Morton v. Superior Court

269 P.2d 81, 124 Cal. App. 2d 577, 47 A.L.R. 2d 478, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1773
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 16, 1954
DocketCiv. 15983; Civ. 16125
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 269 P.2d 81 (Morton v. Superior Court) 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
Morton v. Superior Court, 269 P.2d 81, 124 Cal. App. 2d 577, 47 A.L.R. 2d 478, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1773 (Cal. Ct. App. 1954).

Opinion

PETERS, P. J.

There are presently two proceedings pending before this court growing out of the same controversy. One Civ. No. 15983 is a petition for a writ of prohibition aimed at arresting the enforcement of an order granting an injunction pendente lite. One Civ. No. 16125 is an appeal from the order granting the injunction. Prior to the perfecting of the appeal an alternative writ of prohibition and an order temporarily staying the enforcement of the injunction were issued. When the appeal was perfected the two proceedings, by stipulation, were consolidated. The issues presented in the prohibition proceeding involving the validity of the injunction can all be decided on the appeal, so that the prohibition proceeding is now moot.

The amended complaint upon which the request for the preliminary injunction was predicated sets forth three causes of action. The first two are by the county against the Whipple Road Quarry Company and its president, Hamilton Morton. The first prays for an injunction on the theory that the defendants are operating the quarry without a permit as required by ordinance 961 of the county, that such operation without a permit constitutes a nuisance, and therefore should be enjoined. The second cause of action, also by the county, alleges that the quarry is being operated in a manner that violates certain regulatory provisions of the ordinance, that such operation constitutes a nuisance, and should be enjoined. The third cause of action is by the state. It sets forth that the quarry is being operated under certain described conditions that make it a public nuisance, which should be enjoined. After the trial, the court issued its order abso *579 lutely enjoining the operation of the quarry. This order is predicated on findings contained in the order that the quarry is being operated without a permit in violation of ordinance 961, that the method of operation violates that ordinance in certain described particulars, and that the method of operation creates a public nuisance.’ *

The record shows the following: The quarry is located in unincorporated territory about one mile from the city limits of Redwood City, and is operated by the Whipple Road Quarry Company, a corporation. It operates on a royalty basis under a lease on lands owned by others. It has been operating at its present site since 1929. The quarry itself, and the area surrounding it are hilly and wooded, being very precipitous in certain parts. A hard-surfaced road known as Edgewood Road (Old Whipple Road) leads past the quarry property. About 900 ears daily, including defendants’ trucks, travel on it. A large part of the area surrounding the quarry, particularly towards the west, is entirely uninhabited. Some homes, however, are located in the general area, particularly along or near Edgewood Road, which is easterly from the quarry property. The evidence shows that there are about 55 homes within a half mile of the boundaries of the quarry property, 20 being located on Edgewood Road. No owner of any property immediately adjacent to the quarry property has complained about its operations. Most of the witnesses who testified in this proceeding and complained about the quarry’s operations live on or near Edgewood Road. Practically all of the homes in the area have been built since 1929.

There is a rather sharp curve in Edgewood Road as it approaches the quarry property. On this curve a private road, built for the quarry’s use, enters Edgewood Road. This quarry road originally had a macadam surface, but in the summer of 1952 Morton put a penetrating oil on it. Then in February of 1953 the road was hard surfaced. It was regraded, rolled with rock, then a road oil was added, and the road rolled again. This was done in an attempt to keep the road free from dust. This quarry road runs uphill from the Edgewood Road intersection, and is quite steep. A surveyor testified that for the first 40 feet the incline is 8 per cent, for *580 the next 40 feet it is 8.8 per cent, the third 40 feet is 18 per cent, the fourth is 18.6 per cent, while the fifth 40-foot stretch is 18 per cent, and the sixth 40 feet is 16.5 per cent. The road then is practically level from the top of the hill to the quarry operation, a distance of about 90 feet.

The major objections of the householders who testified for the plaintiffs were that the operation of the quarry caused an excessive amount of dust, which carried over to the homes along Edgewood Road, and that the rock crusher, the trucks and the tractors used in the quarry’s operation created a great amount of noise that was audible and annoying to some of the householders. There was also substantial evidence that the trucks from and to the quarry created a traffic hazard, particularly where the quarry road enters Edgewood Road. The traffic conditions on Edgewood Road are not due solely to defendants ’ trucks. Their trucks constitute a small percentage of the total number of vehicles on the road. Several other quarries also use Edgewood Road for their trucks, as do many private vehicles.

The quarry applied for a permit, as required by ordinance 961, but such application was denied by the planning commission and the board of supervisors. A mandamus proceeding is pending in the superior court to test the validity of those denials. An inspector of the county planning commission testified that in several respects the quarry was being operated in a manner that violated certain of the regulations contained in that ordinance. Thus, in at least one place, an excavation had been completed with less than a one-to-one slope, certain precautions against erosion had not been taken, and some portions of the quarry property had not been enclosed by a fence.

There was evidence that the tempo of the operations of the quarry had been increased shortly before the trial, that the quarry sometimes operated on Sunday, and that on some days it started operations early in the morning. There was also testimony by one witness to the effect that on one occasion a truck tire had rolled down the hill from the quarry property, crashed through a fence and into the home of the witness, barely missing a small child playing in the yard. In most respects this evidence was contradicted by the witnesses for the quarry company, some of whom were householders on Edgewood Road. However, there is substantial evidence in the record to support the allegations of the complaint that this quarry was being operated in violation of the *581 ordinance and in a manner so as to constitute a public and private nuisance as alleged in, the complaint. This evidence need not be further reviewed. But it is important to note that there was no evidence of any kind that any one of the conditions of which complaint is made, except the very fact of the operation of the quarry, could not be regulated so as to prevent such conditions from constituting a nuisance. To the contrary, there was much testimony to the effect that the conditions complained about were subject to correction. There was testimony of engineers and experts that a housing could be devised for the crusher, where most of the dust was created, that would successfully prevent the escape of substantially all of the dust from that cause. Frequent sprinkling of the shoulders of the quarry road would obviously curtail dust from that source. The traffic hazard could be controlled by the use of a flagman at the intersection of the quarry and Edgewood roads.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
269 P.2d 81, 124 Cal. App. 2d 577, 47 A.L.R. 2d 478, 1954 Cal. App. LEXIS 1773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morton-v-superior-court-calctapp-1954.