North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Co. v. Keyser

58 Cal. 315, 1881 Cal. LEXIS 215
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1881
DocketNo. 7,858
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 58 Cal. 315 (North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Co. v. Keyser) 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
North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Co. v. Keyser, 58 Cal. 315, 1881 Cal. LEXIS 215 (Cal. 1881).

Opinions

Boss, J.:

The City of Marysville, in the month of September, 1879, commenced- an action in the then District Court of Yuba County, over which the Hon. Philip W. Keyser presided, against the present petitioner and numerous other mining corporations and individuals-—-the complaint alleging, among other things, in substance, that the plaintiff is, and since the 3d day of February, 1851, has been, an incorporated city, embracing within its limits about three thousand acres of land, of which it owns and controls the city cemetery, containing about fifteen acres; the fair grounds, containing twenty-one acres; various public squares; two landing-places for steamers and barges; the city hall, jail, engine-house, and two brick schoolhouses, with the lots on which they stand; the streets and alleys, and, also, a levee, some seven miles long, which surrounds the business part of the city, but which excludes about five hundred acres of its lands; that the city is situated on a plain on the north bank of the Yuba Biver, at its junction with Feather Biver, at the head of navigation thereon, and at an altitude of seventy-two feet above the sea; that the Yuba Biver is a living stream, heading between the eastern and western summits of the Sierra Nevada Mountains, and passes through deep canons on a western course until it reaches the eastern margin of the Sacramento Valley, where it debouches into that valley at a place called Yuba Mills, and crosses it on the same course in a sub-valley and empties into the Feather Biver at Marysville; that said river, in crossing the Sacramento Valley, runs through strips of rich bottom land, ranging from a half mile to two miles in width, which was originally first-class agricultural land; that the natural banks of the river were originally high enough to protect this land as well as the City of Marysville from overflow at the highest stage of water, without the use of levees, and that its water was clear in summer and sufficiently pure at all seasons for domestic uses and for irrigation; that steamboats for years made them landing and received and discharged their passengers and cargoes in front of the city, from [318]*318which the latter derived large revenues, and carried on a large and flourishing commerce, all of which, from causes afterwards to be mentioned, have been lost to the city; that the city made the river an outlet for its sewers, and in this way obtained (and could obtain in no other manner) a proper and adequate drainage; but that this outlet, owing to the filling up of the river with mining tailings, no longer exists, and the city during the winter and spring months, is substantially without drainage, which is a source of great damage and inconvenience thereto; that the city, apprehending that it would be overflowed from the Tuba by reason of the bed of that river becoming choked with the tailings from hydraulic mines, commenced the construction of levees, and succeeded in preventing the occurrence of such calamity until the winter of 1875 and 1876, when the bed of the’Tuba, a few miles above the city, became so choked and filled with mining tailings deposited by the hydraulic mines along the headwaters of the river, that no adequate channel was left for the passage of the water, in consequence of which the waters of the river overflowed its banks, broke the levees, rushed into the city, filled its streets to the depth of five feet, endangered the lives of its inhabitants, and destroyed a large amount of valuable property belonging to the city and its people; that since then the city has enlarged the old levees and constructed new ones, expending in such defenses not less than three hundred and fifty thousand dollars, and will be obliged to spend more for the same puiqpose; that the protection afforded by the levees is confined to a part of the city, and is temporary and insufficient ; that the city is left without any drainage in the winter season, and is liable to be filled up and overflowed; that the bed of the Tuba, at the eastern end of the city, is now raised by the tailings higher than the streets of the city, notwithstanding the streets have been raised two feet, and that were it not for the levees the city would now be uninhabitable ; that the waters of the Tuba are kept constantly charged with sediment from the mining claims of the defendants to the extent of from three to thirty per cent, of its bulk, and are thereby rendered unfit for domestic or animal use, or for the purpose of irrigation; that the defendants in the action [319]*319own various mining claims situated on the hilltops adjacent to the Tuha River and its tributaries, at elevations varying from five hundred to five thousand feet above the Sacramento Valley, and which are worked by them by the hydraulic process ; that the said mining claims are vast in extent, of a depth ranging from fifty to three hundred feet, and consist of the surface or non-paying earth, which is slightly and almost imperceptibly charged with fine particles of gold, and an underlying pay-streak, so called, which latter is more highly charged with gold; that the claims are worked by means of immense blasts of powder to loosen the gold-bearing and superincumbent earth, enormous heads of water to sweep the loosened earth into ditches, flumes, and tail-races, set at a heavy grade, and through which, at an immense velocity, the earth, water, and stones rush, the gold therein being separated from the earth by the action of the water, and caught by means of pavements of stones and blocks of wood set in the bottom of the ditches, flumes, and tail-races; and the refuse matter, known as tailings, and consisting of muddy water, earth, clay, sand, coarse gravel, round quartz pebbles, and cobble stones, are deposited at the dumps of the mines— which dumps are either in the bed of the Tuba River or its tributaries, or in the beds of the steep ravines and gulches immediately contiguous to and leading into the bed of that river or its tributaries; that the grade of the Tuba and its respective tributaries from the dumps to where the river debouches into the Sacramento Valley exceeds fifty feet to the mile; and that the tailings, so deposited by the defendants, with the exception of the heavy cobble and other heavy stones, are swept by the force of the water in the river and its tributaries down and through the canyon of the Tuba River to the mouth of the canyon; that the grade of the Tuba from the mouth of the canyon to its junction with the Feather River is about eight and one half feet to the mile, and is so much reduced in grade that a part of the tailings from the mines, known as sliclcens, sand, and small stones, chokes and fills the channel of the river, causing it to overflow and cover with debris the adjacent lands, including that part of the City of Marysville which is outside of its levees; that .the mines of the defendants are the only ones from which [320]*320tailings are dumped into the Yuba River or its tributaries; that defendants are now depositing such tailings therein at the rate of fifteen millions of cubic yards annually, well knowing that the slickens, sand, and small stones contained therein will be, and intending that they shall be, carried down the channel and deposited on the lands of the City of Marysville and the other lands adjoining the river; that defendants intend to continue such acts, and assert a right so to do, and that^such acts on the part of the defendants constitute a nuisance to plaintiff and its property, etc.

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Bluebook (online)
58 Cal. 315, 1881 Cal. LEXIS 215, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-bloomfield-gravel-mining-co-v-keyser-cal-1881.