Nev. Cty. & Sacramento Canal Co. v. Kidd

By the Court, Sawyer, C. J.:

There were originally two counts in the complaint, but the Court sustained the demurrer to the second, and, the plaintiff declining' to amend, entered final judgment thereon, and the trial was had on the first count only.

The count of the complaint upon which issue was joined and the trial had substantially alleges that at a time specified the plaintiff had appropriated, was the owner and in the use and enjoyment of certain water rights, privileges, and appurtenances at a point designated, on the South Yuba River, in Nevada County, with the right to divert the water of said river, by means of a dam then in course of construction by plaintiff, into a canal then projected and surveyed by plaintiff, and was the owner and in possession of said water right, site for a dam, and dam in course of construction, and site for canal, and canal thereon projected, surveyed, and commenced; and that afterward, on a day named, the defendants unlawfully and violently, with force and arms, entered upon *300said property, rights, privileges, and appurtenances, and drove off, amoved, and expelled from the whole thereof, except, etc., and from all exercise of the rights of the possession, use, or enjoyment thereof, and with force and arms kept and continued plaintiff' amoved and expelled therefrom for a long space of time, to wit: thence hitherto, and by reason thereof the plaintiff has, thence hitherto, been hindered, delayed, and wrongfully prevented from using, exercising, and enjoying its rights aforesaid, etc., to the plaintiff’s damages in the sum of one hundred thousand dollars. The prayer is: “Wherefore, plaintiff brings its suit and prays judgment against said defendants for the sum of one hundred thousand dollars and for its costs of suit.”

Upon the trial of the issues taken on this count the jury found the following verdict: “We, the jurors * * * render our verdict in favor of plaintiff for the amount of one dollar damages.” On the next day, July 17th, judgment was entered on the verdict in favor of plaintiff for one dollar damages and costs. On the third of August following, the plaintiff' moved the Court on the pleadings and verdict, firstly, to set aside the judgment, in order that the proper judgment might be entered; secondly, that upon the pleadings and verdict the plaintiff have leave to amend the prayer of the complaint by inserting a prayer that plaintiff may have judgment for the restitution of the property; thirdly, that upon the pleadings and verdict the plaintiff have judgment for the restitution of the property; fourthly, that upon the pleadings and verdict the plaintiff be adjudged entitled to the .exclusive possession of the property, rights, etc., that plaintiff have a perpetual injunction and general relief in the premises; and fifthly, that plaintiff have judgment on the second count, as therein prayed. All of which motions, after consideration, were denied.

This cause of action is strictly in trespass at common law for damages. In fact, the pleader, in alleging the wrong complained of, follows very closely the language of the 61 count for a common expulsion” in 2 Chitty’s Pleading, 685, *301and the prayer only demands a judgment for damages, the appropriate judgment in an action for trespass. The verdict responds in damages. The cause of action alleged, the prayer, and the verdict, are in strict accord. It is true, that forms of action have been abolished, but the substance as well as the form of the action is trespass.

It is said, however—and in this we agree with appellant— that, although this complaint, substantially, and in form, presents a cause of action for trespass at common law, yet the averments are, also, broad enough to entitle plaintiff to a judgment for possession of the property and rights from which it has been amoved and dispossessed; that such relief is consistent with the facts stated in the complaint and embraced within the issues formed; and that, under section one hundred forty-seven of the Practice Act, when an answer is filed “the Court may grant any relief consistent with the case made by the complaint and embraced within the issue.” But the Court may grant, not must. That is to say, it may grant any such relief, provided the facts within the issues proved and the circumstances justify it, but, certainly, not otherwise. The verdict in this case does not necessarily find all the facts averred in the complaint. The complaint alleges a trespass on the dam site and dam in process of erection, and on the site for a canal and the canal thereon projected, surveyed, and commenced, and an interference with plaintiff’s water rights, and expressly asks damages for the wrong, and the verdict finds some trespass or interference of some kind alleged, upon the whole or some part of the property, and that the plaintiff is entitled to one dollar damages. But it would be sufficient, to justify this verdict, to show by proofs that the trespass was committed but for a day, or an hour, at any time before the commencement of the suit, and upon any part of the property described. It might not have been continued. The possession might have ceased long before the commencement of the action, so that, at the time of the commencement of the suit, the defendants were not in possession, or the *302right of possession on the part of the plaintiff might have ceased, or been abandoned, or transferred before action brought. On many grounds there might be no right to a judgment for possession proved, although a right to recover damages for the trespass was shown. The testimony is not in the record, and we do not know what facts were proved. The verdict does not necessarily go beyond a trespass and right to damages. It does not necessarily determine all the issues. The judgment was satisfactory to the Court below, and we must presume, in support of the action of the Court, that it covers all the issues proved in favor of the plaintiff, or which the proofs justified. The form of the verdict is peculiar, and indicates that the jury only supposed the plaintiff' entitled to damages on the evidence. There is certainly nothing to indicate that they found in favor of plaintiff, as against defendants, the right to present possession, or right of possession to the dam site or canal, or a right to the present use of the waters of tho Yuba River at the commencement of suit. We cannot presume, against the action of the Court and the record, that the plaintiff proved other issues than those to which the prayer of the complaint relates, or other than such as are sufficient to sustain the judgment as it was entered. The District Court was in a position to determine whether the judgment covers all the issues proved, and it evidently was of opinion that it did, or a different judgment would have been entered, especially when the question was directly presented for adjudication, and the right to a different judgment urged and adjudged against plaintiff. There is no ground for supposing the judgment was inadvertently entered to correspond with the relief asked in the complaint. There is nothing presented in the record by which we can determine that the Court erred on this point, and we have often said that error must he made to affirmatively appear by the party alleging it. The record in this case certainly does not affirmatively show that the Court erred in refusing to enter a judgment for restitution, etc.

