This is an appeal from an order of the superior court granting a temporary injunction. The plaintiffs
set forth in their complaint that they are the owners of certain lands situate in the county of Shasta, comprising about 553 acres, and that they and their predecessors in interest for more than fifty years have been the owners of a certain water ditch taking water out of a certain stream known as Cow Creek; that the water belonging to the plaintiffs is taken at a point on said creek and carried thence in a ditch in a general westerly direction parallel to said stream over and to the lands of the plaintiffs hereinbefore referred to and there used for irrigation purposes; that said water ditch in its course passes along and over a certain tract of land belonging to the defendant before reaching the lands belonging to the plaintiffs; that the plaintiffs have acquired and own the right to conduct said water in said ditch from said Cow Creek to their lands in the ditch above mentioned; that a short time preceding the commencement of this action the defendant on the lands and premises belonging to him and at a point about thirty-three feet from the water ditch belonging to the plaintiffs sunk a sump or well eight feet in depth, three sides of said well or sump being eight feet and the fourth side thereof about nine feet in dimensions; that after said well was dug only a trifle of water appeared in the lowest places therein; that within about twenty-four hours after water was turned into the ditch belonging to the plaintiffs for the purposes of conducting water from Cow Creek to their lands and premises to be used for irrigation purposes, the water in the well or sump dug by the defendant increased to a depth of about four feet; that the defendant installed a pump in said well and was proceeding to pump water therefrom until a temporary restraining order was issued herein; that an order to show cause why a temporary injunction should not be issued pending the trial was made and upon the hearing upon such order to show cause a temporary injunction was issued in this action, restraining the defendant from pumping water from said well until the final order of the court. It is from this temporary injunction that the defendant appeals.
There seems to be no controversy in the testimony that practically all water in the well withdrawn by the defendant's act came directly from the water flowing through the plaintiffs' ditch. The argument presented by the appellant
in this case, admitting the taking of the water to be as above stated, is to the effect that the defendant, as the owner of the land in question, is the owner of all the percolating water therein and that as the water from plaintiffs' ditch comes to the well dug by the defendant underneath the surface, the defendant is entitled to withdraw therefrom all the water that may be found therein for the purpose of irrigating his own land. In support of this contention, a large number of California cases having to do with percolating waters are presented for our consideration.
On the part of the respondent it is first contended that the granting of a temporary injunction is largely discretionary with the trial court and should not be interfered with; secondly, that the plaintiffs are the owners of an easement over the defendant's lands to the extent that plaintiffs are entitled to have the percolating and seepage waters remain undisturbed along the lines of its irrigation ditch for the purpose of supporting and maintaining the current of water flowing in said ditch and, also, further that the different cases relating to percolating waters, in the ordinary sense, where it is held that the owner of the soil is also the owner of all the water beneath the soil, are inapplicable. Passing by the question that the discretion of the trial court in issuing a temporary injunction should not ordinarily be interfered with, we will consider what appears to us to be the main question presented by the facts of this case.[1] Has a land owner a right to sink a well or sump so near an irrigation ditch belonging to another that it is reasonably apparent his water supply will be practically all taken from the waters flowing in said irrigation ditch? We think this question answers itself, and that under such circumstances cases having to do with ordinary percolating waters, in the true sense of the term, have no application. However, we will refer to a few of the leading cases in California, dealing with questions somewhat similar. In the case of Katz v. Walkinshaw, 141 Cal. 116, pages 128 and 129 of the main opinion written by Justice Shaw [99 Am. St. Rep. 35, 64 L.R.A. 236, 74 P. 766, 769], it will be noted that the rule laid down in the case of Hanson v. McCue,42 Cal. 303 [10 Am. Rep. 299], relating to percolating waters and the subsequent cases following the McCue case are taken up, considered, and limited in their application. The
