L.K. Hollenbeak Logging v. Negus CA3 ( 2020 )


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  • Filed 12/18/20 L.K. Hollenbeak Logging v. Negus CA3
    NOT TO BE PUBLISHED
    California Rules of Court, rule 8.1115(a), prohibits courts and parties from citing or relying on opinions not certified for
    publication or ordered published, except as specified by rule 8.1115(b). This opinion has not been certified for publication
    or ordered published for purposes of rule 8.1115.
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Trinity)
    ----
    L. K. HOLLENBEAK LOGGING, CO.,                                                                C080527
    Plaintiff, Cross-defendant and                                 (Super. Ct. No. 12CV062)
    Appellant,
    v.
    BRUCE NEGUS et al.,
    Defendants, Cross-complainants and
    Respondents.
    L.K. Hollenbeak Logging Company (the Company) sued two of its neighbors after
    they allegedly interfered with its ability to divert water from a creek. It later obtained a
    court ruling that granted it nearly everything it sought. The court recognized the
    Company’s right to divert water from the creek, awarded the Company damages for the
    water it lost, and enjoined the Company’s neighbors from further diverting water in a
    manner that would interfere with the Company’s water rights. In the Company’s view,
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    however, the court should have gone further; it should have found the Company’s water
    rights were more expansive, determined the precise quantity of water that each party
    could divert, and appointed a special master to resolve future issues between the parties.
    We disagree and affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    The parties all own land adjacent to a creek known as Big Creek in Trinity
    County, and they all divert water from the creek through a ditch that starts on the
    property of one landowner (named Richard Farmer) and then passes, along with the
    creek, through their respective properties.
    In 2012, the Company sued Bruce and Mike Negus because they allegedly
    interfered with the Company’s ability to divert water from the creek. According to the
    Company’s complaint, the Neguses trespassed onto the Company’s easement along the
    ditch, interfered with the Company’s efforts to clean and maintain the ditch, cut the
    Company’s locks and chains at the diversion point on Farmer’s property, and diverted
    water intended for the Company’s property, Big Creek Ranch. Based on this alleged
    conduct, the Company sought damages and injunctive relief.
    The Neguses, joined by Farmer and Glenda Harrison (collectively respondents),
    countersued the Company and Scott Murrison, the Company’s controlling shareholder.
    They alleged the Company and Murrison, among other things, damaged the ditch and
    interfered with respondents’ ability to use and maintain the ditch. Respondents sought
    damages, declaratory relief about the parties’ respective water rights and ditch rights, and
    injunctive relief prohibiting the Company and Murrison from modifying the ditch and
    limiting their use of the ditch.
    Following a bench trial, the court found largely in favor of the Company. Starting
    with the parties’ competing claims for damages, it first found “Bruce Negus trespassed on
    [the Company’s] property by removing locks at the diversion point which resulted in a
    loss of water to [the Company].” Based on this conduct, it awarded the Company
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    nominal damages for the damaged locks and chains and actual damages for losses
    “caused due to water diversions.” The court rejected respondents’ competing claims for
    damages.
    The court turned next to the parties’ rights to divert from the ditch. According to
    the Company, parts of Big Creek Ranch hold riparian rights and the remaining parts hold
    pre-1914 appropriative water rights.1 But the court agreed with the Company only in
    part. It found all parties hold “riparian rights to Big Creek water whether that water is
    taken directly from Big Creek or from the ‘Big Creek Ditch,’ ” but it found “no evidence
    that any party has any water right that is other than riparian.” The court also found the
    Company has a prescriptive right to use the ditch and the diversion structure located on
    Farmer’s property.
    The court next described the parties’ respective rights to maintain and manage the
    ditch and the diversion structure on Farmer’s property. It first discussed the parties’
    general rights to use the ditch, stating all parties have a right to (1) “maintain the ditch
    including going on the property of others, provided that the maintenance being performed
    is consistent with the rights of the other property/easement owners and does not
    1       California recognizes three primary types of water rights for surface water:
    riparian rights, pre-1914 appropriative water rights, and post-1914 appropriative water
    rights. (See California Farm Bureau Federation v. State Water Resources Control Bd.
    (2011) 
    51 Cal.4th 421
    , 429; People v. Shirokow (1980) 
    26 Cal.3d 301
    , 307.) Riparian
    rights are based largely on a landowner’s location. In general, under the riparian rights
    doctrine, a landowner abutting a stream has the right to divert water from that stream.
    (Rancho Santa Margarita v. Vail (1938) 
    11 Cal.2d 501
    , 528.) Appropriative rights, in
    turn, are principally based on a person’s prior use of water. We refer to some
    appropriative rights as pre-1914 rights because they were acquired before December 19,
    1914, the effective date of an act that established the current permitting scheme for new
    appropriative rights. And we refer to other appropriative rights as post-1914 rights
    because they were acquired after that date under the state’s current permitting scheme.
    (See Shirokow, at p. 307 & fn. 6; Haight v. Costanich (1920) 
    184 Cal. 426
    , 431; Millview
    County Water Dist. v. State Water Resources Control Bd. (2014) 
    229 Cal.App.4th 879
    ,
    889, fn. 7.)
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    unreasonably burden the other owners,” and (2) “make adjustments to water diversion if
    such adjustments are necessary to meet the water rights of the respective party.” It then
    discussed the Company’s additional right to, with certain limitations intended to protect
    respondents, (1) “manage the diversion point both for the purpose of water distribution
