Ogburn v. Connor

46 Cal. 346, 1873 Cal. LEXIS 183
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 1, 1873
DocketNo. 3,453
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 46 Cal. 346 (Ogburn v. Connor) 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
Ogburn v. Connor, 46 Cal. 346, 1873 Cal. LEXIS 183 (Cal. 1873).

Opinion

By the Court, Belcher, J.:

The plaintiff was the owner of a farm adjoining and lying directly north of a farm owned by the defendant. A portion of the defendant’s land was lower than the land of the plaintiff, and had extending through it a natural depression. There was no stream or watercourse upon the plaintiff’s [350]*350land, but the surface water, falling upon it in times of heavy rains, and flowing upon it from other adjoining and still higher lands, was accustomed, before its flow was obstructed by the defendant, to pass off through the depression named over the land of the defendant into a large natural watercourse known as Willow Slough.

In 1863, and while the plaintiff’s land was unoccupied public land of the United States, the defendant built along the north line of his land a ditch fence for the protection of his land and growing crops. This ditch fence consisted of a ditch and embankment with some rails or boards on top of the embankment, and was sufficient to partially obstruct the water which fell or collected upon the plaintiff’s land, from flowing over the land of the defendant as it had been before that time accustomed to do. In 1869, the defendant strengthened and enlarged the embankment so as to form a more complete barrier to the passage of the water referred to. In December, 1871, very heavy and copious rains fell, and a large quantity of water therefrom collected upon the land of the plaintiff, but its passage off from the land was obstructed by the embankment erected by the defendant, and thereby a large part of the plaintiff’s land was inundated and his growing crop of wheat injured to the amount of five hundred dollars.

This action was brought to recover for this injury, but the Court below being of the opinion that the defendant might lawfully protect his land by an embankment or other means, against the surface water flowing from the land of the plaintiff, and that the injury was therefore damnun absque injuria, rendered judgment for the defendant.

The question presented for decision is important and not free from difficulty. In Massachusetts the Courts have steadily adhered to the rule followed by the Court below. In that State it is said that “the obstruction of surface water, or an alteration in the flow of it, affords no cause of action [351]*351in behalf of a person who may suffer loss or detriment therefrom against one who does no act inconsistent with the due exercise of dominion over his own soil.” (Gannon v. Horgadon, 10 Allen, 110; Parks v. Newburyport, 10 Graff. 28; Ashley v. Wolcott, 11 Cush. 192.)

That rule has not, however, been generally followed in the other States, except in so far as it applies to town or city lots. (Martin v. Riddle, 26 Penn. St. 415; Rauffman v. Griesemer, 26 Penn. St. 407; Martin v. Jett, 12 La. 502; Lattimore v. Davis, 14 La. 161; Delahousaye v. Judice, 13 La. An. 587; Butler v. Peck, 16 Ohio St. 334; Laumier v. Francis, 23 Mo. 181; Beard v. Murphy, 37 Vt. St. 99; Gillham v. Madison Railroad Co., 49 Ill. 484; Gormley v. Sanford, 52 Ill. 158; Billows v. Sackett, 15 Barb. 102.)

The prevailing doctrine appears to be that when two fields are adjacent and one is lower than the other, the owner of the upper field has a natural easement to have the water that falls upon his land flow off from the same upon the field below, which is charged with a corresponding servitude.

In Martin v. Riddle, the Court said: “ When two fields adjoin and one is lower than the other, the lower must necessarily be subject to all the natural flow of water from the upper one. The inconvenience arises from its position, and is usually more than compensated by other circumstances. Hence the owner of the lower ground has no right to erect embankments whereby the natural flow of the water from the upper ground shall be stopped; nor has the owner of the upper ground a right to make any excavations or drains by which the flow of water is diverted from its natural channel and a new channel made on the lower ground; nor can he collect into one channel waters usually flowing off into his neighbors’ fields by several channels, and thus increase the rush upon the lower fields.”

In Gillham v. The Madison County Railroad Company, the Supreme Court of Illinois said that the doctrine of Martin [352]*352v. Riddle was the doctrine of the civil law, and has found favor in almost all the common law Courts of this country and of England.

