Peterson v. Arland

141 P. 63, 79 Wash. 679
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1914
DocketNo. 11733
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 141 P. 63 (Peterson v. Arland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Peterson v. Arland, 141 P. 63, 79 Wash. 679 (Wash. 1914).

Opinion

Ellis, J.

This is an action for damages to the plaintiffs’ farm which, it is claimed, were caused by the negligence of the defendants in allowing their saw logs to form a jam and remain in the bed of the Wynooche river, backing up the water, diverting the channel against the plaintiffs’ land and eroding it. The Wynooche river is an 'unmeandered stream, not navigable for any purpose except for the floating of logs. The plaintiffs’ farm, which they have owned since 1909, comprises a tract of about 268 acres, located in the adjoining sections 28 and 88, township 18, north, Range 8, west W. M., in Chehalis county. The Wynooche river flows through the land in section 28 and along the westerly side of that section in 88. The land is, for the most part, low bottom land, and [682]*682this part of the river has, in years past, shifted its bed over an area of about 1,500 feet in width, there being two principal channels which it has occupied at different times since about the year 1882. These may be designated as the east and west channel. These channels separate at a point about 1,600 feet north of the line between sections 28 and 33, the east channel running in an irregular course generally from northwest to southeast, across the plaintiffs’ land, and the west channel, which, apparently, has always been the main channel, running almost parallel with the east channel from where they separate at the north for a distance of about 600 feet, when it takes an abrupt curve to the west for about 700 feet, and then runs in a long, regular curve to the southeast, the two channels uniting again about 1,500 feet south of the line between sections 28 and 33.

These two channels are separated by a chain of gravel bars and islands, some of them well above the bed of the stream, and covered with brush and small timber; others mere gravel bars. One of these gravel bars lies between the two channels where they separate; another immediately south of this at the point where the west channel takes its curve to the west, and the third is an island covered with brush and small timber at the upper end and is a gravel bar at the southerly end. This extends from about 300 feet north of the section line above referred to, to the point of union of the two channels about 1,500 feet south of that line. Between the first two gravel bars above mentioned, is a cross-channel about 150 feet wide, connecting the east and west channels, and between the middle gravel bar and the island is another cross-channel about 200 feet wide.

Since the evidence is in sharp conflict as to the past history of these channels, and as to where the main body of the water has run from time to time, and as to what jams have been formed by the logs of the defendant, and when, thus making all of these things questions for the jury, we shall not consume space by any attempt to make a complete, connected, or [683]*683critical analysis of the voluminous evidence. It will only be necessary to give a bare outline of that sustaining the plaintiffs’ theory, with which the jury evidently found.

It fairly appears that, for over ten years prior to January, 1911, the river had entirely abandoned the east channel, which had become completely filled with gravel and silt. In November, 1909, there had been some cutting into the northerly end of the east channel on account of a jam of logs, but there was no evidence that it was serious. About this time, the plaintiffs constructed a jetty extending out some distance across the northerly opening of the east channel. About January, 1911, the defendants, who are engaged in the logging business, were operating on the river above the point where the two channels separate, placing logs in the river and floating them down. About that time, the river again showed a tendency to cut into the east channel because of the filling of the west channel with the defendants’ logs. In the summer of 1911, the plaintiffs constructed from the old jetty a boom of logs, united with heavy wire or cable, southerly across this east channel to the northerly gravel bar; and subsequently, across this low bar and across the north cross channel, to the second bar, which is designated as a high gravel bar. Still later, they constructed a similar boom from this high bar across the second cross channel to the large island. They were assisted in a part of this work by the defendants.

The evidence tends to show that, between January, 1911, and March, 1913, successive jams were formed by the defendants’ logs; at first, in the west channel between the northerly gravel bar and the west bank. In November, 1912, the defendants ceased work above this point, and established a rollway for depositing logs in the river at a point on the west bank of the west channel, and on the plaintiffs’ land a short distance above the north end of the large island. There was evidence that they continued depositing logs in the river at [684]*684this landing when the water was too low to carry them out, so that they formed a pile or jam in the river between the west bank and the island, and extending a long distance down the westerly side of the island. At the upper end, between the island and the west bank of the river, some of the witnesses testified that these logs were piled to a height of forty or fifty feet above the bed of the river. Photographs in evidence indicate that condition at the time of trial. The evidence fairly shows that these logs obstructed the river at this point almost continuously from November, 1912, until the trial, in June, 1913. The water was backed up in the west channel, forming a large, stagnant pond. During this period, other loggers placed their logs in the river above the plaintiffs’ land and they floated down, stopping in this stagnant water, forming another large jam extending from where the old, or east channel branches off from the main, or west channel, southerly to a point opposite the high gravel bar. There was evidence, also, tending to show that this upper log jam would not have formed but for the fact that the lower jam, formed at, and south of, the defendants’ rollway, had so congested the water above it as to create an eddy in which the logs belonging to other persons stopped and gradually accumulated.

In the fall of 1912 and the spring of 1913, the water, so backed up, broke through the plaintiffs’ jetty and boom above described, washed through the upper opening of the east channel and the two cross channels, washed out the old filled east channel, and, being deflected against the east bank of this east channel, washed away several acres of the plaintiffs’ meadow along the east bank of the old east channel; and at the time of the trial, was endangering between fifty and sixty acres of meadow and orchard land of the plaintiffs along that side. As we have said, much of the evidence tending to establish these facts was flatly contradicted by the defendants’ witnesses; but, on this conflict, all of these facts were clearly questions for the jury. This is not seriously con[685]*685troverted. At the request of the defendants, special interrogatories were submitted to the jury, and answered, as follows:

“Question: How many acres of lands of plaintiffs do you find has been washed away since January 1st, 1911? Answer: Nine (9). Question: How many acres of land of plaintiffs do you find have been washed away by the negligent or wrongful acts of defendants since January 1st, 1911? Answer: Seven (7). Question: If any, how much do you find such land to have been reasonably worth? Answer: One hundred and seventy-two and 50-100 ($172.50) per acre.”

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Bluebook (online)
141 P. 63, 79 Wash. 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/peterson-v-arland-wash-1914.