Martinson v. Hughey

199 Cal. App. 3d 318, 244 Cal. Rptr. 795, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 193
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedMarch 7, 1988
DocketF007104
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 199 Cal. App. 3d 318 (Martinson v. Hughey) 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
Martinson v. Hughey, 199 Cal. App. 3d 318, 244 Cal. Rptr. 795, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 193 (Cal. Ct. App. 1988).

Opinion

*321 Opinion

BROWN (G.A.), J. *

Defendants, cross-complainants and appellants, David F. Hughey and his wife (Hughey) appeal from a judgment entered after a six-day bench trial in favor of plaintiffs and cross-defendants Irvin A. Martinson and his wife and Robert Pokelwaldt and his wife (hereinafter respondents) enjoining Hughey from obstructing the flow of surface and irrigation water off respondents’ property onto Hughey’s property and awarding damages to respondents. Hughey was denied damages to his home and orchard from flooding which he sought by way of cross-complaint.

Statement of Facts

The parties involved all lived in the foothills in the Porterville area at the lower end of a 1,700-acre watershed. The general slope of the area is from east to west. Both Martinson and Pokelwaldt (upper owners) lived to the east of Hughey (lower owners).

Attached as exhibit A is a schematic drawing, for the purpose of illustration only, which shows the general location of certain points and features. This exhibit represents the court’s effort to synthesize the testimony for the purpose of visually depicting the relative physical location of pertinent features. Except for thé size of the block parcels, the drawing is not to scale. All of the property involved can be viewed as composed of 10-acre squares, 660 feet by 660 feet. Hughey’s 30 acres formed a rectangle, the short borders (660 feet) (D-F and G-I) lying on the east and west, the long borders (1,980 feet) (D-G and F-I) lying on the north and south sides.

Pokelwaldt also owned 30 acres, a 10-acre square immediately east of Hughey’s eastern border, a 10-acre square due south and a 10-acre square due west, bordering the southeastern portion of Hughey’s property. The Pokelwaldt land was doglegged, or L-shaped.

Martinson owned 20 acres next to Pokelwaldt, sharing the northern border of the Pokelwaldt property (B-D). Along with the land of Mr. Guzman (who is not involved in this litigation), lying north of Hughey and west of Martinson, the properties met at a common corner (D), the northeastern corner of the Hughey property and the northwestern and southwestern corners, respectively, of the Pokelwaldt and Martinson properties. *322 And, although the general slope of the area is east to west, the Pokelwaldt property also sloped down toward the north, and the Martinson property sloped down toward the south, the lower points being toward their common border.

Hughey first purchased the lower western 10 acres in 1972. There was a house (H) sitting in the northwestern corner, and the land was planted with a citrus grove. In 1974, he bought the eastern 20 acres, also planted with citrus groves. Martinson acquired his 20-acre navel orange grove in 1975. Pokelwaldt acquired his 30 acres in 1978. It was planted partially with citrus and partially with olives.

At the time the parties acquired their interests, there remained a natural drainage course along the area of the border between the Martinson and Pokelwaldt properties (B-D). Meandering along the common border of the Martinson and Pokelwaldt property in the area of the natural drainage course was a ditch (B-D). It emptied at the northeastern corner of the Hughey property into a ditch running along the north border of the Hughey property (D-G). Along the eastern borders of the Martinson and Pokelwaldt property, running north-south, was a raised dirt road on a county easement (A-C). A ditch had been made along its eastern side (J-K). There were culverts beneath the road to permit the passage of water from the east onto the Martinson and Pokelwaldt properties.

Besides the shared natural ditch each of the Pokelwaldt and Martinson properties had an artificial ditch. Pokelwaldt’s ditch drained northwest, terminating approximately at the mid-point of Hughey’s eastern border. From that point, the water would drain northerly along the berm bordering Hughey’s easterly property line (D-F) to the common point (D). Martin-son’s artificial ditch ran approximately 300 feet north of, and parallel to, the natural ditch in a westerly direction, but curved south and emptied into the corner area with the natural ditch. It would appear each of these ditches running through the Pokelwaldt and Martinson properties were but “improved” natural drainage courses. The evidence is somewhat confused and it may be that the Martinson artificial ditch actually emptied at a lower point on Hughey’s northern border. During heavy rains, the water both from above the respondents’ properties and the water off their properties drained in the general direction of the natural slope of the properties (See exhibit A).

The Hughey property had a raised berm which was also at times used as a farm road along the eastern border, reaching approximately three feet in height at the northeastern corner and about twelve feet in width (D-F). Testimony was not consistent about whether the berm ran the whole length *323 of the eastern border of Hughey’s property from its initial construction in 1958 or 1959 or whether it was extended during Hughey’s tenure to meet the northeastern corner. There is evidence that Hughey added to and maintained this berm at various times during his ownership. Also constructed by Hughey’s predecessor in 1958 or 1959 was a ditch running the entire length of the northern border of the Hughey property (D-G north ditch). This ditch, in essence, acted as an extension of the common natural drain running between the Pokelwaldt and Martinson properties (B-D).

Also, during the relevant period, Guzman had constructed a raised road running along the eastern border of his land and the western border of Martinson’s property (E-D) which ended near the corner area shared by the parties.

Thus, irrigation tail water and rain water accumulating from above the parties’ properties ran in the county ditch and passed through the Pokelwaldt and Martinson properties in the artificial and natural ditches toward the artifical ditch on the Hughey property, or, in the case of the Pokelwaldt artificial ditch, toward the berm on the Hughey property which directed the water toward Hughey’s artificial ditch. Similarly, irrigation tail water and rain water originating on the Pokelwaldt and Martinson properties ultimately ran toward Hughey’s artificial ditch.

Except for cleaning and maintenance, the only major change in the drainage system came in 1981 when Martinson and Pokelwaldt deepened and perhaps straightened the natural common ditch between their properties (BD).

Beginning in 1979 Hughey began to deposit dirt, debris, tires and concrete pieces at the top of the north ditch on his property. Initially, this only slowed the flow of water coming from the upper property. However, by the winter of 1981-1982 the flow of water was backed up onto the Pokelwaldt property, killing several trees. Pokelwaldt replanted. Hughey continued to pile debris in the ditch, and during the winter of 1982-1983 portions of both the groves of respondents were injured by surface water which could not flow off the property. Hughey continued to strengthen the obstruction. In March of 1984, the complaint against Hughey was filed, and, in April, a preliminary injunction was granted allowing respondents to remove the obstruction, which they did.

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Bluebook (online)
199 Cal. App. 3d 318, 244 Cal. Rptr. 795, 1988 Cal. App. LEXIS 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinson-v-hughey-calctapp-1988.