The majority opinion avoids rather than answers the basic questions presented by this appeal, which questions have been the subject of extended study and debate among the justices of this court. I respectfully differ with them in at least three significant aspects of their action: (1) As to the tenability of the ground on which they make present disposition of the appeal; (2) as to the wisdom and practicality of this court’s undertaking (instead of reversing and remanding to the trial court) to itself revise and delimit the trial court’s judgment purporting to quiet title to “all waters . . . flowing on” defendants’ property; and (3) as to the implied determination that present avoidance of the real issues is the better administration of justice. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 53.) I am not sure to what extent, if any, I differ with the majority as to the law which should govern the important questions which have been debated but are not decided because I do not know in sufficient detail what the majority’s holdings would be. This I do know; their opinion leaves unanswered the following questions which are important:
1. Under the majority holding do the defendants have the absolute right to impound and store behind their dam all *837water or any water flowing in the Grub (sometimes called Red Ranch) Ravine during the nonirrigation season for use during the dry season?
2. If not, of what avail to defendants is the judgment, since their proof was that for more than five years before building the dam they already had been using on their land during the irrigation season all waters flowing in the ravine ?
3. If the majority intend to give defendants the right to impound and store all or any waters flowing in the ravine during the nonirrigation season for use during the dry season, where in the record, and what, is the evidence (necessarily showing five years’ adverse user during the nonirrigation season) to support such award?
4. If the majority intend that defendants shall have the right to impound and store above their dam during the non-irrigation season a part but not all of the waters then flowing in the ravine, what and where is the workable standard or measure which shall govern the defendants in their taking and plaintiffs in their demands ?
Since the majority have seen fit not to resolve or even discuss the above noted questions, a much more full statement of the issues which have been debated in this case, and of my views thereon, is indicated.
This is a typical water rights controversy. Defendants (upper owners) became the original aggressors when they built a dam on their land and cut off the natural flow of water in the ravine leading to plaintiffs’ (lower owners) property. Plaintiffs as a defensive and retaliatory move then instituted the subject proceeding seeking injunctive relief and to have their title to a fixed amount of water quieted. Defendants answered and themselves sought and were awarded affirmative relief. Plaintiffs appeal from the judgment which purports not only to deny the relief they sought but also to quiet title in defendants to their described real property in the county of El Dorado, together with “all ditches, water ways and watercourses, of whatsoever kind or character situate upon said real property, and all waters arising on, or flowing on, or upon, the said real property.”
Ownership of the several parcels of land by the respective parties, as established by the findings of fact, is not in dispute. Hence it follows that (in respect to the water here in dispute) such respective parties are, prima facie, entitled to whatever presumptions of ownership of water the law attaches to the ownership of the land over which the water flows in the eir*838cumstances disclosed by the evidence. The judgment in defendants’ favor as to the water is based on their claim of a prescriptive right thereto. Defendants’ claim of title by prescription is new matter on which they had the burden of proof. Plaintiffs attack the judgment principally on the ground that the evidence fails to establish adverse user by defendants for the statutory period.
It is to be emphasized that in considering the issues presented by plaintiffs’ appeal the problem is not whether plaintiffs established any right to the quiet title and injunctive relief which they themselves sought, but, rather, whether the judgment decreeing affirmative relief in favor of defendants, by which their title to water in a much more inclusive scope than they had asserted before building the dam is declared and quieted against plaintiffs, may stand, or should be reversed.
As acknowledged in the majority opinion, “It is fundamental that a party who would quiet his title must prevail, if at all, on the strength of his own title and not on the weakness of the claims of an adversary.” (See Helvey v. Sax (1951), 38 Cal.2d 21, 23 [237 P.2d 269]; Peabody v. City of Vallejo (1935), 2 Cal.2d 351, 381 [40 P.2d 486].) That rule is properly applied in the majority opinion as against plaintiffs here, and supports the determination that they take nothing on their complaint, but the opinion fails to make evenhanded application of the rule as against defendants when the latter assume the legally equivalent status of plaintiffs in asserting their claim to quiet their alleged title. Just as fundamental as the strength [burden] of proof rule above stated is the rule that the character of a pleading is to be determined by its substance rather than by the designation appended to it. (Pickwick Stages v. Board of Trustees (1922), 189 Cal. 417, 419 [2] [208 P. 961]; Terry Trading Corp. v. Barsky (1930), 210 Cal. 428, 434 [8] [292 P. 474] ; Zarillo v. LeMesnager (1921), 51 Cal.App. 442, 444 [3] [196 P. 902] ; Keenan v. Dean (1955), 134 Cal.App.2d 189, 194 [5] [285 P.2d 300].)