The same principle applies to the motion, after verdict *303and judgment, for leave to amend the prayer of the complaint, so as to ask for a judgment for possession, and lay the foundation for another motion to modify the judgment. It does not appear that the issues, to which the prayer to be added applies, were proved or found by the jury. The verdict in this case, as wo have seen, does not necessarily find for plaintiff on that issue, although it might have done so upon proper evidence, for a mere trespass without any right of possession at the time of the commencement of the suit, is sufficient to justify the verdict under the pleadings, and is all that is looked to in the prayer, as it stood at the trial. Section thirty-nine of the Practice Act says: “The complaint shall contain * * * a demand of the relief which the plaintiff claims. If the recovery of money, or damages he demanded, the amount thereof shall be stated.” The complaint did particularly specify the relief demanded, as here required, and that relief was a judgment for damages, the amount of which was stated, and the relief demanded was strictly in accordance with the theory of the case as stated. Having been thus specific in stating the relief demanded, and the relief being appropriate, the defendants were entitled to suppose the case would be tried in accordance with the theory of the case thus indicated by the facts as stated, and the relief prayed. They might make a very different defense to an action to recover the possession of valuable property, from that which they would in an action lor damages for a simple trespass, since there might he a cause of action for a trespass, but none at the time of commencing the suit for possession. Other evidence of a different character to different facts would be necessary on the issue of the right to possession at the time of the commencement of the action. At all events, t-he testimony might be confined to the issues as to the trespass charged, and, if so, outrageous wrong and injustice would result, if, after trial and verdict for plaintiff on the issue as to a mere trespass, when too late to remedy the defect of proof on other issues, upon which no relief was asked, the Gourt should allow a prayer for other and differ*304ent relief to be inserted, and then, assuming that all the issues had been tried and found for plaintiff, render a judgment covering issues which defendants had not contested, or been called upon by the state of the pleadings at the time of trial to contest. Such a practice would mislead, and work intolerable injustice. The theory of our Practice Act, and especially of the section cited, is, that a plaintiff shall not only state the specific facts which constitute his cause of action, but shall state the specific relief to which he considers himself entitled. The policy is, to apprise the opposite party of the precise nature of the demand, in order that he may come prepared to meet it. Where the facts alleged in the complaint may constitute two or more different causes of action, and authorize different judgments, the prayer becomes significant, and may determine the nature of the action. (People v. Mier, 24 Cal. 61; Arrington, v. Liscom, 34 Cal. 375.) We said in regard to a judgment declaring certain deeds void, when no such relief was asked by a plaintiff, in Morrison v. Bowman, 29 Cal. 354: “Kor do we discover any reason for declaring null and void the bond executed to Bowman, and the compromise entered into and the release executed by Mrs. Smith. She does not ask to have the same so declared and decreed, and it was not the duty of the Court to extend to her a real or supposed benefit that she manifested no desire to obtain. (See, also, Bigelow v. Grove, 7 Cal. 135.)” It is true, as we have before'seen, that under section one hundred forty-seven, when an answer has been filed the Court may grant any relief consistent with the case made by the complaint, and embraced within the issue, hut this must be in a case under circumstances which would justify it. Thus when the facts averred and the issue joined not only justify the relief asked, but still further relief, upon making the proper proofs, and all the issues have been fully litigated by both parties without objection, and fairly determined, and the additional relief, to which the proofs show the party entitled, has been asked in proper time, the Court may give it, and amend *305the prayer to correspond with the judgment, if such amendment be necessary under that section. But the giving of additional relief, either with or without amending the prayer, if no amendment is necessary, is a matter left to the sound discretion of the Court before which the trial is had, to be exercised in view of the circumstances of each case as it arises. The Court which tries the case is in a situation to determine whether the proofs, the circumstances, and justice to all parties justify relief other than that specially prayed, and whether the amendment may be allowed in that stage of the proceedings, without prejudice to the rights of the defendant. But the District Court is not bound to give other relief than that specifically asked, or to allow an amendment of the prayer to correspond with it, on application made after - trial and verdict upon the theory of the case stated, and in view of the relief asked in the complaint, without reference to the question, whether all the issues have been fully litigated and determined in favor of the plaintiff, or to the proofs and circumstances of the case. If such practice could be tolerated, defendants would be liable to be misled, and have judgments entered against them on issues never, in fact, litigated and determined. The matter rests, where it should, in the sound discretion of the District Court. If this discretion is abused, and relief improperly granted, when not asked, or justified by the proofs, or refused where the plaintiff is clearly. entitled to it under the proofs and circumstances of the case, the party seeking to reverse its action must make the error clearly appear, for all presumptions are in favor of the action of the Court. In this case there is nothing to show that the Court erred, or abused its discretion, in the particular under consideration. All the relief asked in the complaint was given; the averments of the complaint, verdict thereon, and judgment are in strict accord, and we are not at liberty to suppose that all the relief to which the plaintiff showed itself entitled was not given.

