People v. Hawley

279 P. 136, 207 Cal. 395, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 509
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 24, 1929
DocketL. A. 9173; L. A. 9174; L. A. 9175
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 279 P. 136 (People v. Hawley) 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
People v. Hawley, 279 P. 136, 207 Cal. 395, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 509 (Cal. 1929).

Opinion

CURTIS, J.

These three actions were tried at the same time and were submitted for decision to the trial court upon the same evidence. They are before us upon three separate appeals, but upon one and the same transcript of the evidence. It is conceded that the facts governing these three cases, as well as the legal questions involved, are closely related, and that all three appeals may properly be decided in one opinion.

The first of these actions (No. 9173) was instituted by the city attorney of the City of Los Angeles under section 731 of the Code of Civil Procedure in the name of the People of the State of California to abate an alleged public nuisance maintained by the defendants in said action. While there are other persons named in said actions as defendants the principal defendant in interest is the Los Angeles Rock & Gravel Company. The defendant H. W. Hawley has no *398 interest in said action, except as a stockholder in, and president of, said company. The other defendant is an employee or subcontractor of the company. The nuisance sought to be abated by this action was the result of certain operations and excavations then being carried on by the Los Angeles Rock & Gravel Company in the bed of the Arroyo Seco in the City of Los Angeles. The Arroyo Seco, as its name signifies, is a dry watercourse. It has a defined channel with steep banks, and while dry a large portion of the year, in the winter months, and particularly in periods of heavy rainfall, a large amount of flood and storm waters flows in its channel. These waters originate from an extensive watershed in the mountains north and east of the City of Los Angeles and are conducted through and in said watercourse in a southeasterly direction until they reach the Los Angeles River. The bed and banks of the Arroyo Seco are of loose earth, sand, rock and gravel, and by reason of the large amount of flood water at times flowing therein and the character of the materials comprising its bed and banks, said flood waters cause the said banks and bed thereof to be undermined and washed away whenever the natural conditions of the surface and contour of said bed and banks are destroyed by digging, excavating or otherwise removing the material thereof. The nature and character of the nuisance complained of in the complaint were, first: The smoke, noise and dust created by a steam shovel engaged in excavation of the lands of the Los Angeles Rock & Gravel Company, situated in the bed and along the banks of the Arroyo Seco; second, the nuisance resulting from stagnant pools of water which had gathered in certain excavations made by said company on its said lands, which pools of water when left standing bred- mosquitoes and were otherwise detrimental to the health of those residing in the near vicinity, and, third, the danger from flood waters resulting from the excavations already made by said company and those which said company planned to make in the future. In its decree the trial court ordered the stagnant water complained of drained off or otherwise disposed of and the holes or depressions wherein this water had gathered filled up and the surface thereof made level with the adjoining land, and made the future operations of the company dependent upon a compliance with said requirements, and the substitution *399 of an electric for a steam shovel, with the excavations to be kept sprinkled to avoid the smoke, dust and noise complained of. Said decree further provided: “That said defendants shall at all times make any and all excavations permissible hereunder in such manner as to provide a channel in the bed of the Arroyo Seco sufficient to carry a flow of 19,000 second-feet of water, and in such manner as to provide complete and adequate protection to property adjoining said channel from erosion thereof, and so as to afford subjacent and lateral support thereto.” As to this part of the decree the defendants make no complaint. The court further found, however, finding XI: “ That the defendants are the owners of all the land described in the complaint and amendments thereto and Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, and designated as the ‘McNeil Lease.’ That defendants are in possession of said ‘McNeil Lease’ and by the terms of said lease have the right to excavate all rock, sand and gravel upon it during the period of said lease, in accordance with the terms thereof, without restriction. That said lease expires on September 16th, 1925. That according to the terms of said lease all rock, sand and gravel remaining upon said leased land at the expiration of said lease on September 16th, 1925, will be the property of the lessor, and will be forever lost to and forfeited by said lessee, the defendants herein.”

Finding XIV: ‘ ‘ The property constituting the McNeil lease described in the complaint and Plaintiff’s Exhibit 1, both inside and outside of the channel of the Arroyo, is composed of loose rock, sand and gravel of the same general nature and character as that of all of the land along the bed and' banks of the Arroyo Seco. The court finds there is no objection to the excavation of that portion of the McNeil lease constituting the channel of. the Arroyo Seco, provided such excavation in, along and adjacent to such channel is of sufficient width and depth to carry at least 19',000 second-feet of water. The court further finds that no regulation of the excavation of the McNeil lease outside of the Arroyo Seco channel by means of concrete walls or otherwise, can be made which will afford protection to property and streets adjoining the McNeil lease outside of the channel, equal to or superior to the protection now afforded by the loose rock, sand and gravel which defendants propose to excavate down *400 to the level of the channel of the Arroyo Seco, unless enjoined by the court.”

Predicating its judgment upon these findings the court further decreed that the defendants, their successors and assigns, be restrained and enjoined from making any excavations in the earth, rock, sand and gravel constituting the flat or table land known as the McNeil lease, which said land constitutes the easterly bank of the Arroyo Seco.

To this portion of the judgment the defendants make most vigorous protest, and from this portion, and this portion alone, have they appealed as appears from their notice of appeal herein.

The first point made by appellants in their appeal is that the court is without jurisdiction to render any injunction whatever absolutely enjoining and prohibiting defendants from excavating upon their said lands. They base this contention upon the fact that the action is instituted and prosecuted by the city attorney of the City of Los Angeles in the name of the People of the State of California solely under the authority conferred upon said official by section 731 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and that this section of the code confers no jurisdiction upon the court in which an action is brought under its authority to issue an injunction. In other words, appellants contend that the sole power given by the court in such an action is to abate a public nuisance, and that it confers no power upon the court to issue an injunction. It is true that this section of the code refers only to an action brought “to abate a public nuisance,” but. it is often, and we might say generally, necessary in order to abate a nuisance to direct that those guilty of maintaining the same be enjoined from doing certain acts, which, if done, would amount to a continuance or maintenance of such nuisance.

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Bluebook (online)
279 P. 136, 207 Cal. 395, 1929 Cal. LEXIS 509, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-hawley-cal-1929.