On April 23,1887, the Lake Vineyard Land and Water Association conveyed the land described in the complaint to plaintiffs' grantors. The deed contained the following provisions: —
“ Provided that the said A. Elliott and G. A. Richardson do not construct or allow to be constructed on the above-described land any work that will in any manner injuriously affect the waters or water rights of this association; and it is distinctly understood that the said association reserves the right at all times to enter upon said lands for the purpose of making any repairs or for the development of the waters of this association; and a strip ten feet wide on each side of the water-ditch of said association is hereby expressly reserved from the above sale, and under no consideration is the above description, or anything in this resolution contained, to be construed as conveying any part or portion of the aforesaid water-ditch or waters, or of the land for ten feet on each side thereof; and the aforesaid Elliott and Richardson shall not, and in purchasing this land they agree not to, use any water for other than domestic purposes and for irrigating said land, neither are they to sell, give away, or allow to be wasted any water whatsoever, and under no consideration are they to use any water from the ditch of said association; and the said association re*79serves the right to tunnel or in any other manner to develop the waters of said association on this land; and it is also clearly understood that the association reserves the right of way through the above-described lands for a wagon-road, — either the present road or one as good.”
Plaintiffs have acquired all the rights of Elliott and Richardson, and the defendants have succeeded to all the rights reserved to the land and water association which could be transferred by it to a third party.
The statement on motion for a new trial shows “ that there was, on this tract of land, a marshy, swampy piece of water-bearing land of from a three fourths acre to an acre and one quarter dimension; that the water came to the surface and became running water in this piece of land ‘ only where it is trenched’; that when Richardson and Elliott first bought and took possession of the land, there was no water running ‘to amount to anything,’ only ‘ seeping a little over the bank ’; that an inch and two thirds of water measured under a four-inch pressure has been developed by Elliott and Richardson and plaintiffs on this piece of marshy or swamp land, and has been, and was at the beginning of this suit, all used by plaintiffs for domestic purposes and irrigation of the tract of land conveyed by said deed to Elliott and Richardson. An unimpeached witness on behalf of defendants testified that, in his opinion, twenty inches of water measured under a four-inch pressure, over and above the water now being used, could be developed on said piece of marshy or swampy land.”
The defendants claim that the right to enter upon the land, dig trenches, and develop the water resting in the swampy portion referred to was reserved to the association in its deed to Elliott and Richardson, and that they succeeded to the same right through the deed from the association to them. They were proceeding to enforce such claim when this action was brought to restrain them from so doing.
Plaintiffs contend that no such rights were reserved *80to the association, and if they were, they were personal to the association, and could not be transferred to defendants or any other person. The court below sustained plaintiffs’ contention, and gave judgment in their favor. Defendants have appealed from the judgment, and from the order denying their motion for a new trial.
Were the rights claimed by defendants reserved to the association?
It is evident that the parties had under consideration certain waters other than those in the ditch, and intended to define what their respective rights to the same should be under the deed. It was stipulated that “ under no consideration ” were the grantees “ to use any water from the ditch of said association,” but of the other waters they were to have sufficient for “ domestic purposes and for irrigating said land.” Where were the waters, other than those in the ditch, from which the grantees might draw sufficient for domestic uses and irrigation? Manifestly, they lay quiescent in the “ marshy, swampy piece of water-bearing land” in which “the water came to the surface, and became running water only where it was trenched.” There was about one acre of the land capable of producing over twenty inches of water. This is the water which the grantor retained the right to develop. There was no other water to develop. The association certainly did not desire to tunnel for, “ or in any other manner to develop,” water already running in its ditch. The grantor was a water association and the owner of a large body of water-bearing lands, including the land described in the deed. A large portion of the tract conveyed was dry, but susceptible of cultivation when irrigated. The association wanted the water to assist in feeding the ditch which ran through the tract granted, and the grantees wanted the land with water sufficient for domestic and irrigation purposes. The association conveyed the land, but reserved to itself the ditch and the water therein together with a strip of land ten feet wide on each side thereof, and all undevel*81oped water in the land conveyed, less the quantity required to irrigate the tract and for domestic purposes. It is clear that such was the intention of the- parties, and it is expressed in language so plain that there is" little, if any, room for controversy.
Were the rights thus reserved capable of assignment?
It is claimed by respondents that rights like those reserved in the deed to Elliott and Richardson, and now under consideration, cannot be granted over unless the power of assignment is expressly given to the grantor, or the usual words of inheritance to pass the fee are used, showing an intent to extend the right beyond the present grantee; that the rights reserved were not made appurtenant to any land of the grantor, and were therefore mere rights in gross, which are not assignable.
