Galbreath v. Hopkins

113 P. 174, 159 Cal. 297, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 323
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 12, 1911
DocketSac. No. 1773.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 113 P. 174 (Galbreath v. Hopkins) 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
Galbreath v. Hopkins, 113 P. 174, 159 Cal. 297, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 323 (Cal. 1911).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This action is brought to enjoin defendants from maintaining a ditch through which surface waters, accumulated in a natural lake or pond on the lands of defendant, are drained and discharged upon the land of plaintiff.

A judgment was entered in favor of defendants from which, *299 and an order denying her motion for a new trLl, plaintiff appeals.

Plaintiff is the owner of three hundred and sixty acres of land in Sutter County, sloping in a general southerly or southeasterly direction. Commencing several miles above her land and extending through it, is a natural depression commonly known as Live Oak Slough, which is of sufficient capacity to drain from all the land through which it flows, and in proximity to it on a higher level, the surface waters which are naturally tributary to it, including the surface waters from the lands of plaintiff; this slough is not, in legal contemplation, a watercourse, but is merely a natural depression into which the surface waters from the surrounding country gather in seasons of rainfall, and flow down into Feather River. The land of plaintiff is valuable agricultural land, especially adapted to the growing of grain, and the bed of the slough, on account of its moderate depression, is, except in seasons of high water, entirely capable of cultivation, and is by the plaintiff sowed to grain, and was so planted when the acts of defendants herein complained of occurred.

The lands of defendants consisted, in 1893, when the ditch hereafter mentioned was constructed, of part of a large tract owned by one Joseph Chandon, and prior to its subdivision known as the “Chandon land.” Those portions of the lands of defendants through which the ditch in question was constructed lie to the north of the lands of plaintiff, and at a higher elevation, and slope down to and include part of the natural bed of Live Oak Slough, but are slightly depressed below the east bank thereof, and in ordinary seasons such lands are relieved from surface waters by their flowing into such depression and percolating into said slough.

But prior to 1893, while the entire tract was owned by Chandon, in seasons of excessive rainfall, the surface waters were wont to collect upon that tract and form two shallow ponds or lakes, distant about two miles from each other. These ponds were many acres in extent and were much below the surface of the surrounding country, but higher in elevation than the land of plaintiff, and the accumulated surface waters therein, on account of numerous natural ridges, or elevations of land between them and Live Oak Slough, could not be naturally got rid of except by percolation, seepage, and evap *300 oration, and would never reach Live Oak Slough, unless by artificial aid through the construction of ditches for that purpose. In order to accomplish this, Joseph Chandón and others, in the year 1893, dug and excavated a ditch from the lower pond situated on the lands now owned by defendants. This ditch was about three hundred feet long and of sufficient width, depth, and grade to slowly but effectually carry, by connection between them, the waters from both ponds and empty them into Live Oak Slough. This ditch was constructed entirely on the lands now owned by defendants, its head being a little over two feet higher than its mouth, and it drained the waters into Live Oak Slough, upon the lands of defendants and about forty rods north of the land of plaintiff. When constructed in 1893 the waters carried down by this ditch did no damage to the land of plaintiff. Subsequent thereto and up to the spring of 1907 but little water passed through the ditch. In 1907 a tenant of the defendants undertook to excavate the ditch to allow the water to pass from the lower pond into the slough, but was enjoined by plaintiff. No water passed through the ditch in 1908. In 1909 the lower pond, which covered about twenty acres, was, through a heavy rainfall, filled with surface water to a depth of from one to twelve inches, which accumulated waters were by the defendants discharged through the ditch into the slough and they flowed down and spread over the land of plaintiff, damaging a crop of grain sown thereon, whereupon plaintiff brought this action to enjoin any further diversion of the water from the ponds through this ditch upon her land.

In their answer to the complaint defendants set up a prescriptive right to discharge the waters from this lower pond through the ditch to the Live Oak Slough and upon the land of plaintiff, acquired, they allege, under an adverse user of upwards of sixteen years.

The court found in favor of defendants as to said prescriptive right, and in addition found that plaintiff had suffered no serious damage to her land by the discharge of the accumulated waters from the pond upon them in March, 1909, the time it is alleged in the complaint that she was so damaged, and when this action was begun.

The appellant attacks these findings, particularly the finding in favor of defendants as to their prescriptive right, on the *301 ground that the evidence is insufficient to support them.

Little need be said about the finding of the court that no serious damage was done to the land of plaintiff by the overflow complained of. The uncontradicted evidence is, that the water discharged from the pond into the slough by the defendants flowed down and spread to a large extent over her field, which was sown to grain, and actually damaged her. There was, it is true, no evidence of any specific amount of damage in money which she suffered thereby. But proof of this was not necessary. If the overflow of her lands by defendants was wrongful, it was an invasion of her property rights. There was at least nominal damages, and she was entitled to an injunction restraining the defendants from further overflowing her land, because their conduct, it persisted in, and permitted by her without objection for the statutory period, would ripen into a right in their favor as an easement or servitude to overflow her land. The finding of the court can only be sustained upon the theory that having found that the defendants had acquired a prescriptive right to turn the water upon the land of plaintiff, any damage she might have sustained thereby was damnum absque injuria and could not be complained of.

This brings us to the principal finding in controversy,— namely, that sustaining the prescriptive right of defendants.

The theory of counsel for defendants and the trial court was that the act of defendants’ predecessor in constructing the ditch and draining the water from the pond into the slough in 1893 was then an invasion of the property rights of the plaintiff and her right of action against such predecessor accrued then, and that permitting the existence of the ditch and the drainage of the water there through from the ponds into the slough for upwards of five years (in fact, defendants claimed for sixteen years) barred any right of action she originally had to prevent defendants from continuing to do so.

It is, of course, clear under the law that unless the defendants have acquired a right by prescription to discharge the water from the pond by artificial means upon the land of plaintiff, they have no right to do so at all.

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Bluebook (online)
113 P. 174, 159 Cal. 297, 1911 Cal. LEXIS 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galbreath-v-hopkins-cal-1911.