*306It is claimed, also, that the prayer in the second count is applicable to the whole complaint—is broad enough to entitle the plaintiff to the relief demanded. Each count is wholly independent of the other and complete within itself, as much so as if they were in separate actions, each having its appropriate beginning, conclusion and prayer, and each is separately signed by counsel and stands by itself. The prayer of the second count does not have, and is not designed tp have, any reference to the first count. The introduction to the second count and the conclusion both show that plaintiff did not claim, or intend to claim, any relief at law under this count, and that the facts, so far as they constitute a cause of action at law, were only introduced as the basis upon which they founded their claim to equitable relief. And the prayer asks that plaintiff be adjudged entitled to the waters of the South Yuba; that defendants be enjoined from trespassing upon their location or interfering with their rights to divert said waters at the point designated, “or for such further order or relief as to the Court may seem equitable, just, and meet, and for general equitable relief.” This is but a prayer for equitable relief upon the count to which it was appended, and defendants had a right to so regard it. It had no reference to the other count, nor to any legal relief on the count to which it belonged. It went out of the case with the count of which it formed a part. But if it could be considered as applying to the first count, and sufficient to cover any relief within the issues, it still does not aid the plaintiff, for the reasons already stated in discussing the other points, it does not appear that the issues necessary to sustain a judgment for possession were proved or found for plaintiff.

The only remaining question arises on the order sustaining the demurrer to the second count. We do not know upon what ground the Court sustained the demurrer; but as it overruled the demurrer to the first count, which is identical, so far as the legal rights upon which the claim for equitable relief is superinduced are concerned, it is argued that the Court must have regarded the count as looking to an *307equitable cause of action alone, and held that it presented no ground for equitable relief, and was, therefore, insufficient. It was undoubtedly designed only to present an equitable cause of action, but it is clear that the second count presents no grounds for an injunction, or for equitable relief. It seeks only to restrain the commission of naked trespasses, with nothing in the nature of waste. There is no averment that the plaintiff ever, in fact, diverted the waters of Tuba River, or actually applied them to any use whatever, or that it ever was, or that it is yet, in a condition to divert or use the water; or that it could now in any way use it, until plaintiff constructs a dam and canal, which are now only in process of construction. Of course, till the plaintiff' can use the water itself, it can be no injury for others to use it. The Court will not restrain the mere diversion of the water by others till the plaintiff can make some possible use of it. It does not appear that there is any injury for which a recovery at law would not be a full, speedy, and adequate remedy. Leach v. Day, 27 Cal. 645, and Tevis v. Ellis, 25 Cal. 516, are in point and are conclusive.

As a suit to determine an adverse claim to real estate there is no ground for equitable relief, for the very first requisite to the maintenance of such an action—possession by the plaintiff—appears by the averments of the complaint to be wanting. (Practice Act, Sec. 254; Lyle v. Rollins, 25 Cal. 437; Brooks v. Calderwood, 34 Cal. 563; Rico v. Spence, 21 Cal. 511; Curtis v. Sutter, 15 Cal. 259; Pralus v. Jefferson Gold and Silver Mining Company, 34 Cal. 558.)