Following the above stated rule, I agree with the majority that upon a sufficient showing of adverse use defendants’ title to the water “may properly be quieted though his [their] pleading is not technically [denominated] a cross-complaint.” As stated in County of Los Angeles v. Hannon (1910), 159 Cal. 37, 48 [112 P. 878, Ann.Cas. 1912B 1065], when a de*839fendant in his “answer denies title in plaintiff and alleges that he is the owner in fee" of the disputed property, “In effect his answer is in the nature of a cross-complaint to quiet his alleged ownership of this property." Certainly, as the above quoted authorities make abundantly clear, defendants are not to be deprived of any proven right merely because they failed to label the pleading of their affirmative claim a “cross-complaint." But the defendants should not, as the majority do for them, give their pleading the character of a cross-complaint to attain its benefits but disavow that character to avoid its burdens.
A simple quiet title proceeding (which is the nature of the quiet title right asserted by defendants) is regarded as a suit in equity, and the issue of title is an equitable one. (See Thomson v. Thomson (1936), 7 Cal.2d 671, 681 [1] [62 P.2d 358, 117 A.L.R. 1].) Certainly if ordinary fairness is important in equity, the quoted rule that a party must prevail, if at all, only on the strength of his own title, should be applied equally as against defendants here in respect to their cause of action for equitable relief on their “in effect . . . cross-complaint to quiet [their] alleged" title by prescription to “all waters . . . flowing on, or upon" their land. Applying the subject rule, I cannot agree with the majority holding that “Having Failed to Prove Their Own Right to Take Water, Plaintiffs May Not Complain of a Judgment Confirming Defendants’ Water Right." Plaintiffs here may, and do, properly complain of that portion of the judgment (decreeing title by prescription in defendants to all waters flowing in the ravine) which goes beyond determination of the issues made by plaintiffs’ complaint and so much of defendants’ answer as relates to defeating plaintiffs’ claims. The judgment as entered goes far beyond the scope of the issues tendered by plaintiffs, and far beyond any possible support in the evidence.
Looking deep in the record it appears probable that the mischief in this case arises from the fact that the trial court apparently was persuaded, after submission of the cause and after it initially determined the decision it would make on the evidence and the law, to enlarge the scope and character of its intended judgment. The memorandum decision of the court states that “the plaintiffs should not recover and the defendants should recover their costs. The defendants will prepare, serve and file proposed findings and form of judg*840ment in accordance herewith.”1 Nowhere in that memorandum decision does the court mention or suggest that judgment will be rendered for defendants quieting their title to the disputed and to undispiited water as against plaintiffs, but only that defendants should recover their costs. Moreover, the court’s review of the evidence, in such memorandum decision, appears to be with a view to deciding whether plaintiffs are entitled to the relief they sought, rather than of determining defendants’ affirmative cause of action.
But legally the court had the power to change its mind, and presumptively did. The judgment finally entered quiets title in defendants to “all ditches, water ways and water courses, of whatsoever kind or character situate upon [defendants’] said real property, and all waters arising on, or flowing on, or upon, the said real property,” (italics added) and adjudges that plaintiffs have no right, title, estate or interest therein.
It is not in the denial of relief to plaintiffs, but in the affirmative judgment quieting title to “all waters,” etc., in defendants, that the court on this record is shown to have erred. A scrutiny of that record reveals that, as urged by plaintiffs, the evidence is insufficient to support defendants’ claim of a prescriptive right to the water based on asserted adverse user for the statutory five-year period.
In conformity with the rule above stated, “that a party who would quiet his title must prevail, if at all, on the strength of his own title and not on the weakness of the claims of an adversary, ’ ’ the burden was on defendants, with respect to their claim for affirmative relief quieting their title to the disputed water, to prove their own title thereto. The evidence fails to support such affirmative relief in the hereinafter developed respects.
