Hicks v. Drew

49 P. 189, 117 Cal. 305, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 658
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 17, 1897
DocketL. A. No. 124
StatusPublished
Cited by51 cases

This text of 49 P. 189 (Hicks v. Drew) 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
Hicks v. Drew, 49 P. 189, 117 Cal. 305, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 658 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

Garoutte, J.

This is an action to recover damages for injuries to real estate. An appeal is prosecuted to this court from the judgment and order denying plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.

Plaintiff objected to Mr. Annable, one of defendant’s attorneys, appearing in the case, upon the ground that liis prior professional relations with her had been such as, in law, to deprive him of that right. On taking evidence upon this question, the court held against her contention, and reversible error is now claimed upon that ruling. There is no serious conflict as to the facts bearing upon this matter, but wherever contradictions do exist, we are bound to resolve them in such a way as to support the action of the trial court. Prior to the filing of the complaint by plaintiff, she held several conversations with attorney Annable as to the facts of her case. At the final conversation, he offered to prosecute the action in her behalf upon a contingent fee, the amount of that fee to be dependent upon the size of the judgment eventually secured. When this offer was made by Mr. Annable, plaintiff withdrew, and thereupon employed other attorneys, who inaugurated the present litigation. If these facts disqualify an attorney from appearing in a case, it would be an easy matter to disqualify all those attorneys whom a party neither desired to retain, nor to allow the opposing party to retain. In this case in no sense was there a retainer. There was not even an implied contract to pay for advice given. [308]*308Both parties concede this to be so. Mr. Annable’s affidavit discloses that whatever conversation he had with plaintiff was with a view of fixing the amount of his fee. The relation of attorney and client, under these circumstances, never existed between the parties, and no disqualification was created by these acts.

The lands of plaintiff were situated immediately south of those of defendant, a public highway, known as Colton avenue, dividing them. The fee of this avenue, to the center thereof, was in the adjoining owners. In April or May, 1890, defendant erected a bulkhead upon his land which diverted storm waters (that ordinarily and naturally flowed northerly and westerly across his lands) over the lands of plaintiff. As declared by plaintiff’s complaint, these waters thereby caused deep washes and gullies to be cut in the aforesaid avenue, wherein she owned the fee, and by which acts of defendant she was greatly damaged.

By the instructions to the jury the court limited a recovery against defendant to damages accruing within two years prior to the filing of the complaint. This instruction was given in view of section 339 of the Code of Civil Procedure, subdivision 1, which provides that an action founded upon a contract, obligation, or liability not based upon a written instrument must be brought within two years. Appellant denies the application of this statute to the facts of her case, and declares that she had a right to bring the action at any time within three years from the accrual thereof, by virtue of section 338 of the Code of Civil Procedure, subdivision 2, which provides that an action for trespass upon real property may be brought within three years after it has accrued. Is the present action one to recover damages for a trespass upon real property? While in this state all distinctions between common-law actions are abolished as relating to the procedure, yet it is plain that we are bound to consult the common law, and the classification of common-law actions, for the proper determination as to what, the law-making [309]*309power of this state had in mind when using the phrase, “ trespass upon real property.”

It appears that the courts of England often experienced difficulty in determining whether trespass or case was the true remedy to be pursued. This same difficulty often arises in this state, when the statute of limitations is invoked. But in the case at bar, weighed and tested by the rules of the common law, the distinction between these two forms of common-law actions is clearly apparent: and that this case upon its facts is one wherein it is sought to recover upon a liability not based upon an instrument of writing, and, therefore, barred in two years, we are satisfied.

One of the best tests by which to distinguish trespass is found in the answer to the question, When was the damage done? If the damage does not come directly from the act, but is simply an after result from the act, it is essentially consequential, and no trespass. Cliitty says: “If a log, in the act of being thrown into the highway, hit another, the injury is immediate; but if, after it has reached the highway, a person fall over it and be hurt, the injury is only consequential, and the remedy should be case.....So, if a person pour water on my land, the‘injury is immediate; but if he stop up a watercourse on his own land, whereby it is prevented from flowing to mine as usual, or if he plays a spout on his own building, in consequence of which water afterward runs therefrom into my land, the injury is consequential; because the flowing of the water, which was the immediate injury, was not the wrongdoer’s immediate act, but only the consequence thereof, and which will not render the act itself a trespass or immediate wrong.” (Chitty on Pleading, *142.) G-ould on Waters, section 210, declares: “It is not a trespass to flow the land of another with water by erecting a dam below his land, for any one may lawfully build a dam on his own land, and the act, being injurious only in its consequences, is to be redressed by an action on the case.” Angell on Watercourses, at

[310]*310section 395, in speaking as to the remedy of action on the case, says: “ This remedy is the judicial one now always resorted to in the usual case of consequential injury to or by means of a watercourse. The general result of the English authorities renders it very clear that where damages do not immediately ensue from the act complained of, it is consequential, and case is the proper remedy; and, on the contrary, where the act itself, and not the consequence of it, occasions the mischief, trespass is the right action.” In Perrine v. Bergin, 14 N. J. L. 355, 27 Am. Dec. 63, where the lands of an upper owner upon the stream were overflowed by a dam of the lower owner, it is said: “So far from being an ouster, it is not even a trespass, to flow the land of another with water by erecting a dam below his land, for the act in itself is lawful. Any man may build a dam by common right on his own land, and trespass never lies when the act is lawful in itself, and injurious only in its consequences.....It is therefore no dispossession, no ouster, nor even a trespass, to flow water backward on another person’s land. It is denominated in law a nuisance and annoyance to the tenant in possession; and his only modern remedy is by an action on the case, founded on his possession.”

To support plaintiff’s contention that defendant’s acts, in law, constituted a trespass upon plaintiff’s realty, certain decisions of this court are relied upon; but those decisions fail to accomplish the result, and are not opposed to 'the views of the common-law writers from which we have quoted. In Triscony v. Brandenstein, 66 Cal. 514, this court held that a cause of action for trespass upon realty was stated in a complaint which charged that defendant “wrongfully and unlawfully entered upon plaintiff’s lands, and .... depastured the same with five hundred head of cattle and ten head of horses, to plaintiff’s damage.” Clearly, here was an unlawful entry and damage done to the realty.

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Bluebook (online)
49 P. 189, 117 Cal. 305, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hicks-v-drew-cal-1897.