If an action of trespass is not sufficient, it is plain that an action to recover possession of the dam site and dam in process of construction, and of the canal site and canal thereon projected, surveyed, and commenced, would afford a complete and adequate remedy for any injury averred, or that is likely to arise, till the plaintiff is in a condition to use the water, or be injured by its diversion from it by defendants. There is, then, no cause of action for equitable relief stated.

But the second count is a verbatim copy of the first down *308to the prayer of the first, and, if it contains no new material fact, it contains every fact alleged in the first; and, it is said by appellant, that if the first count contains a good cause of action, the second must be sufficient to entitle it to relief at law, if not in equity, and that it is good against a demurrer; that, as forms of action are abolished, a party is entitled to such relief as the facts justify, whether that relief be at law or in equity, and that a demurrer, on the ground that no cause for equitable relief is stated, would be but a demurrer to the prayer and not to the body of the complaint. This may be conceded, and that the Court erred in sustaining the demurrer on this ground, but it does not follow that the judgment must necessarily be reversed. We have held many times that we will not reverse a judgment for an error which could not possibly have injured the party demurring. And in this case the error, if it be one, is manifestly one of that kind. The matter added to the first count to make up the second, as we have already seen, constitutes no new or further ground for relief. It contained nothing material— nothing that could modify or extend the relief. It may, therefore, be laid out of the question, as it is by appellant for the purposes of this point. We have, then, two counts, the second being a verbatim copy of the first. All that could be done under the second could be done under the first—and all the relief attainable under one could be had under the other. The second count, under this view, was simply redundant, and, but for the claim for equitable relief would have been struck out as such on motion. The party got, or might have had, under the count held good, all that he could possibly have got under both counts. If he failed to get it, it was not in consequence of the ruling on the demurrer or of being precluded from using the rejected count. We cannot conceive of any injury he could have sustained by the ruling on the demurrer.

But we also think that the.demurrer is well taken, on the ground that two causes of action are improperly joined and mingled together in one statement, without being separately *309set forth as distinct causes of action. The entry upon, and amotion of plaintiff from, its “site for a dam,” and “dam in course of construction thereon,” and “site for a canal and canal thereon projected, surveyed, and commenced,” may, perhaps, be regarded as a single cause of action. They are land, and for the purposes required must necessarily be connected and continuous, a part and parcel of one entire and complete, fixed and immovable thing. When trespassed upon, or taken from the possession of the plaintiff, and withheld as a whole, by one act, we do not see why the act should not constitute one cause of action, as much so as the taking possession and wrongfully withholding of an entire continuous tract of one hundred acres of land. But the water right, when acquired, although intimately related to and connected with the site fór a dam and canal, and dam and canal commenced, etc., is a different thing, even though each may be necessary to make the other available or useful. They are capable of several and distinct injuries, giving rise to separate and distinct causes of action, for which there are separate and distinct remedies. The dam and canal may be trespassed upon, broken down, destroyed or taken into possession under a claim of right, without taking away the water, or preventing its use in any other mode or place, or without questioning plaintiff’s right to it, and plaintiff may have its action for the trespass, or to recover the possession of the land constituting the dam and canal, or their site; and the water may, also, be diverted and taken away without in any way disturbing or interfering with the dam and canal. • The possession and right of possession of the dam site and dam, and canal site and canal may exist, and a cause of action arise for trespass or ouster long before any present zoater right capable of injury by diversion and use by other parties has any existence. Indeed, such possession and right of possession for mining purposes must, in every instance, necessarily exist prior to the vesting of a complete water right, capable of injury by diversion. A party may to-day take up a site for a dam and canal, and claim the waters of *310a river, to be diverted at that point, and immediately commence work with a view of appropriating the water to his use for mining purposes, and yet, although laboring with all diligence, be unable actually to use the water for any purpose for years to come. Until he can use it, another party may divert the whole water and use it, provided he can do so without injury to the plaintiff’s dam or canal, or the progress of his work, and there would be no injury to the plaintiff’s water right, and no right of action to establish the water right, or recover the water. There is, in fact, as yet, no present water right to be affected. The party has merely acquired the possession and site for his dam and canal, and a right, by diligently pursuing his object, to acquire a future right to the possession of the water, which, when acquired, shall, for the purposes of priority and of redressing any injuries that may thereafter accrue, date by relation from the first act in selecting the location and making the claim. But while pursuing his work, and constructing his dam and canal, with a view to the future appropriation of the water, and before any present water right, capable of injury by diversion or use by others, has been acquired, his dam and canal may be injured by trespassers, or taken from him, and he be obstructed in his proceedings to acquire a right to the waters themselves, and he may have a cause of action on that ground. But this is necessarily a different thing and a different cause of action from an injury to his right to the water itself by diverting it from him. The possession of the unfinished dam and canal, or of the site, is not the possession and enjoyment of the water, but merely the possession of the means of acquiring, by the exercise of due diligence, á right to the water in the future. This is the doctrine of this Court, as established by a long series of decisions. The right to the water, or water right, as it is commonly called, is only acquired by an actual appropriation and use of the water. The property is not in the corpus of the water, but is only in the use. The latter doctrine was laid down in Eddy v. Simpson, 3 Cal. 249, and has been often repeated *311since. In Kidd v. Laird, 15 Cal. 179, our predecessors said: “ This Court has never departed from the doctrine that running water, so long as it continues to flow in its natural course, is not, and cannot be made the subject of private ownership. A right may be acquired to its use, which will be regarded and protected as property; but it has been distinctly declared in several cases that this right carries with it no specific property in the water itself.” (See, also, McDonald v. Askew, 29 Cal. 206.)