The record shows that plaintiffs and defendants each own land near Smithflat, El Dorado County. Defendants’ land is at a higher elevation than that of plaintiffs. The ravine here involved was alleged by plaintiffs and found by the trial *841court to be a natural watercourse.2 This finding is supported by abundant evidence,3 which also shows that the ravine has its source in springs on land owned by one Jones, which is adjacent to and at a higher elevation than defendants’ land. There is also evidence, although disputed, that such springs are likewise the source of natural water flowing in the ravine and through defendants’ land down to plaintiffs’ land.3 Such ravine or watercourse, as also found by the court,2 lies between the lands of plaintiffs and defendants and extends in a general westerly direction from defendants’ land, through the land of one Clarke, and thence to plaintiffs’ land. As further found by the court, defendants, in October, 1950, built a dam within the ravine and upon their lands.4
Under normally applied rules of construction the above epitomized findings should be accepted as establishing that *842both plaintiffs’ and defendants’ lands are riparian to the watercourse.5 As declared in Seneca Consol. Gold Mines Co. v. Great Western Power Co. (1930), 209 Cal. 206, 215 [287 P. 93, 70 A.L.R. 210], “The riparian doctrine comes down to us from the common law and it has been repeatedly defined in this state; hence little time need be spent in recounting the holdings of the courts in this regard. A few citations will suffice.
“ ‘. . . Every owner of land, through which a natural stream flows, has a usufruct in the water of the stream as it passes along, and has an equal right with those above and below him to the natural flow of the water in its accustomed channel, at its usual level, without unreasonable detention or substantial diminution in quantity or quality, and that none of the owners can make any use of it prejudicial to the rights of the other owners, unless he has acquired a right to do so by license, grant, or prescription.’ [Citations.] ” (See also Wright v. Best (1942), 19 Cal.2d 368, 382 [121 P.2d 702]; Rancho Santa Margarita v. Vail (1938), 11 Cal.2d 501, 528-529 [81 P.2d 533]; Gin S. Chow v. City of Santa Barbara (1933), 217 Cal. 673, 684-690, 695-697, 706 [22 P.2d 5]; Weck v. Los Angeles County Flood Control Dist. (1951), 104 Cal.App.2d 599, 609 [232 P.2d 293].)
And in City of Pasadena v. City of Alhambra (1949), 33 Cal.2d 908, 925 [207 P.2d 17], the court declares, speaking through Mr. Chief Justice Gibson, that "Generally speaking, an overlying right, analogous to that of a riparian owner in a surface stream, is the right of the owner of the land to take *843water from the ground underneath for use on his land within the basin or watershed; the right is based on ownership of the land and is appurtenant thereto. [Citations.] The right of an appropriator depends upon an actual taking of water. [Citation.]” (Italics added.) (See also Peabody v. City of Vallejo (1935), supra, 2 Cal.2d 351, 381-383.)
Defendants’ dam, as above mentioned, was constructed in 1950. It impounded the water from the ravine. Plaintiffs commenced this action in 1951, contending that before construction of the dam they had procured water for irrigation purposes from the ravine, but that since such construction the ravine has dried up and they have been deprived of such water. The trial court expressly found that for more than five years preceding commencement of the action defendants had “used all the waters arising on, or flowing on or upon . . . [defendants’ land] for beneficial purposes, to wit, for irrigating an orchard and pasture and for watering fowl and livestock . . .,”6 and as stated above, quieted title to all the water in defendants, with no reservation as to time or amount of taking. (Italics added.)
Plaintiffs-appellants (in the course of their argument) state that the “questions of law involved are: Whether or not an upper riparian owner who, for five years, has used all of the water of a stream acquires a prescriptive right to the waters of said stream when the lower riparian owner has not made use of the water during the same period ? ’ ’7 The stated question is neither answered nor even discussed in the majority opinion. In my view the resolution of such question is material to proper disposition of the appeal.
Generally speaking, there are three ways in which rights to surface water have been acquired in California: 1. By acquiring land through or over which a natural watercourse flows, which ordinarily and presumptively carries with it the so-called riparian right (see cases, supra) analogous to the overlying water right (see City of Pasadena v. City of Alhambra (1949), supra, 33 Cal.2d 908, 925.)