    and to comply with the water needs of any appropriative user and the Dept. of Fish and
    Wildlife,” and (2) “make such repairs as are necessary to the diversion point and the ditch
    itself.”
    Finally, the court granted each of the parties some of their requested injunctive
    relief. Starting with the Company’s requested injunctive relief, the court enjoined
    respondents from (1) making any adjustments to water diversions “without first notifying
    [the Company] 48 hours before taking any such action,” (2) “diverting water if to do so
    would interfere with the water rights of upstream water users,” and (3) “interfering with
    [the Company’s] management of the diversion si[te] provid[ed] that said management is
    not unreasonable.” Turning next to respondents’ requested injunctive relief, the court
    limited the Company’s ability to use heavy equipment on respondents’ properties when
    maintaining or repairing the ditch, and enjoined the Company “from making alterations
    to the ditch which would change the nature of the ditch itself.”
    The Company afterward filed a request for a statement of decision. In the request,
    the Company, among other things, asked the court to appoint a special master “to resolve
    future conflicts and disputes in implementation of the Court[’]s judgment.” But the court
    denied that request, finding it exceeded the scope of a request for a statement of decision.
    The Company timely appealed.
    DISCUSSION
    Although its brief is at times difficult to follow, the Company appears to challenge
    the trial court’s decision for three principal reasons.
    First, it contends the trial court wrongly found “the issue of the existence of non-
    riparian or appropriative rights was neither pled or evidenced at trial and in the
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    pleadings.” The court, however, never said “the issue of the existence of non-riparian or
    appropriative rights” was never pled. It said as much only about certain prescriptive
    rights. And although the court perhaps overstated the point in saying “[t]here [wa]s no
    evidence that any party has” appropriative rights, we find no error in the court’s declining
    to find the Company held appropriative rights.
    To show the court should have found otherwise, the Company focuses on the
    manner in which Big Creek Ranch has historically been irrigated. It contends the
    evidence at trial showed the riparian parts of Big Creek Ranch had been irrigated since
    the latter half of the 1800’s, and, because of the manner in which these lands were
    irrigated, the irrigation of these riparian parts of the ranch “unavoidabl[y]” also resulted
    in the irrigation of the nonriparian parts of the ranch throughout this period. That is so,
    the Company reasons, because “the ditch water must, due to the geography and gravity,
    traverse the [higher elevation] ‘non-riparian’ parcel lands to reach the [lower elevation]
    riparian lands at Big Creek Ranch.” In other words, according to the Company, the
    nonriparian parts of its ranch hold pre-1914 appropriative water rights because, before
    1914, these parts of the ranch were used as a conduit to transport water to the riparian
    parts of the ranch.
    We reject this argument. Pre-1914 appropriative water rights are one of two types:
    nonstatutory pre-1914 rights, the type relevant here, and statutory pre-1914 rights.
    (Haight v. Costanich, supra, 184 Cal. at p. 431.) To establish a nonstatutory pre-1914
    right, a water user had to appropriate water and beneficially use that water before
    December 19, 1914, the effective date of an act that established the current permitting
    scheme for new appropriative rights. (Ibid.; see also People v. Shirokow, supra, 26
    Cal.3d at p. 309.) But a water user has not beneficially used water on a property merely
    because it used that property as a conduit to transport water to another property. Under
    those circumstances, the diverter has at most beneficially used the water on only one
    property—the property that ultimately received the water. Because the Company’s
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    argument here focuses only on the portion of its property that served as a conduit for
    transporting water, and not on the portion of its property that actually beneficially used
    that water, we reject it.
    Next, the Company contends the court “failed to deal with and resolve the issues
    of beneficial, reasonable, and non-wasteful uses by the parties and the quantity of those
    uses.” But the trial court did resolve that issue to the extent required in this litigation. In
    awarding the Company damages for the water it lost as a result of the Neguses’ conduct,
    the court at least presumed the Company’s intended use of that water was reasonable,
    beneficial, and lawful. The Company, after all, would not have suffered any damages
    had its intended use of the water been unlawful. But according to the Company, it is not
    enough that the court ruled in its favor on the claim it raised; the court also should have
    quantified the precise amount of water that the parties could use on their respective
    properties going forward. We disagree. The Company never shows it asked the trial
    court for this particular relief, and so we decline to find the court erred in not addressing
    that issue.
    Finally, the Company argues the court erred in declining to appoint a special
    master to resolve future disputes between the parties. We reject this claim too. The
    Company asked for a special master only in its request for a statement of decision. But a
    request for a statement of decision requires the court only to address current controverted
    issues (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 3.1590(d)), not to set up a mechanism for resolving
    future controverted issues. The court thus rightly found “[t]he request for the
    appointment of a special master exceeds the scope of a request for statement of decision.”
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    DISPOSITION
    The judgment is affirmed. Respondents are entitled to recover their costs on
    appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a).)
    /s/
    BLEASE, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    /s/
    MAURO, J.
    /s/
    RENNER, J.
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Document Info

Docket Number: C080527

Filed Date: 12/18/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 12/18/2020