Until a claimant is himself in position to use the water, the right to the water, or water right, does not exist in such sense that the mere diversion and use of the water by another, is a ground of action either to recover the water, or for damages for the diversion. This is clearly the result of the decision in Kimball v. Gearhart, 12 Cal. 29. The instructions approved by the Court in that case state the necessity of an actual appropriation of the water, and a present ability to use it, as one of the elements necessary to the recovery against a party diverting it. One of the instructions speaks of the title to the water not being perfected “ till the ditch was so far completed as to convey water,” but when completed with due diligence that the right would date by relation from the beginning of the work. “ Possession or actual appropriation must be the test of priority in all claims to the use of the water,” etc. “ The mere act of commencing a ditch with the intention of appropriating the water of a stream is not sufficient, of itself, to give a party any exclusive right to the water of such stream.’ ’ Diligence in following up the work, and a presumed pecuniary ability to complete it, are also mentioned as elements necessary to entitle the party to connect his right upon a final actual appropriation with the first act manifesting an intent to appropriate, for the purpose of giving priority over a prior actual appropriation by other parties in good faith, by acts subsequently commenced. (Ib. 30, 31.) The Court says, “ the question of priority depended very much upon the general fact, whether plaintiff had done such acts in 1854 as *312would, in August, 1855, when they completed their ditch to the water in dispute, entitle them to invoke the doctrine of relation, and get in advance of the actual appropriation of the water by defendants. * * * A large number of instructions were given by the Court and several "refused. Those given are expressed with great clearness and precision. They embody the law, as ruled by this Court, and propositions necessarily resulting from those settled heretofore.” Upon an instruction refused, to the effect that “ if plaintiffs did, in the summer of 1854, acquire a right to the water in dispute, then the law presumes they retained the right so by them acquired, and the burden of proving abandonment on their part is with the defendant,” the Court say: “ The right of the ivater did not, in strictness, accrue until the completion of the ditch, though the initiatory steps in 1854 might, by force of the subsequent event, have given title as against a subsequent appropriation from 1854, if done in that year. But this language, though proper in some sense, was calculated to convey a wrong impression, as the jury might have inferred that these acts of themselves gave a right to the water.” (Ib. 48, 49.), And again: “ The title to the water does not arise, as we have intimated before, from the manifestation of a purpose to take, but from the effectual prosecwtion of that purpose.” So, in Maeris v. Bicknell, 7 Cal. 263, the Court say, in reference to a prior case: “It also follows from the same decision that until such actual appropriation there can exist no complete right to the use of the water, for the party may never carry out his intention. But it was also held in that case that if a party commenced first to construct a work in good faith, then, although power of enjoyment would not commence until its completion, yet the right as against others would have relation to the time of commencement.” That is to say, his right against others, after actual completion of the ditch and actual appropriation. The case referred to is Kelly v. Natoma Water Company, 6 Cal. 108, in which the Court say: “ Possession or actual appropriation must be the test of priority in all claims to the use of water, whenever such claims are not dependent upon ownership of the land through *313which the water flows. Such appropriation cannot be constructive, because there would be no rule to limit or control it, resting, as it must, only in intention. * * * The purchase by defendants of Walker’s dam was an actual appropriation of the waters of the creek so far, but no further; and until they built a dam below, in order to make a further appropriation, any one else had a right to do so. If they had commenced first to build the dam in good faith, then, although their power of enjoyment would not commence until its completion, yet the rights as against others, would bear relation to the time of commencement.” That is to say, the right to the water, when finally acquired, would bear relation to the commencement for the purpose of determining the question of priority. But till the party first commencing can use the water himself, that is, till the right attaches, anybody else, who has the ability to use it, may do so. That the mere diversion or use of water by another is no injury to a party claiming, till he is in a position to use it himself, and even after he has acquired a right, during any cessation of his ability, to use it, is settled by many cases. Mor is such diversion or use, or the diversion or use of any surplus beyond the amount, which the claimant has ability to use, actionable. Thus in Brown v. Smith, 10 Cal. 510, an action for the diversion of water from Brown’s ditch, which had the prior right, it was held that if “ Brown’s old ditch, so called, was so filled with tailings during the Winter season of 1857 that it was incapable of diverting any of the waters of Babbit Creek, then plaintiff cannot recover for loss of water from that ditch.” And again in Ortman v. Dixon, 13 Cal. 39: “ He was entitled to all whenever all was necessary for the mill, but whenever the mill did not need or could not use it for its operations, the defendant could use it for his purposes.” McKinney v. Smith, 21 Cal 381, recognizes the same principle. As has already been remarked, even the preliminary, inchoate right to acquire in the future a right to water, which, when it becomes perfected and fully *314vested, will date, by relation to the first act, for the purposes of priority, may be lost by want of diligence in pursuing the work and pefecting the right, so that another party, more diligent, although commencing subsequently, may obtain the first right by actual appropriation and possession of the water.

