Where the controversy in the state court does not involve the
construction of the Treaty of 1848 with Mexico, but only the
validity of the title of certain Mexican and Spanish grants made
prior to the treaty, no federal question is involved.
The Fourteenth Amendment does not control the power of a state
to determine the form of procedure by which legal rights may be
ascertained, if the method adopted gives reasonable notice and
affords a fair opportunity to be heard.
Where the validity, on account of repugnancy to the federal
Constitution, of statutes of California as to the paramount right
of the City of Los Angeles to the surface and subterranean waters
of the Los Angeles River is not drawn in question in the trial or
in the supreme court of the state, the decisions of the state
courts will not be reviewed in this Court.
This is a writ of error to the Supreme Court of the State of
California to review a judgment of that court affirming the
judgment of the Superior Court of the County of Los Angeles,
California, in favor of the City of Los Angeles, and against Hooker
and Pomeroy. The city brought suit against Hooker and Pomeroy, to
condemn all their "estate, right, title, and interest" in and to
certain tracts of land, described in the complaint, for the purpose
of enabling the city "to construct and maintain thereon the
headworks' of its projected system for supplying water to its
inhabitants for private and municipal purposes." All questions
except the amount of compensation to be awarded were by stipulation
tried by the court. The jury returned a verdict awarding $23,000 as
the value
"of an estate in fee simple in the lands described in the
complaint, including all their elements of value, subject to the
paramount right of the City of Los Angeles to take from the Los
Angeles River, from time to time, all the water that may be needed
at such time for the use of the inhabitants of said city, and for
all municipal and public uses and purposes therein,"
and $2,000 as damages to the remaining
Page 188 U. S. 315
portion of the tract of which that land formed a part. Judgment
was rendered thereon for the amount so found, and costs. The case
was carried to the supreme court, and the judgment affirmed. 124
Cal. 597.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE FULLER delivered the opinion of the Court.
We cannot find in the pleadings or other proceedings in the
trial court, or in the supreme court, that any statute of
California was asserted to be in conflict with the Constitution, or
any law or treaty of the United States, or that any right was
claimed by plaintiffs in error under the Constitution or any treaty
or statute of the United States.
The city alleged in its complaint that the Los Angeles River was
a nonnavigable stream, rising a few miles to the north and
northwest of the city, and fed by streams rising to the surface in
or near the bed of the river; that that bed was composed of sandy
soil, into which the water sank and formed subterranean streams
flowing beneath the bed and then rising to the surface; that the
river flowed through the land sought to be condemned before
reaching the city; that the city was the owner of the exclusive
right to the use of all the water of the river in trust for the
public purposes of supplying the inhabitants of the city with water
for domestic use, supplying water for the irrigation of land
embraced within the pueblo lands of the city, and other municipal
uses; that plaintiffs in error were owners of the fee simple of the
lands described, subject to the rights of the city to the water of
the river, and the prayer was for the condemnation in fee simple of
all the estate, right, title, and interest of plaintiffs in error
in the land.
Page 188 U. S. 316
The answer of plaintiffs in error denied that the river was fed
by springs rising to the surface in or adjoining the bed of the
river; admitted that the bed was composed of sandy soil, but denied
that the waters of the river formed well defined subterranean
streams flowing in channels beneath the bed, or that such
subterranean waters rose before reaching the city, or became a part
of the surface water of the river, and denied that the city was the
owner of any right to the use of all the water of the river, in
trust, or otherwise; denied that the city had any right in the
water or to the use thereof, other than as a riparian owner of
lands through which the river flowed, and rights acquired by
appropriation, and denied that the city owned the right to the
water of the river to the exclusion of plaintiffs in error. On the
contrary, the answer alleged that the lands of plaintiffs in error
were riparian lands situated far above the north boundary of the
city, and that, as riparian owners, plaintiffs in error were
entitled to the use of the waters of the river for all lawful
purposes, and, to a reasonable extent, for irrigating those lands,
and for domestic and other uses. And it set up grants of part of
the land to the predecessors of plaintiffs in error in 1843 by the
governor of both Californias, and of the remainder of the land by
grant in 1784; that confirmation was petitioned for before the
board of land commissioners appointed under the act of Congress of
March 3, 1851, the grants confirmed, and the decrees of the board
affirmed by the District Court of the United States for the
Southern District of California, and patents duly issued, and
averred that plaintiffs in error claimed title
"under and through the aforesaid Mexican and Spanish grants, and
the proceedings for the confirmation thereof, and the said patents
issued by the United States founded thereon,"
and that as owners of the land, plaintiffs in error were also
owners of the waters percolating in the soil thereof, and riparian
owners, having the rights of riparian proprietors in the waters of
the river.
