver said water to her, and that she has received no water whatever upon her said lot of land; and that as a result thereof she has been damaged in a specified sum through her inability to cultivate certain crops thereon requiring such irrigation.

    The only two issues raised by the defendant in its answer involved the sufficiency of the plaintiffs’ demand for water and the question of damages. Upon the hearing in the trial court the plaintiffs introduced in evidence two written demands for water made upon the defendant, the first of these' having been served on June 30, 1911, and the second on November 4th of the same year. As to the first of these demands, the objection of the defendant that it embraced demands for the doing of acts in connection with the delivery of water to the lands of the said plaintiff which the defendant was not under its stock agreement and by-laws bound to do, was probably well taken; but the same cannot be said of the second of these demands. It was drawn by counsel for plaintiffs; and, while doubtless prepared with a view to possible litigation, was couched in general and moderate terms. The chief objection which the defendant makes to the form of this demand is that it requires the defendant to perfect its arrangements for the turning in of the water upon the lands of said plaintiffs by December 1, 1911, whereas by the usages of its water service its water is not available for irrigation until the following January. The defendant further urges as one of the chief reasons why it did not comply with this demand that the plaintiffs had made no preparation by checks or ditches or necessary grading on their own land to receive *748 the water, and particularly that a certain portion of the lot lying a foot or so higher than the level of the defendant’s ditches had not been graded down so as to permit the flow of the water over the entire area of the land. These objections appear to be strained and captious, and not to be in keeping with the co-operative character of the relation between the parties. The evidence discloses that the plaintiffs were earnestly and apparently in good faith seeking to secure the water for their lot to which they were clearly entitled: The requirement in their demand that the defendant perfect its arrangements for turning in such water by December 1st should be reasonably construed to refer to the doing of such repair and extension work upon the company’s pipes and ditches as would make available its water to this lot of land a sufficient time in advance of the actual date of its use thereon to enable the plaintiffs to do the necessary checking, ditching, and grading on their own premises preparatory to the reception of said water at the usual time. The defendant’s objection that the plaintiffs had not done this preparatory work prior to the inception of any work on their own part to put their pipes and ditches in order, is answered by the fact that on a prior occasion certain lands of the plaintiffs had been so prepared, and that no water had been delivered. Had the defendant displayed any activity in the way of preparing to deliver its water in response to this latter demand, it might well be that the plaintiffs would at once have put their premises in order for its reception; and even if they had not done so theirs and not the defendant’s would have been the loss in waste of water. The findings of the court as to the sufficiency of the plaintiffs’ demand, and the refusal of the defendant to comply with it, are, we think, fully sustained by the proofs in the case.

    The judgment of the court which directs the defendant to deliver to the plaintiff, Margaret Jane Beatty, on her said land at least three different times from the fifteenth day of December of each year to the first day of June of each succeeding year, a volume of water over the whole area of said land nine inches thick each time such delivery is made, is to receive such a reasonable construction and application to the facts of the particular situation as not to require the defendant to enter upon the lands of the plaintiff for the doing of any grading or ditching or checking thereon which *749 the plaintiffs, in accordance with the terms of their contract and the usages of the locality, ought to do. So construed it is susceptible of being carried into practical effect by the defendant, and is not subject to the objections which are urged against it upon this appeal.

    We are therefore of the opinion that that portion of the judgment from which the defendant has appealed should be affirmed; and as to that portion thereof the defendant’s motion for a new trial was properly denied.

    Judgment and order affirmed.

    Lennon, P. J., and Kerrigan, J., concurred.

    A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on December 9, 1915, and a petition to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on January 6, 1916.

Document Info

Docket Number: Civ. No. 1701.

Citation Numbers: 153 P. 989, 28 Cal. App. 745, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 370

Judges: Richards

Filed Date: 11/9/1915

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/3/2024