County of Yuba v. Kate Hayes Mining Co.

74 P. 1049, 141 Cal. 360, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 521
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 21, 1903
DocketSac. No. 874.
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 74 P. 1049 (County of Yuba v. Kate Hayes Mining Co.) 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
County of Yuba v. Kate Hayes Mining Co., 74 P. 1049, 141 Cal. 360, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 521 (Cal. 1903).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.—

This action was brought by the plaintiff, the owner of certain lots of land in the city of Marysville, county of Yuba, in which are situated the county courthouse, county jail, hall of records, and county hospital, and also the owner of the wagon-bridge crossing the Yuba River from the foot of D Street in said city, to obtain a decree enjoining defendants from discharging débris from their mineral lands into Sweetland Creek and the Yuba River, or any branch thereof, to the injury of plaintiff’s said property. On the trial, the action was dismissed as to all of the defendants except the above-named mining company and Charles N. Miller, its superintendent, and judgment went for plaintiff. From the judgment and order denying their motion for a new trial said defendants appeal.

The complaint alleged that the property of plaintiff is adjacent to the Yuba River, which empties into the Feather River at or near the city of Marysville, and that the defendants are in possession of, working and operating by the hydraulic process and the ground-sluice process, certain mines and mining claims in Nevada County, and discharging the débris therefrom into Sweetland Creek, a tributary of Yuba River, about three miles in length, whence said débris is carried down the Yuba River, and is deposited and lodged in the beds *362 and channels of the river and upon plaintiff’s property, and will continue to do so, unless restrained. The complaint alleged the general effect of such mining operations of defendants upon the Yuba River, which is by the deposit of débris therein, to raise the bed and channel of the river, and cause the lands on each side thereof, in times of flood, in the absence of high and secure levees, to be covered with water and débris, to the great damage of said lands. (As to the general effects of such mining operations, see Mining Debris case, 9 Saw. 441; 18 Fed. 753, relating to the same locality.)

It was further alleged that it will require many years to exhaust the mines of defendants, 'that the property of plaintiff is, by reason of said mining operations of defendants, each year becoming more seriously threatened with destruction from the waters of the river, that its value has already been greatly depreciated thereby, and that if said defendants and others who are engaged in said operations are permitted to continue to engage therein, the said property will be utterly destroyed and rendered absolutely valueless for any purpose whatever. It was further alleged that plaintiff’s lands have been flooded, but there was no evidence to sustain this allegation, the testimony in this regard being simply that but for the levees it would have been ruined. In all other respects, the material allegations of the complaint must be held to be sustained by the testimony. It is true that the evidence failed to show that defendants were mining by the “hydraulic process,” but, admittedly, they were mining by the “ground-sluice process,” which, according to the evidence, produced the same effect in kind as the hydraulic process, only to a less degree: It is urged that the property of plaintiff, other than the bridge, was not “adjacent to” the Yuba River, and that the finding of the court in that regard is not sustained by the evidence. The property is all near the river, but none of it borders thereon. To.be “adjacent” to the river, it is not essential that the property should be in actual contact therewith. A thing is adjacent to another when it lies near or close to it, although it is not in actual contact therewith.

The material question here was whether it was near enough to the river to be damaged by such overflow thereof as might be caused by the acts complained of.

*363 The court was justified in concluding that the operations of defendants constituted a public nuisance, specially injurious to plaintiff as a property-owner, and, therefore, one to enjoin which plaintiff could maintain an action. (Code Civ. Proc., sec. 731; Civ. Code, sec. 3493; Mining Debris case, 9 Saw. 441; 18 Fed. 753.) As to the county, as a property-owner, the nuisance is also a private nuisance. (Fisher v. Zumwalt, 128 Cal. 493.) The county is not suing to protect the rights of others, but purely in its proprietary capacity, as the owner of certain real property.

The decree enjoining defendants, their officers, agents, etc., from discharging the débris into Sweetland Creek or Yuba River, or any of their tributaries; and from dumping or placing the same in such places that it would be liable to be washed or removed thereto, and from suffering or allowing its or their claims to be worked or operated by the hydraulic process or ground-sluice process, and the débris therefrom discharged into said river, creek, or tributaries thereof, was warranted by the pleadings, evidence, and findings. The decree further restrains defendants “from suffering others to use his or its water supply, or any part thereof, for the purpose of washing into such streams or gulches any earth, rocks, bowlders, clay, sand, or other solid material contained in amy other ground or mine, with knowledge on the part of said defendants that the same is to be used in such a manner as to work injury to the property of the plaintiff described in the complaint, . . . and also from selling, leasing, or in any manner conveying, transferring, or disposing of said mine and mining ground, or any part thereof, or the water supply of the said defendants, or either of them, to any person whatever for the purpose of being worked or used by the hydraulic process or the ground-sluice process, and the mining débris discharged therefrom into said creek or river, or any of their or its tributaries, with knowledge of said purposes on the part of said defendants.”

It is specially urged by appellants that the judgment should be modified by striking therefrom these portions thereof, it being claimed that neither the allegations of the complaint nor the evidence justified the insertion thereof in the decree. While the prayer of the complaint asked for this relief, there *364 was no allegation of the complaint warranting the provision as to the nse of defendants’ water “in any other ground or mine.” The object of the action was to restrain the defendants from working their own mining property in a certain way; the allegations of the complaint are clearly confined thereto, and so far as the complaint is concerned the water is referred to merely as an instrumentality in working said property. There is no allegation that they ever suffered or threatened to suffer any one else to use their water for mining operations. On the contrary, the allegation as to the water is, that the defendant mining company “is now using and will continue to use” the same “to mine its said tracts of land,” and the only evidence in the record is that furnished by the stipulation “that the company defendant owns ánd controls a water supply of 2,500 inches and ditches to convey the same to the mine and to such customers as may purchase water when it has no use for it.” There was no issue as to any of these matters and no finding of the court. While the court was authorized to fully protect plaintiff against any threatened acts and injuries complained of, it could not grant any relief except such as was “consistent with the case

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Bluebook (online)
74 P. 1049, 141 Cal. 360, 1903 Cal. LEXIS 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/county-of-yuba-v-kate-hayes-mining-co-cal-1903.