2. By appropriation. Prior to adoption of the Water Commission Act of 1913 (now Water Code) first right to *844water, as between persons neither of whom had other or higher rights therein, was declared under the principle of prior appropriation to be in the one who first appropriated it (i.e., diverted it to nonriparian land or for nonriparian uses) for beneficial purposes. (See 26 Cal.Jur. 32-51, and cases there cited.) Under the act the Legislature placed the regulation of appropriation procedure in the hands of a water commission (now the Department of Water Resources, Wat. Code, §22). In Wood v. Pendola (1934), 1 Cal.2d 435, 439 [35 P.2d 526], it is stated that “The main purpose of the act is to regulate the right to appropriate and the issuance of permits for the appropriation of unappropriated waters of the state, through the administrative offices of a state water commission thereby created. The act defines what are or may become unappropriated waters subject to appropriation.” (See also Temescal Water Co. v. Department of Public Works (1955), 44 Cal.2d 90, 95 [280 P.2d 1] ; Bloss v. Rahilly (1940), 16 Cal.2d 70, 75 [104 P.2d 1049].) And in Meridian, Ltd. v. San Francisco (1939), 13 Cal.2d424, 450 [90 P.2d 537, 91 P.2d 105], the court declared that the act gives to the commission “power to allow the appropriation for beneficial purposes of unappropriated water under such terms and conditions as in the judgment of the commission will best develop, conserve and utilize in the public interest the water sought to be appropriated. It should be the first concern of the court in any case pending before it and of the department in the exercise of its powers under the act to recognize and protect the interests of those who have prior and paramount rights to the use of the waters of the stream. The highest use in accordance with the law is for domestic purposes, and the next highest use is for irrigation.. When demands on the stream for those and other recognized lawful purposes by riparians and appror priators are fully met and an excess of water exists, it is for the state to say whether, in the conservation of this natural resource in the interest of the public, the diversion [made by another] is excessive.” (See also Wat. Code, §§ 101-106, 1052,1201,1225.)
3. By prescription. As against one with a prior or higher right to water, such as a riparian owner, an appropriator thereof can establish a prescriptive right to such water upon proof of the elements essential to the existence of such a right. Such elements include those customary in the case of other prescriptive claims: Actual, open and notorious user, hostile and adverse to the original owner’s title, continuous *845and uninterrupted for the statutory period, and under a claim of title in the claimant, and not by virtue of another right. The claimant must also show that his use of the amount of water he claims was for beneficial purposes. (See 25 Cal.Jur. 1156-1165, and cases there cited.) Although the law is clear that rival appropriators who seek as against each other to establish rights based on claims to previously unappropriated waters must now follow the regulations and procedures laid down by the Water Code (§§ 1200-1801), no case yet decided has determined whether or not, subsequent to adoption of the act of 1913, and particularly of the 1917 amendments thereto, a later appropriator who has not shown compliance with the procedure thereby laid down can obtain a prescriptive water right as against one whose rights are expressly recognized and saved by the statutory water law; i.e., riparian owners and “any appropriator of water to which he is lawfully entitled.” (See Wat. Code, §§101, 1201, 1202, 1450-1456; Temescal Water Co. v. Department of Public Works (1955), supra, 44 Cal.2d 90, 106; 42 Cal.L.Rev. 219-242, “Prescriptive Water Rights in California and the Necessity for a Valid Statutory Appropriation.”) Inasmuch as the majority opinion affirms in part the judgment quieting title in defendants—a title claimed by defendants to have been acquired solely by prescription through adverse use—it would seem that determination of the law on this question is material to the plaintiffs, and to the issues in this case. Furthermore, this issue of law is important generally to the people of California, and is not, in my concept of our duty in the premises, adequately disposed of in the majority opinion by the statement that ‘ ‘ The parties have not raised this issue . . . and the judgment quieting title in defendants prejudices no right of the state of California.”