Kimball v. Gearhart, 12 Cal. 29, will be found on reading the instructions given, and the opinion approving them, a strong case on this point. To the same effect are White v. Todd’s Valley Water Company, 8 Cal. 444, and Weaver v. Eureka Lake Water Company, 15 Cal. 272.

In approving the seventh instruction, given at the request of defendant, in Kimball v. Gearhart, the Court held that a want of pecuniary means requisite to complete the work in a reasonable time, such pecuniary inability being known to the parties at the time of making the claim, would not excuse a lack of diligence in prosecuting and completing the work in a reasonable time. In Weaver v. Eureka Lake Water Company it was also held that a claim for mere speculative purposes by parties having no expectation themselves of actually constructing works and applying the waters to some useful purpose, would give them no rights against subsequent appropriations made in good faith.

The principles established in the cases cited are founded in reason. The doctrine is that no man shall act upon the principle of the dog in the manger, by claiming water by certain preliminary acts, and from that moment prevent others from enjoying that which he is himself unable or unwilling to enjoy, and thereby prevent the development of the resources of the country by others. Anybody else may divert and use all the water, be it more or less, that a prior claimant is not in a present condition to use, and by lack of diligence on his part in pursuing and perfecting a prior inchoate right, many acquire rights even superior to his. And these principles have a direct and practical bearing upon the question now in hand.

Canals for mining and other purposes often run side by *315side, even crossing and recrossing each other. As one party only acquires a right of way over the land for his canal, a second party may acquire a similar right to another over the same general line, so long as he does not obstruct or intefere with the particular site of the first canal located. A party’s right is limited to the general object for which it is acquired, and another party may acquire another right for similar or other objects not in conflict with the prior right. (Hoffman v. Stone, 7 Cal. 49; O’Keiffe v. Cunningham,, 9 Cal. 590, and cases cited.)

In view of this principle, suppose, by way of illustration, that the plaintiff had located its site for a dam and canal, and claimed the waters of the South Tuba River, and commenced the construction of the dam and canal, but, in consequence of the magnitude of the work, was unable for several years to divert or use the water, and in the meantime the defendants, being men of greater pecuniary ability, should subsequently locate another claim above or near the plaintiff’s, and a canal running parallel with the plaintiff’s, and be in a condition to divert and use the water in half the time; their acts, provided there was no interference with the plaintiff’s site and location, or obstruction to the prosecution of its work, would be no injury to plaintiff, or cause of action in its favor. The plaintiff in such case has, as yet, no right to the water so far perfected that a diversion or use by other parties is any interference or injury. But if the plaintiff’s work should be prosecuted with diligence and completed, so as to entitle it to divert and use the waters, its right to the waters thenceforth would date by relation from the commencement of the work, and, should defendants thereafter continue to divert the waters and deprive the plaintiff of their use, an injury to their water rights then vested and perfected would result, and a right of action for the injury to such right accrue. So, if, before the right of plaintiff to the water should have become perfected, while constructing its dam and canal, with a view to a future diversion and actual appropriation of the water, the defendants should tres*316pass upon and destroy the works, or take possession of the site, a cause of action would arise, but it would be an entirely different cause of action from the other, arising from a diversion of the water, and not identical with it in law, or in fact. An action for damages for the injury done, or to recover the possession of the site, would be the remedy. The right to the water does not yet exist, and it may never vest. The most that is' in esse, is, a right to acquire, by reasonable diligence, a future right to the water. The remedy for the two kinds of injury might be different, and the measure of damages would certainly be different, and would require different evidence. Suppose, again, that plaintiff, being without any adequate pecuniary means, claims the water in the usual way, together with a site for a dam and canal for diverting it, and that the expense of the work necessary to enable it to appropriate the waters is known to the plaintiff at the time to be entirely beyond its ability, present or prospective, or the claim is made for speculative purposes only, and the enterprise lingers for several years with a little work, such as a preliminary survey and a small amount of excavation is done— as much as the party is able to do even—and yet not enough to constitute reasonable diligence, within the principle of the cases cited, to preserve the right, or there is such want of diligence for any other reason, and another party subsequently claims the water, constructs his dam and ditch, and thereby actually appropriates it, and by his diligence ultimately secures the priority of right as to the water; the first claimant might still be in actual possession of its site for a dam and canal, and after the rights of the other party to the water had attached, might continue its work with a view of ultimately appropriating any water that might be left, and the party thus acquiring the first right to the water by his superior diligence, without diverting or using any water which did not belong to him, might maliciously, or for the purpose of obstructing the other’s work and preventing competition, by a trespass upon such site for a dam and canal in process of construction, or amotion of claimant therefrom, give a right *317of action, but it would be entirely different from a cause of action arising from an injury, by a wrongful diversion, to a water right already vested and perfected. There may, then, be, at least, three several distinct and different causes of action of the kind suggested.

