Cushing - Wetmore Co. v. Gray

92 P. 70, 152 Cal. 118, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 318
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 2, 1907
DocketS.F. Nos. 2965, 3833.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 92 P. 70 (Cushing - Wetmore Co. v. Gray) 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
Cushing - Wetmore Co. v. Gray, 92 P. 70, 152 Cal. 118, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 318 (Cal. 1907).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

These are appeals from a judgment in favor of plaintiff for five thousand dollars’ damages and from an order denying defendants’ motion for a new trial.

1. Counsel for the respective parties differ as to the character of the case made hy the complaint, counsel for plaintiff claiming that the action is one at law for damages for injury to plaintiff’s business, caused by malicious and oppressive conduct of defendants deliberately intended to injure sueh plaintiff and “drive plaintiff out of the field as a competitor with the defendants, ’ ’ while counsel for defendants claim that the action is one in equity for the abatement of an alleged nuisance, and incidentally for the damage caused thereby. We regard this question as immaterial on these appeals, even if it be conceded that an action for the abatement of a nuisance is under our present constitution an action within the equitable jurisdiction of the court, and to be governed by the principles prevailing in that jurisdiction. (See McCarthy v. Gaston etc. Co., 144 Cal. 542, 547, [78 Pac. 7].) The case was tried upon the theory that it was solely an action at law for damages, and the judgment given was one for damages only, no abatement of any nuisance being decreed. It is, of course, not disputed that one may maintain an action at law *120 for damage caused by a nuisance, without seeking an abatement of the nuisance. We are satisfied from the record before-us that this must be treated as such an action. Under these circumstances the objection that no findings of fact were made and filed by the judge, and that the judgment was wholly-based on the verdict of the jury is without force. In this connection, however, it is proper to say that if findings by the court were essential, the record does not affirmatively show that such findings were not waived, and under such circumstances the presumption is that findings were made so far as required. (See Richardson v. City of Eureka, 110 Cal. 441, 446, [42 Pac. 965]; Baker v. Baker, 139 Cal. 626, [73 Pac. 469]; Tomlinson v. Ayres, 117 Cal. 568, [49 Pac. 717].)

2. It is contended that the complaint failed to state a cause of action. This contention is based on the fact that the alleged acts causing the injury to plaintiff were the placing of obstructions in certain public streets of the city and county of San Francisco. The obstruction of a public street or highway constituting a public nuisance, and the law authorizing a private person to maintain an action for a public nuisance only where it is specially injurious to himself (Civ. Code, sec. 3493), it is urged that the complaint fails to show any cause of action in favor of plaintiff.

The complaint shows plaintiff to be the owner of certain real property on Lombard and Winthrop streets (the obstructed streets), on which it was engaged in the business, of quarrying, crushing, and selling rock, and that the obstructions alleged, while not immediately in front of plaintiff’s property, and therefore not impeding plaintiff in the right to go upon the obstructed streets from its property, or upon its property from the obstructed streets, were so placed upon said streets at other points as to prevent all ingress to and egress from plaintiff’s quarries by plaintiff’s wagons, teams, carts, and appliancés of its business. It is alleged that plaintiff had for several years been engaged in its business on this property, operating a rock crusher and reduction works with a capacity of one hundred and eighty tons of rock per day, and delivering therefrom to customers an average quantity of seventy-five tons each day; that defendants on May 3d and 5th, 1899, wantonly and maliciously and for the purpose of *121 injuring plaintiff’s business, obstructed said Lombard Street in such a way as to totally obstruct all passage and access of plaintiff’s wagons, etc., to and from its quarry, and that plaintiff having thereupon procured a private right of way leading from Winthrop Street, defendants for the same purpose, on May 20, 1899, and again on July 30, 1899, obstructed said Winthrop Street, with the same result, thus totally stopping the business of plaintiff. It is further alleged that by reason of such obstruction plaintiff has been compelled to repair and reopen the roadways, and to purchase rights of way over private lands and purchase rock and material, to its damage in the sum of five thousand dollars, has been prevented from fulfilling contracts, lost custom and trade, and been deprived of profits in the further sum of ten thousand dollars, and that the credit and business of the plaintiff has been injured in the further sum of ten thousand dollars.