It is clear from plaintiffs’ pleadings5* and from a colloquy between court and counsel during the course of the trial of this cause8 that plaintiffs were claiming a right to the water *846either as riparian owners or under continuous user for a five-year period, or under both theories, and that the issue of riparian rights was in any event inherently in controversy as a necessary incident of determining whether either plaintiffs or defendants had established title to the claimed water by adverse use. As stated hereinabove, the ownership of the land here concerned is not in dispute. As also heretofore stated, the judgment in defendants’ favor as to the water rests on their claim of a prescriptive right thereto, based on asserted adverse use thereof for the statutory five-year period prior to construction of their dam in 1950. And as further already noted, both plaintiff’s and defendants’ lands are shown to be presumptively riparian to the watercourse involved. Use of water in the proper exercise of riparian rights by an upper riparian owner (defendants) has long been understood to be not a use adverse to the rights of lower riparian owners (plaintiffs), and it is only as to water diverted by the upper owner to so-called “improper” or nonriparian uses, such as the storage of water during the wet season to be used during the dry season, that the use has been held to constitute an appropriation (rather than a riparian use) and so to be adverse. (See Moore v. California Oregon Power Co. (1943), 22 Cal.2d 725, 730-738 [140 P.2d 798]; Seneca Consol. Gold Mines Co. v. Great Western Power Co. (1930), supra, 209 Cal. 206, 214-219; Colorado P. Co. v. Pacific G. & E. Co. (1933), 218 Cal. 559, 564-565 [19 P.2d 598, 24 P.2d 495] ; cf. Peabody v. City of Vallejo (1935), supra, 2 Cal.2d 351, 374 [14]; Pabst v. Finmand (1922), 190 Cal. 124, 128-130 [211 P. 11] ; Miller & Lux v. Enterprise Canal & Land Co. (1915), 169 Cal. 415, 443 [147 P. 567].) In City of Pasadena v. City of Alhambra (1949), supra, 33 Cal.2d 908, 925-926, this court declared that “The term ‘appropriation’ is said by some authorities to be properly used only with refer*847ence to the taking of water from a surface stream on public land for nonriparian purposes. [Citations.] The California courts, however, use the term to refer to any taking of water for other than riparian or overlying uses. [Citations.] Where a taking is wrongful, it may ripen into a prescriptive right. ... As between overlying owners, the rights, like those of riparians, are correlative and are referred to as belonging to all in common; each may use only his reasonable share when water is insufficient to meet the needs of all. [Citations.]” In other words, a mere riparian use by an upper owner of any or all of the water in a stream does not constitute an appropriation of the water.
The right of the lower riparian owner does not depend upon his own use or disuse of the right. As stated in Stanford v. Felt (1886), 71 Cal. 249 [16 P. 900], "[T]he right of the riparian proprietor to the flow of a stream is inseparably annexed to the soil and passes with it, not as an easement or appurtenance, but as part and parcel of it. Use does not create the right, and disuse cannot destroy or suspend it. The right of such proprietor extends to the natural and usual flow of all the water of the stream, unless when the quantity has been diminished as a consequence of the reasonable use or appropriation of it by other riparian owners for proper and legitimate purposes. (Ferrea v. Knipe, 28 Cal. 340 [87 Am.Dec. 128]; Lux v. Haggin, 69 Cal. 255 [4 P. 919, 10 P. 674].) The use by the riparian owner of the water for domestic purposes for irrigation and for the propulsion of machinery is recognized as proper and legitimate. This we regard as the law of this state. (See Ferrea v. Knipe and Lux v. Haggin, supra.) It appears to be law that where all the water of a stream is needed for domestic purposes and for watering cattle, and is thus consumed by one proprietor, the law allows such use.
“But in making such reasonable use of water, such proprietor must return the surplus which remains after such use to the natural channel of the stream. ...” (See also Miller & Lux v. Enterprise Canal & Land Co. (1915), supra, 169 Cal. 415, 442; Herminghaus v. Southern Calif. Edison Co. (1926), 200 Cal. 81, 95 [252 P. 607] ; Fall River Valley Irr. Dist. v. Mt. Shasta Power Corp. (1927), 202 Cal. 56, 65 [259 P. 444, 56 A.L.R. 264]; Tulare Irr. Dist. v. Lindsay-Strathmore Irr. Dist. (1935), 3 Cal.2d 489, 530-531 [45 P.2d 972] ; Meridian, Ltd. v. San Francisco (1939), supra, 13 Cal.2d 424, 450; Moore v. California Oregon Power Co. (1943), supra, 22 *848Cal.2d 725; Prather v. Hoberg (1944), 24 Cal.2d 549, 562 [150 P.2d 405].) Further, “The use of water upon riparian lands is presumed to be riparian, and the burden of proving prescriptive rights is upon the person asserting them. [Citations.] ” (Morgan v. Walker (1933), 217 Cal. 607, 615 [20 P.2d 660]; cf. Seneca Consol. Gold Mines Co. v. Great Western Power Co. (1930), supra, 209 Cal. 206, 217-218.) “The presumption is that in the use of water an upper riparian proprietor is exercising his riparian rights, and no title by-prescription can be given, unless it is brought home to the lower riparian proprietors that the upper riparian proprietor asserts a right other than his riparian right. [Citations.]” (Scott v. Fruit Growers Supply Co. (1927), 202 Cal. 47, 52 [258 P. 1095].)