We are satisfied, from a careful examination of the count in question, as it now stand, that there is an attempt, by a skillful combination of the language of the averments stating the cause of action, to unite two, at least, of these different species of injuries, and two separate and distinct causes of action, so as to present them as one, and, in case of success, to obtain the advantages to be derived from both. Such a mode of pleading takes the defendants at a great disadvantage. It would be difficult to separate them at the trial, or to determine exactly what cause of action a verdict for the plaintiff might cover, and relief might be thus obtained not contemplated or justified. The defendant is entitled to have each cause of action separately presented, so that he can demur to each separately for insufficiency of the facts to constitute a cause of action, if such be the ease. When the two are stated together, the whole might constitute one cause of action, while the facts would be insufficient as to one and the most important cause attempted to be introduced. So, also, the defendants are entitled to have them separately stated, in order that they take issue on each separately, and have a verdict directly and distinctly upon each. They might thus succeed on one, although failing on the other, and it could be known on which they succeed and on which they fail. They could, also, better present their evidence upon the several issues, so as to avoid confusion and misapprehension in the minds of the jury.

It is claimed, however, that there is but one cause of action, and that is for an injury to the plaintiff’s water right, but it is said in the same breath that “defendants have not only taken away our water rights and diverted our waters, but they have possessed themselves of our dam and canal, and the s ites for them, that is, the means and conduits for the *318use and enjoyment of them.” This claim certainly covers "both causes and species of action, and plaintiff’s various motions to modify the judgment entered on the other count, which, so far as this question is concerned, is a copy of the one under consideration, asked for a judgment for the restitution of the property, rights, privileges, etc. Plaintiff at least supposes it has stated a cause of action for a wrongful diversion of the water. If the injury complained of is a diversion of the water merely, and thereby depriving the plaintiff of its right to the water, as is sometimes claimed, the rest being merely incidental, then, as we have before seen, the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action in that view, and in that aspect it is insufficient. The averments of the complaint must be read together and construed most strongly against the pleader. The language is his, and he is presumed to state his case as strongly as the facts will justify. Beading the whole together, the complaint does not allege that the plaintiff had, in fact, so far completed its work as to actually take possession of, and use the water. It begins, it is true, by saying generally that it had appropriated and was in the use of certain water rights, hut it goes on to explain how, and this was by means of a dam then in course of construction,” “ into and through a canal then projected, surveyed, and commenced,” etc. This qualification shows that plaintiff was not in a condition yet to make any actual appropriation or use of the waters, and that the mere diversion and use of them by defendants could not, then, be a cause of action. There is, however, an attempt to state this cause of action, and the plaintiff now claims it to be sufficiently stated. The defendants were entitled to have it separately stated, so that they could object to it by demurrer as insufficient. But, if the averments are insufficient to state this cause of action, there are averments sufficient to constitute another and different one—a trespass upon plaintiff’s possession of a dam and canal site, and an amotion therefrom, and consequent obstruction of plaintiff in its efforts to perfect an inchoate right, and thereby secure *319in future a right to the waters themselves. The whole being sufficient to entitle the plaintiff to some relief, a general demurrer for insufficiency would not avail the defendants, and the improper uniting of, at least, two causes of action in one count, prevented them from testing the sufficiency of the real and principal cause of action, which plaintiff now claims it has stated. It is in part to prevent such embarrassments to -defendants in their pleadings that a demurrer is allowed, when separate causes of action are mingled together in one statement or count. It was, doubtless, in this case a matter of the highest importance to defendants to be able to meet directly and singly the cause of action for diversion; for if, by reason of any confusion in the minds of the jury—who are sometimes not very severe logicians—arising from the improper mode of statement in question, the plaintiff should recover on the principal cause, which it claims to have set out, before it has completed any canal, by means of which it could make use of the water, and could by the kind of judgment claimed and sought in the several motions to modify the judgment entered, take from the defendants’ possession and adjudge to plaintiff the water, before the plaintiff is itself in a condition to use it, immense injury might be done to the defendants and the country supplied by them, while the water would run to waste, without benefit to plaintiff; and the plaintiff might, after all, never complete its works, or make any actual appropriation of, or acquire any present right to, the water. We have before seen, that until plaintiff is in a condition to use the water, the defendants are entitled to divert and use it, provided they can do so without obstructing the plaintiff in the construction of its own works with an intention to make a future actual appropriation and use; and that there can he no right of action against defendants for diverting the water in its own ditch, which does not interfere with plaintiff’s work, till the plaintiff is itself in a condition to divert and use it. We think the defendants were entitled to have this cause of action separately stated, *320so that it could be directly and separately -met, unconnected with other embarrassing averments.

