Nev. Cty. & Sacramento Canal Co. v. Kidd

37 Cal. 282
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1869
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 37 Cal. 282 (Nev. Cty. & Sacramento Canal Co. v. Kidd) 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
Nev. Cty. & Sacramento Canal Co. v. Kidd, 37 Cal. 282 (Cal. 1869).

Opinions

By the Court, Sawyer, C. J.:

There were originally two counts in the complaint, but the Court sustained the demurrer to the second, and, the plaintiff declining' to amend, entered final judgment thereon, and the trial was had on the first count only.

The count of the complaint upon which issue was joined and the trial had substantially alleges that at a time specified the plaintiff had appropriated, was the owner and in the use and enjoyment of certain water rights, privileges, and appurtenances at a point designated, on the South Yuba River, in Nevada County, with the right to divert the water of said river, by means of a dam then in course of construction by plaintiff, into a canal then projected and surveyed by plaintiff, and was the owner and in possession of said water right, site for a dam, and dam in course of construction, and site for canal, and canal thereon projected, surveyed, and commenced; and that afterward, on a day named, the defendants unlawfully and violently, with force and arms, entered upon [300]*300said property, rights, privileges, and appurtenances, and drove off, amoved, and expelled from the whole thereof, except, etc., and from all exercise of the rights of the possession, use, or enjoyment thereof, and with force and arms kept and continued plaintiff' amoved and expelled therefrom for a long space of time, to wit: thence hitherto, and by reason thereof the plaintiff has, thence hitherto, been hindered, delayed, and wrongfully prevented from using, exercising, and enjoying its rights aforesaid, etc., to the plaintiff’s damages in the sum of one hundred thousand dollars. The prayer is: “Wherefore, plaintiff brings its suit and prays judgment against said defendants for the sum of one hundred thousand dollars and for its costs of suit.”

Upon the trial of the issues taken on this count the jury found the following verdict: “We, the jurors * * * render our verdict in favor of plaintiff for the amount of one dollar damages.” On the next day, July 17th, judgment was entered on the verdict in favor of plaintiff for one dollar damages and costs. On the third of August following, the plaintiff' moved the Court on the pleadings and verdict, firstly, to set aside the judgment, in order that the proper judgment might be entered; secondly, that upon the pleadings and verdict the plaintiff have leave to amend the prayer of the complaint by inserting a prayer that plaintiff may have judgment for the restitution of the property; thirdly, that upon the pleadings and verdict the plaintiff have judgment for the restitution of the property; fourthly, that upon the pleadings and verdict the plaintiff be adjudged entitled to the .exclusive possession of the property, rights, etc., that plaintiff have a perpetual injunction and general relief in the premises; and fifthly, that plaintiff have judgment on the second count, as therein prayed. All of which motions, after consideration, were denied.

This cause of action is strictly in trespass at common law for damages. In fact, the pleader, in alleging the wrong complained of, follows very closely the language of the 61 count for a common expulsion” in 2 Chitty’s Pleading, 685, [301]*301and the prayer only demands a judgment for damages, the appropriate judgment in an action for trespass. The verdict responds in damages. The cause of action alleged, the prayer, and the verdict, are in strict accord. It is true, that forms of action have been abolished, but the substance as well as the form of the action is trespass.

It is said, however—and in this we agree with appellant— that, although this complaint, substantially, and in form, presents a cause of action for trespass at common law, yet the averments are, also, broad enough to entitle plaintiff to a judgment for possession of the property and rights from which it has been amoved and dispossessed; that such relief is consistent with the facts stated in the complaint and embraced within the issues formed; and that, under section one hundred forty-seven of the Practice Act, when an answer is filed “the Court may grant any relief consistent with the case made by the complaint and embraced within the issue.” But the Court may grant, not must. That is to say, it may grant any such relief, provided the facts within the issues proved and the circumstances justify it, but, certainly, not otherwise. The verdict in this case does not necessarily find all the facts averred in the complaint. The complaint alleges a trespass on the dam site and dam in process of erection, and on the site for a canal and the canal thereon projected, surveyed, and commenced, and an interference with plaintiff’s water rights, and expressly asks damages for the wrong, and the verdict finds some trespass or interference of some kind alleged, upon the whole or some part of the property, and that the plaintiff is entitled to one dollar damages. But it would be sufficient, to justify this verdict, to show by proofs that the trespass was committed but for a day, or an hour, at any time before the commencement of the suit, and upon any part of the property described. It might not have been continued. The possession might have ceased long before the commencement of the action, so that, at the time of the commencement of the suit, the defendants were not in possession, or the [302]*302right of possession on the part of the plaintiff might have ceased, or been abandoned, or transferred before action brought. On many grounds there might be no right to a judgment for possession proved, although a right to recover damages for the trespass was shown. The testimony is not in the record, and we do not know what facts were proved. The verdict does not necessarily go beyond a trespass and right to damages. It does not necessarily determine all the issues. The judgment was satisfactory to the Court below, and we must presume, in support of the action of the Court, that it covers all the issues proved in favor of the plaintiff, or which the proofs justified. The form of the verdict is peculiar, and indicates that the jury only supposed the plaintiff' entitled to damages on the evidence. There is certainly nothing to indicate that they found in favor of plaintiff, as against defendants, the right to present possession, or right of possession to the dam site or canal, or a right to the present use of the waters of tho Yuba River at the commencement of suit. We cannot presume, against the action of the Court and the record, that the plaintiff proved other issues than those to which the prayer of the complaint relates, or other than such as are sufficient to sustain the judgment as it was entered. The District Court was in a position to determine whether the judgment covers all the issues proved, and it evidently was of opinion that it did, or a different judgment would have been entered, especially when the question was directly presented for adjudication, and the right to a different judgment urged and adjudged against plaintiff. There is no ground for supposing the judgment was inadvertently entered to correspond with the relief asked in the complaint. There is nothing presented in the record by which we can determine that the Court erred on this point, and we have often said that error must he made to affirmatively appear by the party alleging it. The record in this case certainly does not affirmatively show that the Court erred in refusing to enter a judgment for restitution, etc.

The same principle applies to the motion, after verdict [303]

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Bluebook (online)
37 Cal. 282, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nev-cty-sacramento-canal-co-v-kidd-cal-1869.