Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Rollins

164 P. 53, 32 Cal. App. 782, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 537
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 10, 1917
DocketCiv. No. 1498.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 164 P. 53 (Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Rollins) 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
Pacific Gas & Electric Co. v. Rollins, 164 P. 53, 32 Cal. App. 782, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 537 (Cal. Ct. App. 1917).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an appeal from an order granting a new trial.

The action is in eminent domain to condemn a right of way for the conveyance of water. The plaintiff is engaged in the business of storing, selling, and distributing water, for power, mining, irrigating, domestic, and other purposes, and particularly for supplying counties, cities, and towns, etc., in the state of California, and the inhabitants thereof, with water for all of said purposes. To carry out these objects, it has constructed and now maintains and operates canals, reservoirs, dams, ditches, flumes, aqueducts, and all such other works, structures, machinery, and appliances necessary for the collection, storage, and distribution of water for the purposes mentioned. The plaintiff, it appears, was, at the time of the commencement of this proceeding, constructing a large storage reservoir in the county of Nevada, called “Lake Spaulding Reservoir,” through which the South Yuba River flows, and owns the right to divert and appropriate from said river at said reservoir eleven thousand or more miner’s inches of water, and has near the outlet of said reservoir constructed an aqueduct through which it proposes to conduct and convey approximately fourteen thousand miner’s inches, and, as soon as the right to do so has been acquired, will dis *784 charge the same into the channel of Bear River at the lower end of said aqueduct, thence through and along said channel of said Bear River to the plaintiff’s diverting dam. The right of way adopted by the plaintiff for conveying said water to said diverting dam includes the channel of that portion of said Bear River which is included between the lower end of said aqueduct and said diverting dam, and particularly that portion of the channel of said river which crosses the-defendants’ tract of land, of which a specific description is given in the complaint. The property which the plaintiff herein seeks to condemn and appropriate to its purposes, above mentioned, is the right of way for conveying said water in and along that portion of the channel of the said Bear River which is included between the most northerly boundary line of defendants’ said tract of land and the most southerly boundary thereof.

It appears from the complaint that the defendant, Erie Mining Company, had, prior to the commencement of this action, failed to pay the state license tax imposed upon it for the year 1905, as provided by law (Stats. 1905, p. 493), and as a consequence had forfeited its charter to the state on the fourteenth day of December, 1905. Hence, the action was brought against the directors of the defendant, Erie Mining-Company, as trustees of the corporation and its stockholders and members (Stats. 1907, p. 746, amendatory of the act of 1905, Stats. 1905, pp. 493, 494.)

Upon the complaint, setting forth sufficient facts, and the-denials of the answer, the cause was brought to issue and trial.

The jury found that the market value of the right, of way sought to be condemned was the sum of four thousand dollars, and that the damages which will be sustained by the defendants on account of injury to the remainder of the tract of land owned by the defendants, and of which the land sought to be condemned is a part, by reason of the taking- and the severing therefrom of the said right of way, would be one thousand dollars.

The court thereafter caused to be entered what is called in the record a “judgment.”

Within due time, the defendants served and filed a notice-of intention to move for a new trial upon the following-grounds : 1. Insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict *785 of the jury; 2. That the verdict was and is contrary to and against the evidence; 3. That the verdict is contrary to law; 4. Errors of law occurring at the trial and excepted to by defendants. The said notice stated that “said motion will be made upon a statement of the ease," etc.

The statement on the said motion was within due time prepared and served, and on the fourteenth day of September, 1915, the court duly allowed and settled the same. On the eleventh day of October, 1915, the matter of the motion for a new trial on the statement as allowed and settled was called for hearing. At said time, the defendants presented a motion for the amendment of said statement and specification of errors so as to make it appear in the appropriate place therein that “No findings were made or filed by the court and that findings were not waived by defendants, ’ ’ and to add to the assignments of errors the following: “That the judgment herein entered is contrary to law in this: That the court did not file its findings of fact upon the issues presented in the case other than the issue of compensation, as required by law; that the final order or decree of condemnation herein entered is contrary to law in this: That the court did not file its findings of fact upon the issues presented in the case other than the issue of compensation, as required- by law. ’ ’

To said motion the plaintiff interposed an objection upon the ground, among others, that no notice of said motion to amend had been given as provided by section 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The motion was denied by the court without prejudice to the right of the defendants to renew the same, and, against the objection of the plaintiff to any further delay, the court continued the further hearing of the motion for a new trial until the eighteenth day of October, 1915.

On the thirteenth day of October, 1915, the defendants served upon the plaintiff their notice to amend the said statement in the manner and particulars above mentioned. Said notice was accompanied and supported by an affidavit.

Upon hearing said motion as so presented, the court allowed the same over a number of specifically enumerated, objections by the plaintiff.

It is preliminarily objected by the appellant: 1. That the motion for a new trial as made did not set forth any grounds upon which the court could properly have granted the mo *786 tion. The argument in support of this proposition is that “the grounds as stated in the motion were too general and indefinite to enable the court to know wherein the evidence was insufficient to justify the verdict; . . . that it was incumbent upon respondents in making such motion to state specifically the grounds of the motion or refer to some paper on file wherein such grounds were specifically stated (citing Williams v. Hawley, 144 Cal. 97, [77 Pac. 762]; Hayne on New Trial and Appeal, sec. 164); that respondents did not state specifically the grounds upon which they relied, nor did they refer to any paper on file in the case wherein such grounds were stated.” 2. That the specification of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict is insufficient, in that it is too general, and fails to point out the particulars in which the evidence does not justify the verdict. *

As to the point first suggested: Section 657 of the Code of Civil Procedure designates the grounds upon which a motion for a new trial may be made. Among the grounds so specified is that of the insufficiency of the evidence to justify the verdict or other decision. Section 659 provides that the moving party must designate in his notice of intention to move for a new trial the grounds upon which the motion will be made.

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

Related

Digital Biometrics, Inc. v. Anthony
13 Cal. App. 4th 1145 (California Court of Appeal, 1993)
Barker v. McKellar
294 P. 196 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1930)
Beall v. Bekins Van & Storage Co.
166 P.2d 370 (California Court of Appeal, 1917)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 P. 53, 32 Cal. App. 782, 1917 Cal. App. LEXIS 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacific-gas-electric-co-v-rollins-calctapp-1917.