We are of the opinion that this shows such special injury to plaintiff as authorized the maintenance of the action by it. The case is practically the same as that made by the complaint in the case of Gardner v. Stroever, 89 Cal. 26, [26 Pac. 618], where the injury complained of was an obstruction in a public highway between the plaintiff’s slaughter-house and a connecting highway, which completely prevented plaintiff, maintaining a meat market in the town of OroviUe, from bringing his meat to town to supply his customers, to the injury and destruction of his business. It is said that this decision is in conflict with the doctrine of the earlier cases of Aram v. Schallenberger, 41 Cal. 449, and San Jose Ranch Co. v. Brooks, 74 Cal. 463, [16 Pac. 250], wherein it was held that allegations simply to the effect that the plaintiff had no means of access to his land except over and along the obstructed road, did not show such special injury, in addition to that suffered by the public, as would authorize the maintenance of the action. The former of these cases was an action for an injunction to prevent a proposed obstruction of a highway affording the only means of access to the plaintiff’s property. The only allegation of damage was that plaintiffs had no other means of access, neither injury to the property nor interference with any use plaintiffs were making or desired to make of the land being averred. In San Jose Ranch Co. v. Brooks, 74 Cal. 463, [16 Pac. 250], the allegation was simply that the *122 obstruction prevented the plaintiff “having ingress or egress to and from a tract of land which it owned situated at a point in a canon above the place where the obstruction is placed, and which prevents it from making any use of its land which it desires.” It did not affirmatively appear that any use was then being made of the property, or that any particular use was then contemplated. The theory upon which these decisions is based is that the only injury done in such a case is the obstruction of the party in his right of passage over the highway, and that this injury is the same in kind- as that suffered by all of the general public who may have occasion to travel over the road, although the inconvenience may be greater in degree in the one case than in the other.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Tucker v. Watkins
251 Cal. App. 2d 327 (California Court of Appeal, 1967)
People Ex Rel. Department of Public Works v. Silveira
236 Cal. App. 2d 604 (California Court of Appeal, 1965)
McKinney v. Ruderman
203 Cal. App. 2d 109 (California Court of Appeal, 1962)
Phelan v. Superior Court
217 P.2d 951 (California Supreme Court, 1950)
McIvor v. Mercer-Fraser Co.
172 P.2d 758 (California Court of Appeal, 1946)
Phillips v. City of Pasadena
162 P.2d 625 (California Supreme Court, 1945)
Rose v. State of California
123 P.2d 505 (California Supreme Court, 1942)
Pilgrim Plywood Corp. v. Melendy
1 A.2d 700 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1938)
Carpenter v. Pacific Mutual Life Insurance
74 P.2d 761 (California Supreme Court, 1937)
Biber v. O'Brien
32 P.2d 425 (California Court of Appeal, 1934)
Strehlow v. Mothorn
280 P. 1021 (California Court of Appeal, 1929)
Lane v. San Diego Electric Railway Co.
280 P. 109 (California Supreme Court, 1929)
Robinett v. Price
280 P. 736 (Utah Supreme Court, 1929)
McClintock v. Richlands Brick Corp.
145 S.E. 425 (Supreme Court of Virginia, 1928)
Fitzgerald v. Smith
271 P. 507 (California Court of Appeal, 1928)
Faucett v. Dewey Lumber Co.
266 P. 646 (Montana Supreme Court, 1928)
Blodgett v. Darby
258 P. 373 (California Supreme Court, 1927)
Richardson v. O'Hanrahan
256 P. 1103 (California Court of Appeal, 1927)
Lennon v. City of Butte
214 P. 1101 (Montana Supreme Court, 1923)
Cypress Lawn Cemetery Ass'n v. Lievre
203 P. 150 (California Court of Appeal, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 P. 70, 152 Cal. 118, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cushing-wetmore-co-v-gray-cal-1907.