The trial court decided that the city was, and had been since
its organization, owner in fee simple of the paramount use of the
waters of the Los Angeles River, so far as might be needed from
time to time, for the public purposes of supplying the
Page 188 U. S. 317
inhabitants of the city with water for public and domestic
purposes, as described in the complaint; that plaintiffs in error
were the owners of the particular land, and had, subject to the
rights of the city, the rights of riparian proprietors thereof and
the right to use the water of the river for all purposes for which
riparian owners are entitled to use such waters.
The contentions seem to be that the state courts decided against
the claim of plaintiffs in error to the rights of a riparian owner,
and to the ownership of alleged percolating waters, as derived from
patents of the United States as well as from Mexican grants, or
under the Treaty of Guadeloupe Hidalgo; that the statutes of
California, in authorizing the trial of title in condemnation
proceedings and the determination of compensation before the
determination of title, amounted to providing for the taking of
private property for public use without just compensation; that
certain statutes declaring the city to be vested with a paramount
right to the surface and subterranean waters deprived plaintiffs in
error of their property without due process of law, and that the
statute of the state, in providing that compensation and damages
should be deemed to have accrued at the date of the summons, as
construed by the state courts, resulted in taking the property of
plaintiffs in error without just compensation.
Obviously, the question as to the title or right of plaintiffs
in error in the land, and whatever appertained thereto, was one of
state law and of general public law, on which the decision of the
state court was final.
San Francisco v. Scott,
111 U. S. 768;
California Powder Works v. Davis, 151 U.
S. 389. And the question of the existence of percolating
water was merely a question of fact.
The patents were in the nature of a quitclaim, and under the Act
of March 3, 1851, were "conclusive between the United States and
the said claimants only, and shall not affect the interests of
third persons." The validity of that act was not drawn in question
in the state court, and as the right or title asserted by
plaintiffs in error was derived under Mexican and Spanish grants,
the decision of the state court on the claims asserted by
plaintiffs in error to the waters of the river was not
Page 188 U. S. 318
against any title or right claimed under the Constitution, or
any treaty, or statute of, or commission held, or authority
exercised, under the Constitution. If the title of plaintiffs in
error were protected by the treaty, still the suit did not arise
thereunder, because the controversy in the state court did not
involve the construction of the treaty, but the validity of the
title of Mexican and Spanish grants prior to the treaty.
New Orleans v. De
Armas, 9 Pet. 224;
Iowa v. Rood,
187 U. S. 87;
Phillips v. Mound City Land & Water Association,
124 U. S. 605.
In
Crystal Springs Land & Water Company v. Los
Angeles, 82 F. 114, the circuit court ruled that, where both
parties claimed under Mexican grants, confirmed and patented by the
United States in accordance with the provisions of the treaty of
Guadeloupe Hidalgo, and the controversy was only as to what were
the rights thus granted and confirmed, the suit was not one arising
under a treaty so as to confer jurisdiction on a federal court, and
that, where the only ground of federal jurisdiction was the
allegation in a bill that defendant's claim of title was based in
part on certain acts of the legislature of the state, which
attempted to transfer to it, as alleged, the title held by
complainant's grantors at the time of their passage, the court
would not retain jurisdiction when an answer was filed by defendant
denying the allegations, and disclaiming any title or claim of
title not held by it before the passage of the acts. The bill was
dismissed, and we affirmed the judgment.
177 U. S. 177 U.S.
169.
