Lourence v. West Side Irrigation District

233 Cal. App. 2d 532, 43 Cal. Rptr. 889, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1386
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 12, 1965
DocketCiv. 21055
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 233 Cal. App. 2d 532 (Lourence v. West Side Irrigation District) 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
Lourence v. West Side Irrigation District, 233 Cal. App. 2d 532, 43 Cal. Rptr. 889, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1386 (Cal. Ct. App. 1965).

Opinion

BRAY, J. *

Plaintiff appeals from judgment, after jury verdict, in favor of defendant in an action for damages for alleged water seepage from defendant’s canals on and adjacent to plaintiff’s property.

Questions Presented

1. Failure to give plaintiff’s instruction No. 4 concerning the effect of section 22099 of the Water Code.

2. Alleged error in instructions given:

(a) On inverse condemnation.
(b) On the application of section 22098, Water Code.
(c) On “equally balanced” evidence.
(d) On mitigation of damages.

Record

Plaintiff owns a 300-acre farm, approximately 3 miles west of the City of Tracy. It is one mile long and one-half mile wide. It is all farm land with heavy soil. All of it is leveled for irrigation. He purchased the majority of the property in 1941; the remaining 96 acres in 1949. He testified that when he bought the land there was no high water table apparent or *534 even suspected, and he did not expect to have any seepage trouble from the adjacent canals.

Defendant is in an irrigation district. Two of its canals run across portions of plaintiff's property. They were made with soil and gravel; no concrete lines their walls. The upper main canal extends 9 miles and cuts across plaintiff’s property at the southwest corner of the field. The lower canal extends 7 miles and cuts across the property at the northeast corner. The two canals run water continuously each year from about March 1 to about November 1.

The farm is leased to tenants who have grown sugar beets, tomatoes, alfalfa, corn, barley and flax. It seems to be conceded that the water table on plaintiff’s land has risen and on 115 acres thereof is high and that water stands almost continuously on a portion of it. Plaintiff contends that the water condition is due to seepage from portions of the canals which are within plaintiff’s property and also from portions which are off plaintiff’s property, and comes underground to plaintiff ’s property. That in addition to the character of the canals which permit seepage, defendant operated and maintained the canals in a negligent manner. Defendant contended that there was no appreciable seepage from the canals, it was not negligent in its operation or maintenance and that the water condition on plaintiff’s property comes from irrigation waters from upslope properties over which the district has no control.

Plaintiff’s complaint is predicated on three grounds: Negligence, inverse condemnation, and the property owner’s rights under section 22098, Water Code. As plaintiff concedes that there is substantial evidence to support the jury’s implied finding that the water condition is not due to seepage from defendant’s canals, and bases his appeal solely on error in the instructions, we deem it unnecessary to detail the evidence. Suffice it to say that during the 15 days of trial, there was much expert testimony supporting the respective theories of the parties. 1 The jury resolved the evidentiary conflict in favor of defendant.

1. Plaintiff’s Proposed Instruction No. 4.

The court instructed: “ Whenever it appears necessary to drain any land within a district on account of the irrigation which has been done or which is intended to be done by the district under laws relating to it, whether for the purpose of more beneficially carrying on the irrigation or to protect the *535 district from liability by reason of the irrigation, its board, if it is reasonable from an economic standpoint that the drainage be provided, shall provide for the drainage.” (This is basically the wording of Water Code section 22098.)

“In order for a land owner to show that an irrigation district has not followed its duty under this law, he must establish three propositions by satisfactory and sufficient evidence:

“ First, he must prove that his lands are in need of drainage made necessary by the irrigation operations of the district.
“ Second, he must affirmatively show that the installation of said drainage is reasonable from an economic standpoint.
“ Third, he must prove that the steps taken by the district toward discharging this statutory duty do not constitute a reasonable compliance with the requirement of the statute.”

This instruction was followed by quoting section 22099 of the Water Code, which reads: “No drainage need be provided for land as to which the district is relieved from liability for seepage or flooding by reason of grant, waiver, prescription, statute, decree, or condemnation.” (Italics added.)

The court instructed that plaintiff sought to hold defendant on three theories: 1. Because of defendant’s alleged negligence in the construction, maintenance, alteration or supervision of its canals either within or without the boundaries of plaintiff’s land or both within and without such boundaries; 2. that as to the construction, maintenance, alteration or supervision of defendant’s canals outside the boundaries of plaintiff’s land defendant had proximately caused damage to plaintiff’s property within the meaning of section 14, article I, of the California Constitution; and 3. that defendant had failed to provide plaintiff with the drainage required pursuant to section 22098. The' court then stated: “ The first ground is that defendant’s negligence proximately caused damage to plaintiff’s land,” and for approximately three pages of the transcript instructed on negligence and proximate cause. It then turned to the second theory—plaintiff’s land'had been damaged from the construction, maintenance, alteration or supervision of defendant’s canals which lie outside the boundaries of that land “pursuant to Article I, Section 14, of the Constitution of the State of California.” The court read a portion of that section: “ ‘Private property shall not be . . . damaged for public use without just compensation having first been made to . . . the owner,’ ” and stated that this section did not apply concerning the portion of defendant’s canals lying within the boundaries of plaintiff’s land.

*536 The court then turned to the third theory-—that defendant had failed to provide plaintiff with the drainage required “pursuant to” sections 22098 and 22099 and instructed as hereinabove set forth concerning sections 22098 and 22099.

It had been stipulated that plaintiff’s predecessors in interest in the subject property granted to the district two rights-of-way over it, upon which portions of the canals in question which are on plaintiff’s property were located. No reference to “grant” owners is made in the instructions elsewhere than in the quotation from section 22099, nor was any limitation given as to the effect of this section.

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Related

Brown v. Smith
55 Cal. App. 4th 767 (California Court of Appeal, 1997)
Elmore v. Imperial Irrigation District
159 Cal. App. 3d 185 (California Court of Appeal, 1984)
Yee v. City of Sausalito
141 Cal. App. 3d 917 (California Court of Appeal, 1983)

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Bluebook (online)
233 Cal. App. 2d 532, 43 Cal. Rptr. 889, 1965 Cal. App. LEXIS 1386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lourence-v-west-side-irrigation-district-calctapp-1965.