Ellis v. Tone

58 Cal. 289, 1881 Cal. LEXIS 209
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1881
DocketNo. 7,032
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 58 Cal. 289 (Ellis v. Tone) 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
Ellis v. Tone, 58 Cal. 289, 1881 Cal. LEXIS 209 (Cal. 1881).

Opinion

Thornton, J.:

This action was brought to recover of defendants damages for diverting water from Mormon Slough, a natural watercourse, by which plaintiffs were, prevented from irrigating their growing crops'of wheat and barley in 1877, and in consequence of which they suffered loss and damage.

On the trial a verdict was rendered in favor of plaintiffs for one thousand dollars, on which judgment was entered. Defendants moved for a new trial, which was denied, and they prosecute this appeal from the judgment and the order denying a new trial.

On the trial several exceptions were reserved to the rulings in relation to the admissibility and exclusion of evidence, and in giving and refusing instructions, which are indicated in a statement, which we are called on to consider and pass on.

It appears from the statement that the evidence proved, or tended to prove, that Mormon Slough or channel heads from and runs out of the Calaveras River to the east of Stockton, and about four miles in a north-easterly direction from plaintiffs’ land, and flows thence in a south-westerly direction to the Stockton Channel, a distance of about twenty miles. The slough runs through the land of plaintiffs in two ■ channels. The defendants own land on the Calaveras River, below the point where Mormon Slough runs out of the river. The slough is a natural watercourse, having a well-defined channel and banks. In 1850, and before the channel of the Cal[295]*295averas was filled in by mining debris, it (the lower channel of the river) was lower from six to four feet than the bed or channel of the slough, so that the waters from the river did not flow into the slough until the waters of the river had risen from four to six feet. The channel of the river was so filled by the debris brought from above, that when the water was low, most or nearly all of it ran into or through the slough. This has been the case since the heavy rains and great flood of 1862 (unless prevented by artificial means), so that in dry seasons, or the dry season of the year, nearly all of the water ran into the slough, and during the whole or greater part of the year, water was in the bed of the slough, while in the latter part of the dry season little or none ran in the river below the head of the slough. In the fall of 1876 and the winter of 1877, the plaintiffs put in a crop of wheat and barley on the land described in the complaint, through which the slough ran as above stated—one hundred acres in wheat and twenty-five in barley. There was a good stand of grain in April, 1877, and at that time it looked well. The plaintiffs made arrangements to irrigate the land in crop in the spring of 1877, by damming the north channel of the slough, so as to make the water flow into the south channel, along which the greater portion of their crop was sowed and was growing. This arrangement was completed by plaintiffs in the month of April, 1877, when their crops looked well. When their arrangements for this purpose were completed, they found that defendants had stopped the mouth of the slough by digging a ditch in the bed of the river, and damming the mouth or exit of the slough from the river, so that the water was compelled to flow down the river, instead of flowing, as had been the case for about fifteen years, into the slough. In consequence of this, the water was cut off from the slough, the plaintiffs were unable to irrigate their growing crop, and the product was small—only about four hundred and fifty bushels of wheat and about fifty bushels of barley. There was also evidence tending to show that the defendants had purchased, in 1877, of the Mokelumne and Campo Seco Canal and Mining Company, four hundred miners’ inches of water, which were furnished to them during a period commencing 15th of April, 1877, and ending on the 1st of June of that [296]*296year. This water so furnished was taken from the south and middle forks of the Mokelumne River, and turned into the Calaveras River (above the head of Mormon Slough), down which river it was to flow to the lands of defendants, so that it might be used by them for irrigation. The quantity of rain which fell in the valleys around the lands referred to was small. At various times since 1852 dams have been placed in the head of the slough to turn the water from the slough, and cause it to run in the river; and in 1871 obstructions were placed in the river, below the head of the slough, to cause the waters to run into and through the slough.

The Court of its own motion instructed the jury as follows:

“This is an action brought by the plaintiffs here against these defendants, wherein the plaintiffs allege themselves to be the owners of certain lands described in the complaint, and allege that the Mormon Slough was a natural stream of water flowing through their lands. If you believe from the evidence that the Mormon Slough was a natural stream of water and the water would, have flowed through their lands, but for the diversion of the natural flow of that water by the defendants, the plaintiffs are entitled to a verdict for whatever damages they may have sustained to their crops, provided they were prepared to .use the water and had made the necessary preparations as they have alleged in the complaint. The measure of damages in this case is the amount of injury to the crops described in the complaint by the act of the defendants in diverting the natural flow of that water, if they did divert it. It is for you, after weighing and deliberately considering all the evidence in this case, to say what damages the plaintiff suffered.

“If you find for the plaintiffs, your verdict will be: ‘We, the jury, find for the plaintiffs—’ in such damages, according to the evidence, as you think the plaintiffs may be entitled to recover.

“If, however, the plaintiffs received no damage by any act of the defendants, or they did not divert the natural waters of this stream to the injury of the plaintiffs, then your verdict will be for the defendants.”

It is objected to these directions of the Court, that it was [297]*297assumed by them as a fact that defendants had diverted the natural waters of Mormon Slough.

In our judgment, the directions referred to were not obnoxious to any such objection. The question of diversion or not by the defendants was in plain language left to the jury.

It is also urged that in the first part of these directions, it was stated to be law that if the plaintiffs were prepared to use the water, they were entitled to a verdict for whatever damages they may have sustained to their crops; that there was no qualification to this in that part of the instruction; that the instruction did not state the true rule of damages and gave no definite rule for ascertaining such damages.

There are two points made in the foregoing:

As to the first point, we do not think the Court instructed the jury as contended on behalf of defendants. The jury was not told that if the plaintiffs were prepared to use the water they were entitled to a verdict for whatever damages they may have sustained to their crops. But they were told that if the defendants diverted the natural flow of the water into the slough, the plaintiffs were entitled to a verdict for whatever damages they may have sustained to their crops, provided they (the plaintiffs) were prepared to use the water and had made the necessary preparations, as they alleged in their complaint. In this the Court did not err.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Cal. 289, 1881 Cal. LEXIS 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ellis-v-tone-cal-1881.