Walkinshaw case further holds that the law relating to percolating waters is very much limited and is governed largely by another rule, which is to the effect that one must so use his own property as not to injure that of another. In the Walkinshaw case the owner of land was enjoined from sinking wells and pumping water therefrom which materially interfered with and diminished the water supply in wells owned by an adjoining land owner. It is true that the waters used and proposed to be used by the parties enjoined was conducted away from the lands from which it was pumped. The complaint in the Walkinshaw case alleged "that the water was necessary for domestic use and irrigation on the lands on which they were situate; that the defendant, by means of other wells and excavations upon another tract of land in the vicinity prevented any water from flowing through the plaintiffs' wells to their premises, and that this was done by drawing off the water through the wells of the defendant, taking it to a distant tract, and there using it." The contention was made in the Walkinshaw case similar to the contention made here as to the rights of the defendant to percolating water. In speaking of this contention Justice Shaw said: "The idea that the doctrine contended for by the defendant is a part of the common law adopted by our statute, and beyond the power of the court to change or modify, is founded upon a misconception of the extent to which the common law is adopted by the statutory provisions, and a failure to observe some of the rules and principles of the common law itself." Mention is then made of conditions under which the principles enunciated by the common law of England are inapplicable, among which are the physical conditions of our state and also the fact that the rule of the common law is not to be applied where the reason for it utterly fails, and, further, "the true doctrine is, that the common law by its own principles adapts itself to varying conditions, and modifies its own rules so as to serve the ends of justice under the different circumstances, a principle adopted into our code by section 3510
of the Civil Code: ``When the reason of a rule ceases, so should the rule itself.'" We do not need to follow the reasoning of the Walkinshaw case further than as above stated to show that where the circumstances are such that the reason for the rule utterly ceases, it cannot be applied. In the case
of Hudson v. Dailey, 156 Cal. 617 [105 P. 748], opinion by Justice Shaw, the supreme court considered a case involving the withdrawal of water by wells and pumps and thereby depleting the quantity of water flowing into a near-by creek. The trial court found there was a substratum of impervious material under which water flowed and from which water was taken by the defendant in connection with the water that was drawn from the creek supplying the plaintiff. As to this matter the opinion reads: "But as the findings also, in substance, declare that the pumping of the defendant does, to a material extent, decrease the amount of water which the plaintiff is able to divert from the creek and which she needs for the irrigation of her land, the finding as to the lower strata is immaterial. If the pumping by the defendant constituted an unlawful diversion of water to which plaintiff was entitled, it would be no defense that they also took other water from another source." In the further consideration of the facts presented in the Dailey case, the court came to the conclusion that the defendant had an interest in the water flowing in the creek and that the claims of the plaintiff were not paramount to the rights of the defendant and it was upon this phase of the case that judgment was rendered. Again, in the case of VerdugoCanon Water Co. v. Verdugo, 152 Cal. 655 [93 P. 1021], a case involving the taking of subterranean waters by means of wells, opinion by Justice Shaw, it is said: "The continued presence in the soil, sand, and gravel composing the bed of the stream of a sufficient quantity of water to supply and support the surface streams in their natural state, is essential to their existence and preservation, and the parties have as clear a right to have this quantity remain underground for that purpose as they have to the stream upon the surface; and neither party should be permitted to decrease this necessary quantity of underground water to the depletion of the surface streams and the injury of those to whom it has been assigned." The facts of that case are not the same exactly as presented in this, but the principle announced is similar — the right to the support to the water flowing in the ditch afforded by the seepage water escaping therefrom into the soil reasonably adjacent to the ditch. Here the defendant by his action, as determined by the trial court, dug his well so near the water ditch belonging to the plaintiffs as
to draw therefrom practically all of the water finding its way to his lands through the agency of an eight-foot well and a pumping plant. For all practical purposes, considering the juxtaposition of the well to the ditch, the suction-pipe of the pump might just as well have been inserted directly in the ditch belonging to the plaintiffs. We think the common law relating to percolating waters, as stated, where the circumstances show that real percolating waters are involved, have no bearing upon the issues in this case, and that the principle set forth in the Walkinshaw case and the two California cases, which we have cited following the Walkinshaw case, are the ones governing the conditions such as are here presented.
The order appealed from is affirmed.
Hart, J., and Finch, P.J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing of this cause was denied by the district court of appeal on March 6, 1926, and a petition by appellant to have the cause heard in the supreme court, after judgment in the district court of appeal, was denied by the supreme court on April 5, 1926.