We also think the demurrer well taken, on the ground of ambiguity, in the respect specifically pointed out in the demurrer. If we had entertained any doubt on this point, upon an examination of the complaint, it would have vanished on reading the several briefs of appellant, and its several motions-for amendment of the judgment, which were denied, and the denials of which constitute grounds of appeal. After considering the various and conflicting views of appellant’s counsel, and the difficulty they encountered in the. different stages of the proceeding, in determining the exact character of the action, and exactly what relief they .wanted, we are not surprised that defendants were at a loss to divine the intentions of plaintiff, and called upon it, by their demurrer, to more specifically define its position. There could certainly be no difficulty it stating the exact cause of action relied on, whether a diversion of the water, which plaintiff had been using, and was then in a condition to use, or a trespass upon, or amotion from its dam and canal in the course of construction, and an obstruction of plaintiff thereby in its efforts to construct works, whereby it could perfect inchoate rights and acquire, in future, by actual appropriation, a right to the waters, or both. And we think the defendants should not, by an elaborate and skilled combination of language, in a form better adapted to conceal than reveal the real intention, be left in the dark as to the real cause of action designed to be alleged. If the statement of cause of action in question is not ambiguous, it would, we think, be difficult to draft one obnoxious to a demurrer on that ground.

Whether the District Court rested its decision sustaining the demurrer on these grounds or not, we think them sufficient to sustain the order and the judgment thereon; and an order correct in itself will not be reversed because it was rendered upon a wrong reason.

In this view the Court of course erred in overruling the *321demurrer to the first count. But this error was in favor of appellant, and as plaintiff had the full benefit of its vicious mode of pleading, it has no reason to complain on that ground.

The discussion of the demurrer, also, suggests other dangers that might result from any assumption on our part that the verdict rendered in this case found other issues in favor of plaintiff than such as are strictly necessary to sustain the judgment rendered. Had the Court entered the judgment asked by plaintiff' on the verdict, it would not only have awarded to plaintiff the site for. a dam and canal, with the dam and canal projected and commenced merely, but not completed, but would also have adjudged to it, under the loose, general allegations of the complaint, a present, perfected right to the waters, as against defendants, and have awarded to it the present right of possession, and the actual possession of the waters, and this would, doubtless, thereafter be claimed to be res adjudicóla, against them. Yet, as we have seen, the averments of the complaint do not show that plaintiff is yet in a position to use the water, or that it has as yet acquired such a perfected right as entitled it to such a judgment, or that plaintiff* has any cause of action for a diversion of the water. The judgment therefore might, and, if entered as asked, probably would, have been in favor of the plaintiff as to its present right to the water before it had become entitled to it, when it might never become entitled to it, and at a time when the actual right to the use of the water was, and might, ever after, continue to be in the defendants. And this result would, or might have been worked out through the vicious mode of pleading adopted by plaintiff, and through a trial of such issues as would entitle plaintiff to a verdict and some relief, and afterwards assuming that all the issues had been disposed of, and asking and obtaining all the relief that could possibly be granted under them, regardless of that which had. been originally specifically demanded in the complaint, or of the evidence *322adduced. A judgment establishing a right to the water, sought by plaintiff in this case, would manifestly have been erroneous in view of the defective allegations of the complaint, on the principle before stated.

There is nothing in this opinion in conflict with anything decided when the case was here before. The complaint has since been amended, and the questions are different, and are presented in a different mode and aspect.

We find no error in the record prejudicial to appellant.

The judgment and order are therefore affirmed, and remittitur directed to issue forthwith.