Abbott v. Pond

76 P. 60, 142 Cal. 393, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 949
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 7, 1904
DocketL.A. No. 1211.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 76 P. 60 (Abbott v. Pond) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Abbott v. Pond, 76 P. 60, 142 Cal. 393, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 949 (Cal. 1904).

Opinion

GRAY, J.

This action was brought to enjoin defendants from discharging waste water upon the land of plaintiff.

The plaintiff appeals from a judgment in defendants’ favor and from an order denying plaintiff a new trial.

*395 1. The plaintiff objected to the defendants introducing any evidence of a prescriptive use or right to discharge their waste waters across the land of plaintiff, upon the ground that the facts set up in the answer “do not constitute a defense by way of prescriptive right or easement as claimed in the answer.” This is in the nature of a demurrer to the answer. It is claimed that “defendants have not alleged that their use or possession was notorious and not clandestine, nor that it was hostile to the claim, of title of another, nor that such possession was held under a claim, of title as their own, exclusive of any other right.”

The language of the answer in this respect is as follows s “And during all said times these defendants and each of them, and their respective grantors and their predecessors in interest, have so maintained and used said ditch continuously, openly, peaceably, uninterruptedly, under claim of right, and adversely to the plaintiff and his grantors and predecessors in interest, and to all the world, and during all said times these defendants and their respective grantors and predecessors in interest have been, and these defendants now are as to their said respective lands, the owners of the right so to maintain and use said ditch, as a perpetual easement appurtenant to their said lands.” That the use of the waste-ditch was “notorious” and “not clandestine” is sufficiently implied from the words used in the answer. Particularly the word “openly” shows that the use was not clandestine. And again it would be improbable that the use could be carried on as described in the answer without being known to any persons at all interested in the land, and this would make the use sufficiently notorious to satisfy the law governing rights by prescription as applied to easements. Nor was it necessary to use the term “hostile” in the answer. “Adversely to the plaintiff,” etc., is the language commonly used in this connection, and it implies that the use of the ditch was in hostility to any claim the plaintiff might have made adversely or in hostility to such use. “Plaintiff’s use of the right of way under a claim of right was necessarily hostile.” (Humphreys v. Blasingame, 104 Cal. 40.)

Neither was the word “exclusively” necessary to the answer. The ditch might have been used also as a wasteway by plaintiff and others, and this would not prevent the use of *396 the several defendants and their predecessors in title from ripening into a right by prescription, provided the latter use 'was in no way interrupted or interfered with. Several parties could use and acquire a permanent and several right to use the same ditch for waste water, just as several parties could use and acquire similar rights in a private road. (Humphreys v. Blasingame, 104 Cal. 40; Barnes v. Haynes, 10 Gray, 188.) The words “under claim of right and adversely to plaintiff” also imply that the use was “under claim of title as their own.” We think the answer was good, and the objection to evidence on the ground that the answer was bad was properly overruled.

Other objections are made in appellant’s brief to the answer, but as these all seem to be based on the ground of uncertainty, and there seems to have been no demurrer to the answer on any ground, and the answer also seems reasonably free from uncertainty, we do not deem it necessary to take up these objections in detail.

2. The appellant contends that he was entitled to relief upon the strength of the twelfth finding, which is to the effect that defendants “have not at all times maintained said ditch along said line in a proper condition for the carrying of said surplus and waste water, and by reason of such failure such water has at times overflowed from said ditch upon plaintiff’s lands to his damage.” From an examination of the complaint it will be seen that it was not prepared for the purpose of compelling the defendants to confine their waste water to the waste-ditch nor to recover damages for the escape of the water from the waste-ditch; but the object was to have defendants enjoined altogether from flowing any water upon or across the land of plaintiff. The appellant had already destroyed defendants’ waste-ditch on his land, and this suit was intended to settle the question as to defendants’ right to maintain the waste-ditch. Defendants did not claim any right to use the waste-ditch in such a way as to needlessly flood plaintiff’s land, or, to put it in the language of the findings: “The defendants have not, nor has any of them threatened to cause or allow any water or surplus water to flow from any of their lands down to or upon the plaintiff’s land, except in and through said ditch, as they have the right to do, as aforesaid, nor threatened to cause or allow any such water *397 to overflow any of his land, except in so far as such overflow would result from his own wrongful act in closing and filling said ditch as aforesaid.” The relief here suggested would therefore have been outside of the matter litigated. Of course, it is the duty of defendants to keep their waste-ditch in repair, when they have any ditch to repair, and to confine their waste water to it. Plaintiff, however, cannot have the equitable interposition of the court to confine water to a ditch which he has destroyed. The whole case must go against plaintiff on the finding of defendants’ right to maintain the ditch.

3. The appellant attacks the findings of the court, which are to the effect that ever since 1888 “the defendants and each of them and their respective grantors have severally caused and allowed said surplus and waste water from their respective tracts of land” to flow through said ditch, using the same as a waste-ditch “continuously, openly, peaceably, uninterruptedly, under claim of right, and adversely to the plaintiff,” etc. And that since the year 1895 the defendants and their respective grantors have been the owners of such rights and of said easement.

There was substantial evidence tending strongly to show that the ditch, which the plaintiff, as it seems, plowed in and destroyed a few days before the commencement of the action, had been maintained and used as a waste-ditch by the several predecessors in title of the several defendants, and by the several defendants continuously before that time for a period running as far back as 1888, and that this use was without interruption and without asking the consent of the plaintiff or of his predecessors in title; that no objection to the use was made until shortly before the commencement of this action, and about five or six years after the period of limitations had run; that during all this time the land across which this waste-ditch ran was being cultivated; and that the ditch was frequently repaired and cleaned out by defendants and their predecessors. The ditch was situated on the dividing-line between two lots of about nine and a quarter acres each, numbered 39 and 42 respectively, and was partly on each of these lots.

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Bluebook (online)
76 P. 60, 142 Cal. 393, 1904 Cal. LEXIS 949, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/abbott-v-pond-cal-1904.