Here, there was neither proof nor finding that the upper riparian owners (defendants) were, prior to construction of their dam in 1950, using all or any of the water flowing in the ravine for nonriparian purposes which would give rise to prescriptive rights or that (prior to such dam construction) it was ever brought home to plaintiffs, the lower riparian owners, that defendants were either exercising or asserting a right other than their presumptive riparian right. On the contrary there is evidence that prior to construction of the dam plaintiffs secured from the ravine all the water they wanted or claimed therefrom. Further, although the trial court found that for more than five years preceding commencement (in 1951) of this action defendants had “used all the waters arising on, or flowing on or upon” their land, it also specifically found,9 in accordance with the evidence, that such use was “for beneficial purposes, to wit, for irrigating an orchard and pasture and for watering fowl and livestock,” which use, on its face, appears to be altogether in harmony with, and not adverse to, a lower owner’s riparian rights. There was no showing or finding that the water was taken out of the watershed or was otherwise diverted by defendants to nonriparian uses. It therefore follows that defendants’ user is not shown to be adverse to plaintiffs as lower riparian owners until such time as defendants constructed their dam in 1950 and thus artificially impeded the flow to plaintiffs’ lands of water in the ravine. And inasmuch as this action was commenced in 1951, the judgment based upon defendants’ claim of adverse user for the statutory period of five years is *849patently untenable. To suggest, as do the majority, that plaintiffs are not prejudiced in the premises of the case, and “may not complain” of the judgment, is unrealistic and untenable.
However, regardless of what view we may take as to the presumptive or proved character of the relationship of the water in Grub Ravine to the land over which it naturally flows (as being riparian or otherwise), the judgment here cannot be sustained. Such judgment as entered not only denies plaintiffs the additional prescriptive water rights they sued to establish but also deprives them of every vestige of riparian or other rights which apparently they had enjoyed undisputed until defendants erected their dam. Plaintiffs are left by the superior court judgment with no right to have any water at any time flow in Grub Ravine to their lands. That holding rests necessarily on a finding of prescriptive title to all the water in defendants. As hereinafter developed the majority recognize a deficiency in proof, which in my view requires reversal and remand, but which the majority dispose of by modifying the judgment.
The majority hold that “The judgment entered by the trial court ... is too broad in providing that defendants are the owners of all waters arising on, or flowing on, or upon, their land. The record discloses that the subject of this action was the right to take water from Grub Ravine during the irrigation season. The right to take water during the remainder of the year was not litigated.” This holding will probably come as something of a shock to the parties litigant. Certainly the trial court imposes no such limitation on the language it used, and reason suggests that the thing most worth litigating was the right to take and store the water during the nonirrigation season for later use during the dry season. And it appears rather likely that the parties have been under the impression that the dam was to remain in place and operative the year around. But, it seems, this is to be a new kind of water project: one in which water (if any) is to be impounded only during the dry season, and the surplus of the wet season is to run off unhampered.
From studying the record it can be inferred that the majority conclude that the judgment is “too broad” for the evidence to support because even the defendant husband did not claim that before the dam was built he used all the water *850of the watercourse all the year.10 He testified that he had used all of it only during the irrigation season and admitted that during the remainder of the year the waters were permitted to flow down to plaintiffs’ property11 I had thought it obvious that the main purpose of building the dam was to enable the defendants to impound during the nonirrigation season water to be used later during the dry season.