We do not deem it necessary to discuss the legal and technical etymology of exceptions, reservations, or profits a prendre. A right reserved may be an exception, though designated in the deed as a reservation. The strip of land ten feet wide on each side of the ditch reserved in the deed is clearly an exception. The other rights reserved are either exceptions or profits a prendre; and if exceptions, neither the word “ heirs," nor express power of assignment was required to enable the grantor to transfer his rights to the appellants. (Whitaker v. Brown, 46 Pa. St. 198; Emerson v. Mooney, 50 N. H. 319; Gould on Waters, sec. 310.) Regarded as a profit or interest in the soil, or, as it was designated in the Norman French, a right of profit a prendre in alieno solo, the same result follows. When such a right is reserved in a deed by which lands are conveyed, it is equivalent, so far as the creation of the right of common is concerned, to an express grant of the right by the grantee to the grantor (Wagner v. Hanna, 38 Cal. 116; 99 Am. Dec. 354); and in this state, words of inheritance are not requisite to transfer a fee in real property. (Civ. Code, secs. 1072, 1092, 1105.) These provisions of the code were intended to change the common-law rule not only with respect to a transfer of the fee, but of all other estates in real property. In cases of ex*82ception, where the grantor owns the fee, such words would be entirely superfluous, because the thing excepted never passed to the grantee, and as a reservation of a right of profit a prendre was assignable at common law with words of inheritance, we think, under the provisions of the code quoted, it may now be assigned without such words. The original and underlying principle of the old rule requiring words of inheritance in the grant conferring the fee — which was of feudal origin—was, that the personal services of the grantee were the only consideration of the grant, and the estate therefore would not continue beyond the life of the grantee, unless the grantor expressly provided that it should extend to his heirs. The great changes which have occurred in the political and business relations of life, however, have done'away with the reason for such a rule, and there is certainly no reason why an absolute estate should pass without words of inheritance, and the reservation of a right of profit a prendre should not.
The cases cited by respondents which relate to water running on the surface do not aid us in determining the question before us in this case. There is a wide and apparent distinction between the water of a running stream and water which rests in the soil. The former assumes a distinct character from that of the earth; no exclusive property can be acquired in it while it is still flowing in its natural condition, distinct and separate from the land over which it runs; the latter is confined in the earth, and “has no distinctive character of ownership from the earth itself, any more than the metallic oxides of which the earth is composed.” (Roath v. Driscoll, 20 Conn. 540; Cross v. Kitts, 69 Cal. 222; 58 Am. Rep. 558.) In Hanson v. McCue, 42 Cal. 309, 10 Am. Rep. 299, the court said: “Water filtrating or percolating in the soil belongs to the owner of the freehold, like the rocks and minerals found there.....The owner may appropriate the percolations and filtrations as he may choose, and turn them, to profit if he can.” Being an integrant part of the realty, the right to take it»away for *83use or profit is as much & profit a prendre as the right of fowling, fishing, hawking, or the common of turbary, or the common of estovers. (Washburn on Easements and Servitudes, 2d ed., 10; Hill v. Lord, 48 Me. 100; Goodrich v. Burbank, 12 Allen, 459; 90 Am. Dec. 161; Chatfield v. Wilson, 28 Vt. 49.) In Trustees v. Delhi, 50 Barb. 319, the court, in speaking of subterranean waters, said: “The water belongs to the soil, is part of it, and may be used, removed, and controlled to the same extent by the, owner.”
Respondents claim that neither percolating nor standing waters can be granted' without a grant of the soil above and below, and that if the reservation under consideration be held to mean both water and soil, the exception is void, because repugnant to the estate granted.
We do not think this contention is sound. If the deed in express language had excepted all the water-bearing lands from the tract granted,—and that is practically, though not precisely, what was done, because the grantors reserved the right to. enter and “to tunnel, or in any other manner develop, the waters of the association on this land,”—the exception would not be repugnant to the grant. The grant was not of any specific number of acres. The land was described by courses and distances, and it was as competent to except from the operation of the 'grant the marsh or swamp as it was to except ten feet on each side of the ditch. If a grant of land be for twenty acres, and one acre be excepted therefrom, the exception is void, because repugnant to the grant. “So one may grant a farm, excepting the meadow; but to grant a pasture and meadow, excepting the meadow, would be repugnant and void.” (3 Washburn on Real Property, 5th ed., 464.) Nor can it be said that the. exception is void for uncertainty. It appears from the provisions of the deed that a portion of the tract conveyed is water-bearing land, and some of it is so dry that it requires irrigation to fit it for cultivation. The subject-matter, therefore, supports the exception, and the exception is not void, because the boundaries of the part excepted must be shown by evidence. The evi*84dence shows that of the thirty-two acres granted, there is only from three fourths of an acre to an acre and one quarter which can be used for the production of water, and that this small parcel is capable of yielding over twenty inches of water. It is apparent, therefore, that the quantity excepted can be easily located and defined, and that there is not much basis for the respondents' disquietude on account of what they term “such a tremendous and destructive power over their property .... as that which is now claimed by appellants.''
