Kramer v. City of Los Angeles

82 P. 334, 147 Cal. 668, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 453
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 7, 1905
DocketL.A. No. 1379.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 82 P. 334 (Kramer v. City of Los Angeles) 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
Kramer v. City of Los Angeles, 82 P. 334, 147 Cal. 668, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 453 (Cal. 1905).

Opinion

LORIGAN, J.

This action is brought by plaintiff to recover damages from the city of Los Angeles for injuries alleged to have been sustained by plaintiff through the negligence of the city relative to a drainage conduit constructedT through his premises.

From a judgment in favor of plaintiff and an order denying defendant’s motion for a new trial the city appeals.

The material facts, as found by the lower court, substantially stated, are: That prior to the year 1883 there existed *670 in the city of Los Angeles a small ravine, or arroyo, known as the “Arroyo de los Reyes,” which began in the hilly section of the northwestern portion of said city at a point north of the intersection of Second and Fremont streets, and ran thence in a southerly direction through, along, and across the public streets of said city, and through and across private property, to a point south of the intersection of Eighteenth and Figueroa streets; that said arroyo, by means of its branches, tributaries, and the contour of the ground in said hill section of the city, received, collected, and carried off a large portion of the storm-water naturally falling in said hill section, and delivered the same to and upon the public streets and private property of said city; that in 1883 or 1885 the city, for the purpose of confining said surface-waters falling and. accumulating in said hill section a.nd flowing in said arroyo, constructed in said arroyo at the places where it crossed the public streets a thirty-two-inch cement pipe or main, and also constructed in said arroyo from a point in said hill section near the corner of Second and Fremont streets to a point southerly and in the east line of Flower Street near Fifth Street, a forty-one-inch brick conduit; that thereafter a cement pipe of thirty inches in internal diameter was laid in said arroyo from the southerly end. of said brick conduit to Ninth Street, a short distance north of the property of plaintiff; that there was also constructed in said arroyo from a point just south of plaintiff’s property southerly to a point, in Figueroa Street near its intersection with. Eighteenth Street another cement pipe thirty inches in internal diameter, and terminating in a well constructed by said city in Figueroa Street, which well was by said city also connected, by means of a twenty-two-inch pipe, with another small well constructed by the city in Figueroa Street about fifty feet from the first one, and over these wells the city placed iron gratings flush with the surface of said street, said two gratings constituting the only outlets of said cement pipe; that portions of said cement pipe were constructed in said arroyo by and at the expense of the owners of the lots through which the same was laid, portions by the city at its own expense, and other portions at the joint expense of the city and the owners of the lots through which the same was laid; that in March, 1897, plaintiff and the owners of the lots next adjoining plaintiff *671 petitioned the city council to pipe that portion of said arroyo which ran across their respective lots, offering to pay one half of the cost thereof, and in November, 1897, said city, for the purpose of completing said storm-drain, which had already been constructed from a point in the hill section of said city within a short distance north of plaintiff’s property, and from the south of plaintiff’s property down to the southerly terminus of said drain in the wells in Figueroa Street, and for the purpose of carrying said storm-water therein, constructed across the property of plaintiff and the lots of the adjoining owners a cement pipe of thirty inches internal diameter, and so connected the same with the other portions of said storm-drain already completed that the same then constituted a closed conduit or storm-drain from a point in the hill section of said city to its southerly terminus or outlet in said wells in Figueroa Street near Eighteenth Street; that half the cost of construction through the property of plaintiff and through the adjoining lots was paid by the owners of said lots into the city treasury of said city; that subsequent to the completion of said storm-drain, and prior to November 17, 1900, plaintiff constructed upon his property a frame dwelling, described in the pleadings and known as “Kramer’s School for Dancing,” which on said last-mentioned date was being used, and had theretofore been used, by plaintiff as a residence and hall for conducting a dancing-school, and also for renting purposes for parties and entertainments ; that subsequent to the construction through the property of plaintiff of said cement pipe, and prior to said 17th of November, 1900, the city, for the purpose of more effectually collecting and confining the storm-waters which fell and accumulated in said hill section of the city and ran through and over the public streets thereof, built and laid under the said public streets two other cement pipes or storm-drains, thirty inches in internal diameter, and connected the same with the first-mentioned storm-drain at or near the intersection of Second and Fremont streets, one of which laterals or tributaries extended in a northeasterly direction in said hill section, and the other in a northwesterly direction in said hill section; that said city at all times after the construction of said cement pipes or storm-drains has maintained the same under its supervision; that the portion of said pipe *672 so constructed under the building of plaintiff was negligently constructed and of improper, insufficient, and defective material, and was inadequate to withstand the pressure of the water which was intended to and did pass through the same; that just prior to November 17th defendant city negligently permitted said pipe and the outlet thereof to become partially clogged and stopped up with débris, and that by reason of the negligence of said defendant in the construction of said pipe and the defective character of the material used by said defendant in its construction, and by reason of its negligence in the maintenance of said pipe, the same on the 17th of November, 1900, broke at certain points underneath plaintiff’s building, in consequence of which large volumes of muddy and oily water were discharged into the basement of said building; that immediately and on November 17, 1900, plaintiff notified the street department, the city engineer, and the mayor of said city of the breaking of said pipe and the condition of plaintiff’s premises; that on November 21, 1900, he appeared before the city council of said city, convened in regular session, and informed said council of the breaking of said pipe and the condition thereof and the condition of his premises; that defendant wholly failed to take any steps or make any effort to repair said pipe or place the same in safe condition, and thereafter, on said 21st of November, 1900, in consequence of the broken condition of said pipe, the basement of plaintiff’s building was again submerged with muddy and oily water. And the court found that plaintiff had been damaged in the sum of $2,613.86, injuries sustained by the sinking of the foundations of his building, injuries to his furniture contained therein, and loss resulting to his business.

Upon this appeal appellant attacks practically all of the findings made by the court upon the ground that the evidence is insufficient to justify them.

We do not deem it necessary to consider this attack except as to a few of the main findings.

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Bluebook (online)
82 P. 334, 147 Cal. 668, 1905 Cal. LEXIS 453, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kramer-v-city-of-los-angeles-cal-1905.