The trial court determined for itself, among other questions,
the nature and extent of the city's interest in the waters of the
river, but while it instructed the jury in relation thereto it did
not file its written findings until after the return of the
verdict. And it is argued that the respective rights of the parties
were not in fact adjudicated until after the amount of compensation
had been found, and that in this way plaintiffs in error were
deprived of their property without due process of law. The
Fourteenth Amendment does not control the power of a state to
determine the form of procedure by which legal rights may be
ascertained, if the method adopted gives reasonable notice and
affords a fair opportunity to be heard.
Iowa
Central
Page 188 U. S. 319
R. Co. v. Iowa, 160 U. S. 389;
Long Island Water Supply Company v. Brooklyn, 166 U.
S. 685.
The construction of a law of a state, that it was competent for
the court to try and determine, in a condemnation proceeding, an
adverse claim of the plaintiff therein to an interest in property
sought to be condemned, is conclusive on this Court, and we cannot
understand how the entry of the verdict of a jury as to the amount
of compensation prior to the filing of written findings on the
other issues could have the effect of depriving plaintiffs in error
of their property without due process of law. The Chief Justice of
California well said that it was of no importance in what order the
other issues in the case were decided, except insofar as the
determination of one point was necessary as a basis for the
determination of another, and that, if the instructions to the jury
actually given were correct, the fact that these findings had not
been previously filed was of no consequence.
And so as to certain statutes of the State of California, which
declared that the City of Los Angeles is vested with the paramount
right to the surface and subterranean water of the Los Angeles
River. Those statutes were admitted in evidence merely to show that
the city was the successor of the ancient pueblo. The court held
that the right of the City of Los Angeles to take from the Los
Angeles River all of the waters of the river to the extent of its
reasonable domestic and municipal needs was based on the Spanish
and Mexican law, and not on the charters of the City of Los
Angeles. The validity of the statutes, on account of repugnancy to
the federal Constitution, was not drawn in question in the trial
court nor in the supreme court of the state, and both courts held
that they neither granted to the city nor took away from plaintiffs
in error any rights or property.
Section 1249 of the Code of Civil Procedure of California
provided that, for the purpose of assessing compensation and
damages the right thereto should be taken to have accrued at the
time of the summons,
"and its actual value at that date shall be the measure of
compensation for all property to be actually taken, and the basis
of damages to property not actually taken, but injuriously
affected. "
Page 188 U. S. 320
The validity of the statute under the state constitution had
been repeatedly sustained by the state courts, and those courts
held that the value referred to in the statute was the actual value
at that date.
Plaintiffs in error asked the court to charge the jury that the
date of estimating the value of the property was the date of the
summons, and the supreme court held that in these circumstances
they could not be permitted to attack the condemnation statute as
unconstitutional so far as related to the appraising the value of
the land as provided.
Moreover, this Court cannot reverse the decisions of state
courts in regard to questions of general justice and equitable
considerations in the taking of property.
Fallbrook Irrigation
District v. Bradley, 164 U. S. 112.
The truth is there is nothing in this record adequately showing
that the state courts were led to suppose that any claim under the
Constitution of the United States was made by plaintiffs in error,
or that any ruling involved a decision against a right set up by
them under that instrument.
In
Sayward v. Denny, 158 U. S. 180,
after stating the contention of plaintiff in error that the effect
of the judgment of the state court was
"to deprive him of his property without due process of law, or
to deny him the equal protection of the laws, and amounted to a
decision adverse to the right, privilege, or immunity of plaintiff
in error under the Constitution, of being protected from such
deprivation or denial,"
we said:
"But it nowhere affirmatively appears from the record that such
a right was set up or claimed in the trial court when the demurrer
to the complaint was overruled, or evidence admitted or excluded,
or instructions given or refused, or in the supreme court in
disposing of the rulings below. . . . We are not called on to
revise these views of the principles of general law considered
applicable to the case in hand. It is enough that there is nothing
in the record to indicate that the state courts were led to suppose
that plaintiff in error claimed protection under the Constitution
of the United States from the several rulings, or to suspect that
each ruling as made involved a decision against a right specially
set up under that instrument. And
Page 188 U. S. 321
we may add that the decisions of state tribunals in respect of
matters of general law cannot be reviewed on the theory that the
law of the land is violated unless their conclusions are absolutely
free from error."
This case comes within the rule there laid down, and the writ of
error must be
Dismissed.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA took no part in the decision of this
case.