Horton v. Goodenough

194 P. 34, 184 Cal. 451, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 344
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1920
DocketL. A. No. 6045.
StatusPublished
Cited by57 cases

This text of 194 P. 34 (Horton v. Goodenough) 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
Horton v. Goodenough, 194 P. 34, 184 Cal. 451, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 344 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

OLNEY, J.

This is an action wherein the plaintiffs seek to enjoin the continued maintenance by the defendants of certain small structures which the latter have built for the purpose of preventing water from flowing on to their lands. There is no question but that the defendants built the structures complained of or that the structures, or one of them, had the effect of diverting the water from the course it otherwise would have followed into a course which finally led some of it to the plaintiffs’ land. The only question is as to the right of the defendants to maintain the structures. The primary rules of law governing such a case are *453 simple enough and well settled, and are three in number. [1] First, one has no right to obstruct the flow on to his land of what are technically known as surface waters. (Heier v. Krull, 160 Cal. 441, and authorities therein cited at page 444, [117 Pac. 530].) But by surface waters are not meant any waters which may be on or moving across the surface of the land without being collected into a natural watercourse. They are confined to waters falling on the land by precipitation or rising thereon in springs. Putting it conversely, they do not include waters flowing out of a natural watercourse, but which yet were once a part of a stream and have escaped from it—flood waters, in other words. (McDaniels v. Cummings, 83 Cal. 515, [8 L. R. A. 575, 23 Pac. 795]; Farnham on Waters, see. 278.) [2] Second, one has the right to protect himself against flood waters, that is, waters of the character last described, and for that purpose to obstruct their flow on to his land, and this even though such obstruction causes the water to flow on to the land of another. (Barnes v. Marshall, 68 Cal. 569, [10 Pac. 115]; Lamb v. Reclamation District, 73 Cal. 126, [2 Am. St. Rep. 775, 14 Pac. 625]; De Baker v. Southern Pac. Ry. Co., 106 Cal. 257, [46 Am. St. Rep. 237, 39 Pac. 610]; Sanguinetti v. Pock, 136 Cal. 466, [89 Am. St. Rep. 169, 69 Pac. 98].) [3] Third, one may not obstruct or divert the flow of a natural watercourse. But by a watercourse is not meant the gathering of errant water while passing through a low depression, swale, or gully, but a stream in the real sense, with a definite channel with bed and banks, within which it flows at those times when the streams of the region habitually flow. (Los Angeles etc. Assn. v. Los Angeles, 103 Cal. 466, [37 Pac. 375] ; Sanguinetti v. Pock, supra; San Gabriel Valley Country Club v. Los Angeles County, 182 Cal. 392, [9 A. L. R. 1200, 188 Pac. 554] ; Simmons v. Winters, 21 Or. 35, [28 Am. St. Rep. 727, 27 Pac. 7].)

Such being the law, the complaint and findings are quite uncertain as to the character of the waters whose diversion by the defendants’ obstructions is complained of. They are alleged and found to be “surface or flood waters.” But if these words are used in their technical senses, surface waters and flood waters are not the same, and the defendants have not the right to obstruct them in the one ease and have the *454 right in the other. Nor is the uncertainty removed by assuming that the words were not used in a strictly technical sense, but that what was meant was that the waters were errant waters flowing over the surface of the ground without being gathered into the channel of a watercourse. If that be the meaning, then the character of the waters as surface or flood waters in the technical sense is not stated, and yet, according as they are one or the other, the plaintiffs are or are not entitled to recover. Nor is this uncertainty cured by the further statement in the complaint and findings that the obstructions were of waters “in natural channels.” It is quite evident from the context that the channels so spoken of were channels only for flood and surface waters, and were not the channels for watercourses or streams in the real sense. Apparently the cause was tried and decided upon the theory that the defendants had no right in any case to obstruct the flow of water on to their lands. Such is not the law. If the water was flood water, the defendants had the right to divert it from their lands even though such diversion injured the plaintiffs. It may, perhaps, be that even in such a case the defendants could not divert the water in a manner which would unnecessarily injure the plaintiffs, but that question is not presented and does not require consideration.

But we need not decide the case upon any insufficiency of the complaint' and findings. The evidence, while perhaps somewhat obscure on certain points, is without substantial conflict and we believe the material facts appear with reasonable certainty. The water whose diversion is complained of came from a canyon known as Jepson Canyon, which opens off the- west side of the Sespe Valley, in Ventura County. This valley extends north and south, draining to the south, and the lands of all the parties are within it. Through approximately the middle of the valley runs the county road, which is its main highway. The lands of the defendants Hiller and Birss lie side by side on the west side of this road, and fronting upon it, that of Hiller being the more northerly of the two tracts. At their rear or westerly ends these tracts are almost immediately against the mouth of the Jepson Canyon. Directly to the east and across the main road from them lies the land of the defendant Goodenough. It fronts on the road at its westerly end, *455 and extends easterly to the Arroyo Sespe, or Sespe Creek, which flows to the south. approximately parallel with the county road and drains the valley. The land of the plaintiffs is some distance to the south from Goodenough’s land, and, like it, lies on the east of the county road, fronting upon it and extending from it to the Arroyo Sespe. The plaintiff Turner holds the legal title to the land, while the plaintiff Horton is the equitable owner. For the purposes of discussion we may treat them as a single plaintiff.

In January, of 1914, at a time of extreme high water, some of the water of Jepson Canyon on emerging from it took a course which it had not previously followed, at least not since the region was settled up, and came in a stream against the west fence of Hiller’s land near its southwest corner. There it turned southerly along the fence to the northerly end of Birss’ west fence, and continued southerly along the latter. "When it approached the southwest corner of Birss’ land, it cut across it to the east and followed easterly along his south line to the main county road. It then flowed across this road and against the land of Goodenough at its southwest corner. It there went through or over his fence and followed along his southerly line until it lost itself in the Arroyo Sespe. In the years following the first invasion of the lands of the defendants in this manner, some of the water from the canyon continued to escape in similar fashion in times of high water and to follow the same course, and each of the defendants endeavored to protect his land against it.

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Bluebook (online)
194 P. 34, 184 Cal. 451, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/horton-v-goodenough-cal-1920.