Bolsa Land Co. v. Burdick

90 P. 532, 151 Cal. 254, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 421
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 15, 1907
DocketL.A. No. 1608.
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 90 P. 532 (Bolsa Land Co. v. Burdick) 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
Bolsa Land Co. v. Burdick, 90 P. 532, 151 Cal. 254, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 421 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

HENSHAW, J.

Plaintiffs’ complaint alleged that the Bolsa Land Company was the owner of the land in the complaint described, and with the Bolsa Chica Gun Club, a corporation, the members of which were the same as the members of the Bolsa Land Company, were in possession of it. This tract of land, comprising several thousand acres, was wholly inclosed by a fence surrounding its exterior boundaries. Within the inclosure, and near the center of the tract, were numerous sloughs, artificial ponds, and overflowed swamplands. These ponds, sloughs, and swamp-lands were frequented by wild fowl—ducks, geese, snipe, etc. The plaintiffs had improved these lands and constructed thereon conveniences for shooting purposes, and used these ponds, sloughs, and overflowed lands for such purposes as a preserve for its members and stockholders. To give notice and to protect these lands, the plaintiffs had posted notices along the fence surrounding the tract. It is then alleged that the defendants, who are many, are strangers to the property and have absolutely no rights or interests therein, but, notwithstanding, have at numerous times, by force and violence, broken down plaintiffs’ fences, entered upon the land, hunted, shot, killed, and carried away large numbers of the wild fowl found *256 thereon, and that, although personally notified to refrain from trespassing upon the land, the defendants paid no heed to such notification, but declared their intention to return and enter upon the land whenever they chose to do so, and in particular declared that they would return upon the twenty-sixth day of November (which day was Thanksgiving day) and enter upon the premises and shoot and kill the wild fowl which they might find there. It is further alleged that the effect of such indiscriminate shooting was to drive the birds away from the lands and to destroy the value of the lands as a game resort and preserve. It was also charged in the complaint that these defendants were acting under agreement and conspiracy so to trespass upon the lands of plaintiffs and commit the unlawful acts charged. Plaintiffs prayed that an injunction might be issued upon the filing of the complaint, restraining the defendants from entering upon the land and trespassing thereon, and that at the trial of the cause the injunction be made permanent. Upon the filing of the complaint the court made its order directing the issuance of a preliminary injunction, and fixed the amount of the bond thereon, which plaintiffs gave as required. The writ of injunction was then issued and served upon the numerous defendants. Thereafter the defendants came into court and filed their answer and served notice of a motion to dissolve the preliminary injunction upon the records of the case and upon accompanying affidavits attached to the notice. This motion was presented to the court, together with affidavits, and plaintiffs in turn filed counter-affidavits. Besides these affidavits, they presented documentary evidence, both in support of their title and in opposition to certain asserted rights of defendants, which will hereinafter be more specifically adverted to.

The court thereupon dissolved the preliminary injunction, and plaintiffs appeal.

It is plain that this complaint is in all respects like that of Kellog v. King, 114 Cal. 378, [55 Am. St. Rep. 74, 46 Pac. 166], An injunction is the principal relief sought. A preliminary injunction, under the allegations of the complaint, was not pnly proper but necessary to protect the plaintiffs’ rights and to prevent the alleged prospective destruction of their game preserve. The question here presented is whether, *257 under the showing made by the answer, and the affidavits in support of the motion to dissolve, taken with the opposing evidence offered by plaintiffs, the motion was properly granted. Without attempting to set forth at length the matter of this evidence, its substance may be summarized briefly. There is no serious attempt to deny the acts charged against the defendants generally. Affidavits of individual ■defendants make specific denials in some instances, but certain facts are established substantially beyond question. The ■defendants did, in great numbers and upon many occasions, break down the fences and enter upon plaintiffs’ inclosure, ■overrunning the lands, on foot, as well as traversing the waters by boat, carrying firearms, discharging them at will, shooting birds, refusing to heed warnings and notices of plaintiffs’ employees, and in at least one instance, that of ■defendant Barton, threatening to murder. They did do these things (excepting the threat to murder) by agreement and preconcert of action, but they deny that a conspiracy existed, and assert that their agreement went only to the exercise of their legal rights upon the premises. They do not deny the breaking down of plaintiffs’ fences, but assert that in so ■doing they were but removing obstructions in a navigable stream. In short, upon the nature of their acts, the summing up may be made in the language of respondents’ brief: '“There has for several years been a kind of scrambling contention between appellants and the citizens and residents •of the community of Bolsas Bay as to the right of the general public to go upon the said water since the time when the plaintiffs claim to have procured the conveyance of the same; the people in the neighborhood, including many of these defendants, claiming that they had the same rights upon the water that they had before the conveyance or patent was made by the state, and that the plaintiffs had no legal right to build the dam across the mouth of said bay or to fence said waters, and this controversy has arisen because of these contentions.” Such being the admitted attitude of the defendants, it needs but little knowledge, and no discernment, to perceive that they were using at least the waters of this preserve in all respects as though their rights thereon were the ■same as the plaintiffs. Thus, no substantial denial is made of the fact that some forty or fifty of them overran the *258 lands and waters upon November 26th, all carrying guns, all discharging them freely and shooting game. Yet the affidavits on this point would seek to have the court believe that they were there upon that occasion as invited guests of the plaintiffs, called to an amicable conference to adjust their differences. Just why some forty or fifty should have come to the conference, instead of one or two spokesmen and leaders, just why, in coming to this conference, they should have carried shotguns and tramped the marshes shooting at game, and just why they should never have attended, nor have sought to attend, this proposed conference, is of course, nowhere explained.

So much for the acts of the defendants, which acts, it may not be questioned, constituted such an invasion of plaintiffs’ asserted rights as to have justified the continuance of the preliminary injunction.

As to the title and right of possession of the property, plaintiffs showed that the lands were part of a rancho to which patent had been issued by the .United States. The plaintiffs’ title was derived by mesne conveyance through the holders of the patented title. The lands comprised many hundreds of acres of upland as well as marsh lands, with an ocean frontage. An estuary from the ocean projected into these lands, the waters in which estuary, with its tributary sloughs, were affected by the flow of the tides.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P. 532, 151 Cal. 254, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 421, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bolsa-land-co-v-burdick-cal-1907.