Hamilton v. King County

79 P.2d 697, 195 Wash. 84
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedMay 27, 1938
DocketNo. 26909. En Banc.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 79 P.2d 697 (Hamilton v. King County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hamilton v. King County, 79 P.2d 697, 195 Wash. 84 (Wash. 1938).

Opinions

Beals, J.

For several years prior to 1937, plaintiffs had engaged in the business of raising mink on a tract of land owned by plaintiff William Lou, near Renton Junction, in King county. Plaintiffs’ original stock were carefully selected high grade “Yukon” mink.

During the breeding season of 1935, forty-four female mink were mated, of which thirty-nine whelped, giving birth to an average of four kittens per female. During the season of 1936, the thirty-nine proven breeders and thirty other female mink, born in 1935, were mated. Only one of these females raised her kittens. Plaintiffs contended that the others either aborted their young or killed and ate them after birth, because of nervousness and fright occasioned by the construction by defendant King county of a large draining ditch, which passed within five feet of the mink house, the ditch having been constructed during the whelping season.

Plaintiffs sued the county for damages suffered by reason of the failure of the 1936 mink crop. The county denied all liability, and the action was tried to the court, sitting without a jury. The case was tried May 13, 1937, and of forty-nine females of those that had been mated in 1936, and again in 1937, thirty-five had already whelped at the time of trial.

At the close of the case, Judge Roscoe R. Smith, who had presided at the trial, announced the judgment which he would render, stating that he would award plaintiffs judgment in the full sum of $1,580. Prior *86 to the signing by Judge Smith of any findings of fact, conclusions of law, or judgment, the judge died. Thereafter, by stipulation of the parties, findings of fact, conclusions of law, and a judgment, based upon Judge Smith’s oral decision, were signed and filed.

Defendant has appealed from the judgment, assigning error upon the failure of the trial court to sustain its challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence which was interposed at the close of plaintiffs’ case; upon the failure of the trial court to grant its motion for dismissal of the action made at the close of the entire case; upon the ruling of the trial court to the effect that respondents William and Ollie Lou were not, by their conduct, estopped from claiming damages because of the construction of the ditch; appellant finally contending that the damages which the trial court awarded respondents were based upon pure speculation and conjecture, and upon no evidence sufficient in law to justify any such award.

July 1, 1936, respondents filed their claim against King county, based upon alleged damages occasioned by the acts of the county in constructing the ditch hereinafter referred to, and in the course of the work frightening the female mink so that the latter failed to raise their young.

Respondent William Lou owned the land upon which the pens in which the mink were confined were situated, the tract of land being approximately 1165 feet in length by 170 feet in width. William Lou, his brother Ollie Lou, and E. W. Hamilton, all respondents in this action, were jointly engaged in the raising of mink. The land in its longer dimension ran north and south, and on its northerly end bordered on. a paved road. The land sloped from north to south, the land being low and flat south of a point between three and four hundred feet south of the road.

*87 A creek meandered across the land, and during the wet season a considerable portion of the low land was under water. The landowners in the vicinity were all anxious to have their land drained and formed a voluntary association by way of a local improvement club, of which Mr. Lou was a member. Appellant county agreed to sponsor a Federal W. P. A. drainage project, with the result that, during the month of April, 1936, the construction of a new drainage ditch was commenced under the control and direction of the county. It was proposed that the new ditch cross the Lou land from west to east, a short distance above the toe of the slope from the north, the ditch to pass not far from the southerly end of respondents’ mink pens.

April 20th, a crew of men commenced to dig the ditch across the Lou land. It appears that there was some doubt as to the exact location of the proposed ditch, respondents’ evidence indicating that the line proposed by the county commissioners did not approach the mink house closer than two hundred feet. In any event, several lines through the Lou property were considered, and the route finally adopted ran very close to the mink pens. In the course of the ditch digging, considerable disturbance was created, and some of the blasting shook the Lou residence, which was located some distance north of the,mink pens.

Ollie Lou testified that, on or shortly after May 5th, he heard some squeaking in five or six of the pens, indicating that some kittens had arrived, but that after May 25th, he heard no further squeaks. The evidence showed that it is not good practice to examine the pens for some little time after the females have whelped, as any such examination may unduly excite the mink and cause them to kill their offspring.

Judge Smith having died after the action was tried and submitted to him for decision, and after he had *88 announced his conclusions and the judgment which hé would sign, his oral opinion being a part of the statement of facts, the parties stipulated that findings of fact and conclusions of law based upon the decision of Judge Smith, together with a judgment, might be entered by any judge of the superior court for King county “with the same force, effect and validity as if they had been made and entered by Judge Roscoe R. Smith in his lifetime.” Findings of fact and conclusions of law were prepared, it being therein recited that

“ . . . the parties hereto, through their attorneys, having stipulated in writing that Judge Smith, had he lived, would have made the following findings of fact and conclusions of law.”

State ex rel. Oregon-Washington Water Service Co. v. Hoquiam, 155 Wash. 678, 286 Pac. 286, 287 Pac. 670.

Accepting these stipulations at their face value, it appears from the findings, which were signed by Honorable James T. Lawler, one of the judges of the superior court for King county, who also signed the judgment in the action, that respondent William Lou owned the tract of land above referred to, and that, for several years prior to the digging of the ditch, a mink farm had been operated on the land; that, during and prior to the month of April, 1936, respondents had in their mink pens sixty-nine female mink which had been mated between March 12th and April 5th next preceding; that, on April 19th, appellant commenced to construct the ditch above referred to, and that, on or about April 27th, a Diesel shovel was placed in operation, which on the following day became bogged down at a point within thirty-five feet of the mink pens; that, after two days labor and considerable effort, the shovel was extricated by use of a tractor; that dynamite or a similar explosive was used to blow out stumps on both sides of the Lou land; and that, May 13th, considerable powder was *89 used in blasting a sandstone spit on the property immediately adjacent to the Lou land.

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

Related

Brutsche v. City of Kent
164 Wash. 2d 664 (Washington Supreme Court, 2008)
Lahar v. Barnes
91 N.W.2d 261 (Michigan Supreme Court, 1958)
Foster v. Preston Mill Co.
268 P.2d 645 (Washington Supreme Court, 1954)
Covey v. Western Tank Lines, Inc.
218 P.2d 322 (Washington Supreme Court, 1950)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
79 P.2d 697, 195 Wash. 84, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hamilton-v-king-county-wash-1938.