Hall v. Superior Court

233 P. 80, 70 Cal. App. 393
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 27, 1924
DocketDocket Nos. 4801, 4809, 4810.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 233 P. 80 (Hall v. Superior Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hall v. Superior Court, 233 P. 80, 70 Cal. App. 393 (Cal. Ct. App. 1924).

Opinion

WORKS, J.

These three proceedings, identical in character except as to one circumstance hereafter to be mentioned, are under stipulation to he determined together. A statement of a part of the allegations of the petition in one of *395 them, No. 4801, will serve as a basis upon which disposition may be made of all.

The petition contains averments that on May 17, 1917, petitioner commenced an action against respondent Imperial Water Company No. 5 in respondent court, which action is still pending and which has proceeded to findings and judgment; and that the action was brought for the purpose of enjoining respondent Water Company from permitting water from its canals to escape, seep, and percolate upon, under, and through certain lands of petitioner, to abate the canal, or the operation thereof in its present condition, as a nuisance, and to recover damages caused to petitioner’s land by said percolation and seepage. The petition further alleges that the water carried in said canals, and which escapes therefrom into petitioner’s lands, has at all times since May 1, 1916; been diverted and taken from its natural course in the Colorado River by respondent Imperial Irrigation District for the purpose of using the same in the state of California in the improvement and irrigation of the lands of respondent Irrigation District, and that it became and was the duty of respondent Irrigation District since May 1, 1916, and still is its duty, to control the waters so diverted and to prevent them from escaping into the lands of petitioner to her damage or prejudice; that since about May 1, 1916, respondent Irrigation District has permitted and caused the said waters to pass into and to flow through the said canals of said Water Company and to escape therefrom into the lands of petitioner, well knowing.at all times since May 1, 1916, that said water was so escaping, and at all times passed and caused to be passed into said canals an amount of water in excess of the amount actually' furnished the lands irrigated from said canals to cover the loss from seepage into petitioner’s lands; that petitioner’s lands had never been within respondent Irrigation District at the time she commenced said action and at the time it was tried; and that she was ignorant of the fact that said water was diverted from the Colorado River and caused to escape from said canals by respondent Irrigation District, and that respondent Irrigation District was a joint tort-feasor with respondent Water Company, until early in July, 1924. It is further averred in the petition that before the trial and decision of said action, and on or about November 1, 1922, respondent Water Company sold to respondent Irrigation District *396 all of its property, including said canals; that since said sale and on or aboitt November 1, 1922, respondent Irrigation District took possession of all of said property so sold, including said canals, and has ever since November 1, 1922, operated said canals and continued and yet continues to cause said water to pass by seepage into petitioner’s lands and to keep and maintain said canals as a nuisance to petitioner in all respects as before said sale; that respondent Water Company is about to disincorporate, and that because thereof any judgment obtained by petitioner against said Company in said action will be ineffective and valueless and will afford petitioner no relief whatever, unless respondent Irrigation District is made a party defendant in said action and judgment be had against it. The petition also alleges that petitioner served upon respondent Water Company, as defendant in said action, and filed with respondent court a notice of motion to be permitted to file therein an amended and supplemental complaint setting forth the allegations above stated and showing the connection of respondent Irrigation District with the diversion of said water, the purchase and possession of said property and canals, and the permitting said water to escape into petitioner’s lands, and making respondent Irrigation District a party defendant in said action, praying that it be brought in as such defendant and that judgment be had against it enjoining it from operating said canals in their present condition as a nuisance and for damages; that said motion was set for hearing before respondent court on July 25, 1924, that the same was heard on that day by one of respondent judges, against the objection of petitioner, and was by him on July 26, 1924, overruled and denied. The petition then sets up allegations intended to show that each of the judges of respondent court is disqualified to try said action or to conduct any proceedings therein because of financial interest in the affairs and property of respondent Irrigation District. The petition further alleges that on August 28, 1923, and after a trial of said action, one of the judges of respondent court caused to be entered in the minutes of the court his decision in said action, denying petitioner’s prayer for an injunction, but awarding her judgment for damages in the sum of nine hundred dollars, and that thereafter findings and judgment carrying the- decision into effect were signed and filed; that thereafter petitioner filed with respondent court her notice *397 of intention to move for a new trial of said action; that thereafter and on or about July 9, 1924, she served and filed in said action her written objections to either of the judges of respondent court sitting or acting further therein, or hearing or deciding her motion for a new trial thereof, or hearing or deciding her motion for leave to file an amended and supplemental complaint therein; that on July 25 and 26, 1924, one of the judges of respondent court heard said objections and on July 26, 1924, denied and overruled the same; that petitioner’s motion for a new trial of said action has been set for hearing on August 15, 1924, and that unless restrained and prohibited by this court one of the judges of respondent court will then hear and decide the same. The petition then alleges particular facts intended to show that each of the judges of respondent court is disqualified by financial interest to hear or decide said motion for a new trial. The petitions in each of the three proceedings are identical in legal effect, except that no notice of intention to move for a new trial has been filed in the action which is the basis for the petition in No. 4810. In each of the proceedings an alternative writ of prohibition, upon prayer therefor, was issued, restraining respondent court and respondent judges from taking further steps in the respective actions, and the three matters are now before us for a determination of the question whether peremptory writs shall issue.

The briefs before us are voluminous, a large portion of them being devoted to a discussion of the question whether respondent judges are disqualified in the actions pending in respondent court, and to a discussion of the validity of the past action of one of the judges in denying leave to file an amended and supplemental complaint. Other questions of which we shall not specifically state the nature are also debated vigorously. It is unnecessary to decide any of the points stated, either specifically or generally, in this paragraph, as other questions which we shall now briefly discuss precede them in a consideration of the proceedings—questions which close the door upon all others which are presented and argued.

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Related

Anderson v. Geo. L. Barney Co., Inc.
36 P.2d 717 (California Court of Appeal, 1934)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
233 P. 80, 70 Cal. App. 393, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hall-v-superior-court-calctapp-1924.