In Butler v. Peck, the Supreme Court of Ohio said: “ The principle seems to be established and indisputable that when two parcels of land belonging to different owners lie adjacent to each other, and one parcel lies lower than the other, the lower one owes a servitude to the upper to receive the water which naturally runs from it, provided the industry of man has not been used to create the servitude; or in other words, more familiar to students of the common law, the owner of the upper parcel of land has a natural easement in the lower parcel to the extent of the natural flow of water from the upper parcel to and upon the lower.”

As the result of the cases upon the subject, Mr. Washburn, in his excellent work on Easements and Servitudes, states the rule thus: “ It may be stated as a general principle that when the situation of two adjoining fields is such that the water falling or collected by melting snows and the like upon one naturally descends upon the other, it must be suffered by the lower one to be discharged upon his land, if desired by the owner of the upper field. But the latter cannot, by artificial trenches or. otherwise, cause the natural mode of its being discharged to be changed to the injury of the lower field, as by conducting it by new channels in unusual quantities on the particular parts of the lower field.” (2d ed. p. 427.)

Substantially the same question was before this Court in Castro v. Bailey, No. 2,023, decided at the October Term, 1869, and the judgment, which was for the plaintiff in the Court below, was affirmed here.

We are satisfied that the rule generally prevailing in this country is the better rule, and that it, and not the rule which obtains in Massachusetts, should have been followed by the Court below.

[353]*353But it is said by counsel for respondent that the answer alleged that the plaintiff, by means of ditches constructed by him, had concentrated the water upon his own land, and carried the same by new channels upon the defendant’s land; that in support of the judgment these facts will be presumed to have been found in favor of the defendant, and the plaintiff, therefore, was not entitled to recover. The obvious answer to this position is that the Court negatived this allegation of the answer by finding that there was no watercourse or stream upon the plaintiff’s land, but that all the water falling thereon was accustomed to descend upon the land of the defendant by reason of the natural depression of the soil.

It is further urged that the plaintiff ought not to be permitted to recover because the defendant constructed his embankment before the plaintiff purchased his land of the Government, or had settled thereon.

The argument is not sound.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Locklin v. City of Lafayette
867 P.2d 724 (California Supreme Court, 1994)
Keys v. Romley
412 P.2d 529 (California Supreme Court, 1966)
Jergens v. City of Los Angeles
103 Cal. App. 2d 232 (California Court of Appeal, 1951)
The Weinberg Co. v. Bixby
196 P. 25 (California Supreme Court, 1921)
La Fetra v. Richardson
186 P. 396 (California Court of Appeal, 1919)
Gray v. Reclamation District No. 1500
163 P. 1024 (California Supreme Court, 1917)
Heier v. Krull
117 P. 530 (California Supreme Court, 1911)
Shaw v. Town of Sebastopol
115 P. 213 (California Supreme Court, 1911)
Cox v. Odell
82 P. 1086 (California Court of Appeal, 1905)
Humphreys v. Moulton
81 P. 1085 (California Court of Appeal, 1905)
Wood v. Moulton
80 P. 92 (California Supreme Court, 1905)
Davis v. Fry
69 L.R.A. 460 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1904)
Sanguinetti v. Pock
69 P. 98 (California Supreme Court, 1902)
Cushing v. Pires
57 P. 572 (California Supreme Court, 1899)
Rudel v. County of Los Angeles
50 P. 400 (California Supreme Court, 1897)
Thompson v. Connecticut Mutual Life Insurance
38 N.E. 796 (Indiana Supreme Court, 1894)
Mayor of Albany v. Sikes
26 L.R.A. 653 (Supreme Court of Georgia, 1894)
Drew v. Hicks
35 P. 563 (California Supreme Court, 1894)
Wharton v. Stevens
15 L.R.A. 630 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1891)
McDaniel v. Cummings
23 P. 795 (California Supreme Court, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Cal. 346, 1873 Cal. LEXIS 183, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ogburn-v-connor-cal-1873.