It appears altogether clear to me what the defendants have attempted to do by constructing the dam. It is likewise altogether clear, under what I have thought to be a well established view of the law, that defendants have failed to prove a prescriptive right to all or even any of the waters they propose to impound and store. If the defendants during the irrigation seasons for five years or more used all the water flowing onto their land in Grub Ravine during those seasons then it would not seem likely that there would be any surplus water to store up behind the dam during those same seasons in the future. Hence, the most rational purpose of the dam would seem to be to impound and store waters flowing onto defendants’ land during the nonirrigation seasons. But defendants do not claim to have impounded or stored Grub Ravine waters during the nonirrigation season at any time before the dam was constructed. How then do they establish prescriptive rights (dependent on proof of prior adverse user) to do that which admittedly they had never done before? As suggested at the very beginning of this dissent, do the defendants have a clear title to do that very thing? Or do they not? I do not find the answer in the majority opinion. But I do find in its loosely-defined limitation of the trial court’s judgment a source of much future discontent and probable litigation. I think that this court should not undertake, as the majority do, to revise the judgment of the trial court by declaring that it “is modified ... to limit defendants to the right to use all the water flowing through their land in Grub Ravine during the irrigation season.” (Italics *851added.) Do the findings of the trial court fail to support its judgment? If they do support it, what finding is modified by this court, and in what respect, to support its modification of the trial court’s judgment? Have the majority made new or different findings to support their own judgment? What is “the irrigation season”? May defendants by staggering crops perhaps create several “irrigation” seasons? What meaning do the majority ascribe to the word “use” in the above quotation from their opinion ? Is it equivalent, in their meaning, to “impound and store” above the defendants’ dam? If the proscription against “use” of all the water during the nonirrigation season does not prohibit accumulation and storage during that season, does it mean that defendants may accumulate and store all the waters during that period but must not water their stock (if any) from it or avail themselves of it for any other useful purpose? Is it to stagnate as a breeding pool for mosquitoes ? If defendants may use part of it, who has the superior right to how much ?
It appears to me that the difficulties these contesting parties are having will not be solved until it is at the least made clear to what extent and when, if at all, the defendants may impound or store water. This can better be done in the superior court, and to make such determination it may well be that even the superior court would want to secure the assistance of the experts of the State of California Division of Water Resources. (Cf. Allen v. California Water & Tel. Co. (1946), 29 Cal.2d 466, 488-490 [176 P.2d 8].) Certainly on the record before us it is not a task which this court is equipped to perform. We should not undertake to modify, in this type of litigation and in the major aspects here involved, the obviously erroneous judgment which is before us; we should, rather, reverse it and remand the cause to the trial court for further proceedings. And lastly, if the majority modification of the judgment means what it appears that a trial court could properly construe it to mean—that defendants may impound water behind their dam only during the dry season—then the order that “Plaintiffs shall bear the costs of this appeal,” is patently unreasonable, for they (if anyone) will be the real winners on appeal. That is, they will be, if they can afford and prevail in the further litigation which seems indicated unless the parties can agree on what their respective rights shall be.
Shenk, J., and McComb, J., concurred.
The memorandum decision also states that "The plaintiffs have made no measurements of water which flowed from the lands of the defendants before the dam was built. ... It is possible to guess . . . that the dam reduced the flow of the water, but there is no credible evidence in what quantity it reduced the flow ... To grant plaintiffs relief . . . would require a decree that the defendants release water in a stated quantity . . . This cannot be done from the evidence . . . except by an arbitrary guess ...”
Finding No. II: “That Grub Ravine, sometimes known as Red Ranch Ravine, is a natural water course lying between the real properties owned by the parties to this action and extends in a general Westerly direction from the lands of the defendants to the lands of the plaintiffs. ’ ’
Deacon Jones testified that “the actual beginning of the . . . [ravine is] up near the north side of our ranch,” on which there are three springs ‘ ‘ that lead into Red Ravine or this gulch or water course that we are talking about”; that “after and before the irrigation season . . . the waters of . . . these springs feed into this ravine . . . [but] during the irrigation season ... I use it all.”
Plaintiff testified that the water in the ravine originates “about a mile above” his land and has “its source in natural springs”; that there was no “water that came onto” his place “from any source . . . that connects with this ravine . . . other than the thread of this ravine” and other than occasional leakage from the irrigation ditch prior to replacement of the syphon in 1950.
Mr. MeKinsey, residing in the vicinity, testified that the ravine is “a natural water course” which has its source in “an enlarged spring at the top of the hill, or almost to the top of the hill ... on Deacon Jones’ place”; that “the springs ... on Deacon Jones’ property . . . is . . . the source of the water flowing in the . . . [ravine], down to Mr. Hudson’s [plaintiff's] property.”
