Moulton v. Parks

30 P. 613, 64 Cal. 166, 12 P.C.L.J. 122, 1883 Cal. LEXIS 597
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 22, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 30 P. 613 (Moulton v. Parks) 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
Moulton v. Parks, 30 P. 613, 64 Cal. 166, 12 P.C.L.J. 122, 1883 Cal. LEXIS 597 (Cal. 1883).

Opinion

McKinstry, J.

In his complaint plaintiff alleges “that he is ignorant of the true names of the defendants above designated as John Doe and Richard Roe, and therefore has thus designated them, and prays that when their true names are discovered the pleadings and proceedings herein may be amended by inserting such names in the place and stead of the names herein used to designate such defendants.”

The “ defendants ” filed an answer.

The record does not show that the true names of the defendants designated in the complaint as John Doe and Richard Roe have been discovered, nor have the pleadings and proceedings herein been amended by substituting any names for the fictitious names. Did the complaint not show that the names John Doe and Richard Roe were fictitious names, we might hold perhaps that the persons, whomsoever they were, who appeared and answered as John Doe and Richard Roe were .bound by the judgment—they having failed to plead the misnomer or to respond in their real names to the allegations made against them. But as the record reads we construe the answer to be the answer of those of the defendants sued by their proper names, to wit: W. H. Parks, Eli Davis, W. H. Perdue, A. B. Van Arsdale, G. W. Santee, George Ohyler, and James T. Leary, and the injunction as operative only against such persons, their servants, etc.

[168]*168The complaint was filed January 13, 1875.

. It avers that the plaintiff now is, and for more than two years last past has been, the owner and in possession of a tract of land containing one hundred and fifty-eight acres, situated in the county of Colusa, which tract is specifically described; that the land has been held and possessed by plaintiff for farming, grazing, and fruit-growing purposes, and is of the value of five thousand dollars for such purposes; that plaintiff has and for more than a year past has had on said land a dwelling-house, usually occupied by- plaintiff’s tenants and employees, about one half mile of fence, a well, corrals, and an orchard of fruit-bearing trees of the value of eight hundred dollars.

The foregoing allegations of the complaint are denied by the answer, but the court below found them to be true, and the evidence is not before us.

The complaint further avers' that plaintiff’s land is situated between Butte Creek and the Sacramento Biver, above where Butte Slough puts out of said river; that said slough puts out of said river below plaintiff’s land, less than a mile therefrom, and running in a southeasterly direction to the mouth of Butte Creek, flows thence in a southerly direction to and into said river, at a point more than twenty miles south of and below plaintiff’s land; that Butte Creek rises and has its source more than forty miles northeast of plaintiff’s land, and flows in a southwesterly direction and into Butte Slóugh at a point on said slough about two and one half miles southeast from plaintiff’s land; that Butte Creek and Butte Slough, from their point of confluence with each other, and the said Butte Creek from a point at least twenty miles northeast of plaintiff’s land, to such confluence, flow through a basin of low land, which basin is bounded on the west by a strip of high land from one to three miles in width, extending along the east bank of the Sacramento Biver from a point on said river about thirty miles above and north of where said Butte Slough puts out of said river to a point where said slough enters said river, and on the east by the high lands adjacent to the Butte Mountains, and the high lands along the west bank of the Feather Biver —which said basin . has an average width of about two miles; that during the winter and spring months in each and every year large quantities [169]*169of water flow through said basin, slough, and creek, filling their banks in said basin and overflowing the same, and the Avaters from the Sacramento River above said high land find by natural means their way into said basin, so that the Avater floAving into and in said basin during said months is in volume double that of the main Sacramento River at any point opposite said basin, and said waters are discharged through said creek, slough, and basin into the Sacramento and Feather Rivers more than twenty miles south of and beloAV plaintiff’s land.

The ansAver admits the allegations of the complaint last set forth, except that the defendants deny that Butte Slough runs to the mouth of Butte Creek, or into the Sacramento River at any point; deny that Butte Creek runs into Butte Slough, or that there is any junction or confluence of said creek and slough, “ except that both run into the same large basin of tule and SAvamp lands”; alleged that the Avater floAving into or through the basin described in the complaint is in volume not more than one tenth of the Avater of the main Sacramento, and deny that the Avaters of the basin described in the complaint, or any part thereof, are discharged from the Sacramento or Feather River through said creek or slough at any point south of the head of said slough.

- The court found that Butte Slough runs to the mouth of Butte Creek, and floAvs thence in a southerly direction “ to and into the tules of Sutter County” at a point more than five miles south of and beloAV plaintiff’s land; that Butte Creek flows into Butte Slough at a point on said slough about íavo and one half miles southeast of plaintiff’s land; that Butte Creek and slough from the point of their confluence floAv through the basin described in the complaint and discharge their Avaters into the said “tules of Sutter County,” and that in the Avinter and spring months the waters floAving to and in said basin are in volume about equal to that of the main Sacramento at points opposite said basin.

Tlius the finding of the court accords with the last recited allegations of the complaint, except that the court finds that, after their junction, Butte Creek and slough flow into the tules of Sutter County, instead of finding that Butte Creek and slough floAv into the Sacramento and Feather Rivers, as alleged in the complaint.

[170]*170It is averred in the complaint, and admitted by the answer, that the Sacramento River is a navigable stream from the town of Red Bluff, in the county of Tehama, a distance of seventy miles above and north of plaintiff’s land, to its mouth, and from said town to said land and slough flows nearly due south; that opposite the basin described in the complaint the banks of said river are from ten to twenty feet higher than the banks of Butte Creek where said creek flows through said basin.

The complaint further Alleges that plaintiff’s land is part of the said strip of high land lying on the east bank of the Sacramento River, and during the winter months of every year is at times partially overflowed by the waters of said Butte Creek, and by the waters of the Sacramento River, that find their way into said basin as aforesaid, but such overflow is slight and does not interfere with the use and enjoyment of said land for the purposes for which it is owned and possessed; that said land is relieved from said overflow by the flowing off of said waters through said basin, creek, and slough, which constitute the natural and only outlet for said water; that if said slough, creek, and basin remain open, and the slough and creek unobstructed, the flood waters of each year will be drained off before any injury is done to said land of plaintiff, or the improvements thereon.

The answer denies these last averments. The court found as alleged by plaintiff, except that it found a portion

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
30 P. 613, 64 Cal. 166, 12 P.C.L.J. 122, 1883 Cal. LEXIS 597, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/moulton-v-parks-cal-1883.