Cook v. State

74 P.2d 199, 192 Wash. 602, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 355
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 16, 1937
DocketNo. 26594. Department Two.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 74 P.2d 199 (Cook v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cook v. State, 74 P.2d 199, 192 Wash. 602, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 355 (Wash. 1937).

Opinions

Robinson, J.

When this action came on for trial in the lower court and a jury had been impanelled and an opening statement made on behalf of the plaintiffs, the state objected to the introduction of any evidence upon the ground that the complaint, as amplified by the opening statement, failed to state sufficient facts to constitute a cause of action. The objection was treated as a general demurrer and, as such, sustained by the court. A judgment of dismissal was entered, and this "appeal was taken therefrom.

The factual allegations of the complaint must, therefore, be taken as admitted. They are, in substance, as follows: The plaintiffs, Silas Cook and wife, for some years, owned a thirty-five acre farm near Spokane, through which flows the Little Spokane river and Deadman creek. On this farm, by diking, ditching, *604 and excavating, they made a shallow, artificial lake covering an area of about five acres, fed by the waters of Deadman creek. In the winter time, when the lake was covered with ice, they conducted a public outdoor skating rink. The business prospered, and a large number of people from Spokane and vicinity patronized it.

The Little Spokane river and Deadman creek were the natural habitat of beaver and muskrats. For some years, plaintiffs protected the dam from threatened injury by these animals by employing persons to trap them.

In 1933, the state game commission, acting under the authority of the state game code, declared a certain area, which included plaintiffs’ farm, a wild life sanctuary or refuge, in which it should be unlawful to hunt or kill or trap game or fur-bearing animals, including muskrats. Plaintiffs, foreseeing from past experience that the beavers, if left to their own devices, would dam up the ditch regulating the inflow of water from Deadman creek and the muskrats would burrow through the dike and in this manner destroy the skating rink, notified the game commission of their past experience with these animals and requested permission to continue to trap them alive and convey them to other locations. But their request was refused. They thereupon requested the game commission to cause the muskrats to be trapped and save the skating rink from imminently threatened damage. This the commission refused to do. Some traps were found set on the premises. They were confiscated by the game authorities, and Mr. Cook was emphatically warned that anyone found trapping there would be arrested, prosecuted, and fined.

One evening in early November, 1935, while the lake was thronged with people skating to the music of an *605 orchestra, the ice began to settle aind crack in all directions, and so badly that it was impossible to skate on it. Upon investigation, it was found that there was no water supporting the ice. The beaver had dammed the ditch from Deadman creek which supplied the water to the pond, and the muskrats, on the other hand, had burrowed through the dike, permitting the water, which was already there, to escape.

The plaintiffs were unable to restore the rink for several weeks and, as a consequence, lost five thousand dollars in revenue. In addition to this, it is alleged that they were damaged in the sum of one thousand five hundred dollars with respect to the loss of good will; it being their theory that persons who had long patronized them became accustomed to going to other rinks and never returned.

The plaintiffs, as appellants here, contend that, since Rem. Rev. Stat. (Sup.), § 5889 [P. C. §2620] (Laws of 1933, chapter 3, p. 41, § 34), grants the power of eminent domain to the game commission for the condemnation of property deemed necessary for its use for hatchery sites, rearing ponds, and fur-bearing animal sanctuaries, it is intended that it shall have the right to establish such sanctuaries only in that manner. We think, however, that this section was intended to cover situations where the commission desires full ownership of property for such purposes.

In the case at bar, as we understand the allegations of the complaint, the commission merely defined an area within the boundaries of which it forbade, for an indefinite time, the hunting, trapping, killing or taking of fur-bearing animals. This, we think, the commission undoubtedly had a right to do under the broad general powers granted to it by the game code. Rem. Rev. Stat. (Sup.), §§ 5855-7 and 5870 [P. C. *606 §§4-107g, 2601] (Laws of 1933, chapter 3, pp. 30, 32, §§ 13j 19).

The appellants contend, with greater plausibility, that the facts show a taking and damaging of their property contrary to § 16 of Art. I of the state constitution, which reads, in part, as follows:

“ . . . No private property shall be taken or damaged for public or private use without just compensation having been first made, or paid into court for the owner, ...”

It is pointed out that, in order to constitute a taking or damaging within this provision of the constitution, it is not necessary that the owner of the property be actually deprived of the property itself or even of a part of it; and to this effect a great number of cases are cited, as, for example, Burrows v. Grays Harbor Boom Co., 44 Wash. 630, 87 Pac. 937, where the land of riparian proprietors was overflowed above the line of ordinary high water mark; Jacobs v. Seattle, 93 Wash. 171, 160 Pac. 299, L. R. A. 1917B, 329, where the value of land was depreciated by the fact that the city of Seattle maintained an incinerator adjacent thereto for the burning of garbage; Great Northern R. Co. v. State, 102 Wash. 348, 173 Pac. 40, L. R. A. 1918E, 987, where the state highway, in building a highway, blasted rock and other material upon a railroad track belonging to plaintiff, interrupting its use; Conger v. Pierce County, 116 Wash. 27, 198 Pac. 377, 18 A. L. R 393, where adjoining counties, under legislative authority, in improving a navigable stream for the purpose of preventing overflows, caused the erosion and washing away of plaintiffs’ land, by deflecting the current of the stream; Southworth v. Seattle, 145 Wash. 138, 259 Pac. 26, where plaintiff was permitted to recover for damage to his property from a sewage disposal plant adjacent to it; Spokane, P. & S. R. Co. *607 v. State, 159 Wash. 529, 294 Pac. 231, where the roadbed of the railway was rendered temporarily useless by blasting done in constructing the highway.

Other Washington cases of the same general description are cited as follows: Aliverti v. Walla Walla, 162 Wash. 487, 298 Pac. 698; Litka v. Anacortes, 167 Wash. 259, 9 P. (2d) 88; State v. Superior Court for Walla Walla County, 167 Wash. 334, 9 P. (2d) 70. A number of other cases of the same type are cited from other jurisdictions.

The cases cited, and cases of that type, of which appellants rightly say there is a multitude, have but little to do with the question in the case at bar. They are cases where the taker had no right of any kind whatever in or with respect to the land claimed to have been taken or damaged, and in all of them there was either an illegal trespass or the maintenance of a nuisance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 P.2d 199, 192 Wash. 602, 1937 Wash. LEXIS 355, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cook-v-state-wash-1937.