Mrs. Williams, who resided on plaintiffs’ property from 1944 to 1947, testified that during such period she and her husband got “plenty of water all the time [out of the ravine] for our horses and our milk cows” and for their garden, and “I just supposed it was natural, because it ran all the time.”
Mr. Estey, a prior owner, during 1925-1926, of plaintiffs’ property, testified that during such period he used water that “Come down that ravine. It is a natural run-off from that hill”; that the water flowing in the ravine is from a “couple of big springs up there” on Deacon Jones’ land plus “very little” seepage water from such land; that there are no other canyons carry water which runs into the ravine during the summertime (the irrigation season).
Finding No. III: “That in the month of October, 1950, the defendants constructed within the said Grub Ravine, also known as Red Ranch Ravine, and upon the lands of the defendants an earthen dam.”
I agree with the majority (if such be the intended holding) that plaintiffs’ pleadings are sufficient to place riparian rights in issue. To hold otherwise would be to impose far stricter rules on the construction of pleadings than is currently permitted under our code system. (See Code Civ. Proc., § 452; Faulkner v. California Toll Bridge Authority (1953), 40 Cal.2d 317, 328 [253 P.2d 659]; Mix v. Yoakum (1927), 200 Cal. 681, 687 [254 P. 557].)
It may be noted in this connection that plaintiffs allege in their second amended complaint that they “are the owners of a certain water right, which said water right is appurtenant to the real property owned-by plaintiffs herein, and the source of said water right ... is Grub Ravine, also known as Red Ranch Ravine. That said ravine is a natural water course, and the waters therefrom flow onto the lands of plaintiffs, across intervening lands, from the lands of defendants and have their source on lands above the lands of defendants.” And in their original complaint and first amended complaint (indicating that the riparian nature of their claim has been an issue since the very inception of the action) they allege that their water right is “appurtenant to” and “an appurtenance to” their land. (See City of Pasadena v. City of Alhambra (1949), 33 Cal.2d 908, 925 [207 P.2d 17].)
Finding No. VII.
Petition for Hearing in the Supreme Court, page 2. Also, in the opening brief of Plaintiffs-Appellants, it is pointed out (pp. 11-12) that the springs which form the source of the water in the ravine “are riparian to the ravine,” and that “This ravine goes through the property of plaintiffs.”
See footnote 5, ante, p. 842.
Such colloquy was as follows: “The Court: Let me see if I understand your position here: There has got to be shown by the plaintiff, by the greater weight of the evidence, the acquiring of a water right by grant.
‘ ‘ Mr. Milham: [Counsel for Plaintiffs]: Color of title.
“The Court: To maintain that, Mr. Hughes, do you think they have to show actual use constantly and continuously?
“Mr. Hughes [Counsel for Defendants]: Tes, Tour Honor.
“The Court: How about that, Mr. Milham? Do you agree?
“Mr. Milham: A water right must, under our water code, or can be *846lost, if the Court please, by non-use, but if it is riparian and it hasn’t been deeded away from a riparian owner by grant, a riparian owner does not lose by non-use. Now, that is the law. [Italics added.]
“Mb. Hughes: There is no claim in this amended complaint or the complaint at all about riparian rights.
“The Court: We will pass that point for the moment. The other one, other alternative, is to establish the right to it through the element of adverse possession, if you can. ’ ’
It will be recalled that it is not plaintiffs’ claim, but the sufficiency of defendants’ proof of title by adverse user, that is the critical point on this appeal. As developed in the text of the opinion, an upper riparian owner, if he is to establish a prescriptive right against a lower riparian owner, must show that his use of the water went beyond his own riparian rights.
Finding No. VII.
Defendant husband testified as follows: ‘ ‘ Q. And you first became the owner of the property, as I remember, when? A. 1945. . . . Q. Now, during the period of time you have been there . . . how much of the water have you used? A. All there was. Q. After the irrigation season, is there any difference in the volume of the water? A. That is, in the ditch? Q. Yes. A. Yes; after the irrigation season is over, I don’t need the water in the orchard, so I cut the ditch and let it go into the ravine.”
Likewise, the trial court in its memorandum of decision declares that “the testimony shows that the defendants used all of the natural spring water during the irrigation season.’’ (Italics added.)