Sections 801 and 802 of the Civil Code are cited to show that the rights reserved were mere servitudes in gross, and incapable of being granted over.
There is no doubt that the servitudes enumerated in section 801 are real servitudes imposed for the benefit of the estate to which the right belongs, and resting upon the estate on which the obligation is imposed; and that those named in section 802 are personal, not attached to any dominant estate, and are not assignable. We cannot, however, regard the rights in question as mere servitudes, but if they are, they were created as incidents or appurtenances to the ditch and water rights of the company, and passed by the grant to appellants. At common law a profit a prendre, if granted in gross, was regarded as an estate or interest in the land itself. (6 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 142.) Such a right “ has always been considered in law a different species of right from an easement,'' and although capable of being transferred in gross, may also be so attached to a dominant estate as to pass with it by a grant transferring the land with its appurtenances.'' (Huntington v. Asher, 96 N. Y. 610; 48 Am. Rep. 652.)
As stated before, the intention of the parties is clearly expressed in the deed, and this being so, little weight should be attached to technical definitions of terms used. It matters but little what name we give to the rights reserved to the grantor in the deed. Attempts to create symmetry in the law by classification and designation of classes of different kinds of rights connected *85with and springing out of lands are always hazardous. From whatever stand-point we view the case, and whatever may be the true and technical term applicable to the rights reserved, we are led to a conclusion different from that reached by the learned judge of the court below.
It is claimed by respondents that all of the water on the land is necessary for irrigation and domestic purposes, and that the court found this contention to be true; but we do not so construe the findings. It is found that certain waters rise and flow from springs existing on the land which have been sufficient to furnish water for the irrigation of a large portion of the land; that about ten acres of the land have been irrigated, plaintiffs " using therefor all of the said waters so rising and flowing on said lands; .... and all of the water rising on said land was at all of the times herein mentioned needed for the proper irrigation of said land, and for proper domestic use thereon”; that defendants have dug and excavated ditches which have interrupted the flow of a portion of said waters “ so rising and flowing as aforesaid,” and prevented the same from flowing into the conduits of plaintiffs, “ and plaintiffs have ever since the making of said excavation been and now are prevented from using said portion of said waters for the irrigation of said land or otherwise”; that defendants, “ claiming they had the right to appropriate and take for their own use and benefit, and convey from said land, all of the waters so flowing in said trenches and ditches excavated as aforesaid, and at least four fifths of the other waters rising and flowing on said lands as aforesaid, entered in and upon said land, and diverted all of said waters so flowing in said trenches and ditches excavated as aforesaid, and the greater portion, to wit, at least four fifths of said other waters rising and flowing on said land as aforesaid, .... so that plaintiffs were then and there wholly deprived of all use thereof”; that plaintiffs have, since said diversion, turned the water back into their conduits, and used the same for irrigation and for domestic *86purposes, but defendants still unlawfully threaten to again divert and at all times thereafter to appropriate and take for their own use and benefit all of the waters,' .so diverted by defendants.
These facts found by the court entitled the plaintiffs to an injunction restraining the defendants from diverting the water which plaintiffs needed for irrigation and domestic purposes, and to that extent the decree is correct; but the judgment went further, and declared that the defendants “ have not, nor has either of them, any estate, right, or interest of, in, or to such land and waters, so owned as aforesaid by said plaintiffs, of any part thereof, nor of any easement or servitude upon or against . said land, or any part thereof,” and adjudged that the defendants and those claiming under them be perpetually enjoined from appropriating or taking “ said waters rising and flowing, or hereafter to rise or flow, upon said land so owned by said plaintiffs, or any part thereof, or from in any manner interfering with said plaintiffs’ use, control, and possession of- said waters, or from in any manner interfering therewith, or from entering in or upon said land, owned by said plaintiffs, to excavate, dig, or bore thereon, or otherwise disturb the soil thereof.” These latter provisions of the decree go beyond the relief to which the plaintiffs are entitled. The defendants are entitled to go upon the land for the purpose of making repairs, and to tunnel, or in any other reasonable manner to develop, the water which may exist in the water-bearing lands of the tract, and which may not be required by plaintiffs for irrigation and domestic purposes. How -many tunnels or how many ditches may be cut in the land by appellants cannot be determined in advance. All that can be said in that regard is, that they will be held to a reasonable exercise of the right to develop the water remaining after the plaintiffs have secured enough for irrigation and domestic purposes.
The order denying a new trial is affirmed, but the cause is remanded, with directions to the court below to *87modify its decree in accordance with the views we have expressed.
Harrison, J., and Garoutte, J., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.