Rudel v. County of Los Angeles

50 P. 400, 118 Cal. 281, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 759
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1897
DocketL. A. No. 358
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 50 P. 400 (Rudel v. County of Los Angeles) 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
Rudel v. County of Los Angeles, 50 P. 400, 118 Cal. 281, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 759 (Cal. 1897).

Opinion

SEARLS, C.

This action was brongbt to restrain the defendants, wbo (except the defendant, H. Dovey, as to wbom the appeal bas been dismissed) are the duly elected, qualified, and acting supervisors of the county of Los Angeles, from diverting the waters of the Rubio cañón and causing the same to flow into and tbrougb Eaton canon.

The cause was tried by the court without the intervention of a jury, and upon the findings in writing made, a decree was entered restraining the defendants as prayed for in the complaint.

Defendants appeal from the judgment, and the cause comes up on the judgment-roll, without a statement or bill of exceptions.

From the findings it appears that plaintiff is seised in fee and is in possession of that certain tract of land situate in the county of Los Angeles, state of California, particularly described as the west one-balf of the southeast quarter of section seven (7) in township one (1) south, range eleven (11) west, San Bernar-dino meridian.

“The Eaton canon is a canon making out of the San Gabriel mountains, lying about four miles north of the above described land. That said cañón during the rainy 'season delivers a large volume of water upon the foothills and plains at the foot of said mountains, and from the foot of the said mountains said waters flow by a natural channel down to and upon the plaintiff’s lands, entering the same by a natural channel at the northwest corner thereof, flowing tbrougb the same by said [284]*284natural channel to a point at the southeasterly corner thereof, and the said channel in each year when the rainfalls are abundant, is washed out and widened by the said waters flowing therein. Said channel is sufficient to carry the water naturally flowing in said channel during the rainy season, but is not sufficiently large to carry any additional water which should be turned into said Eaton cañón, or the stream leading therefrom, and is insufficient to carry the volume of water which will be turned into the said stream and added thereto by the acts of the defendants hereinafter set forth.

“Said channel so existing on the land of plaintiff is with difficulty controlled by the plaintiff, and any augmentation to the water therein flowing, in the manner as hereinafter proposed and threatened by the defendants, would render it impossible for plaintiff to control said channel and keep the waters within the bounds thereof. Plaintiff has buildings situated upon said tract of land near said channel, consisting of residence and winery, which would be endangered by the addition of any volume of water flowing in said channel; if any qonsiderable volume of water be turned therein there would be very great danger of said residence and winery being washed out and destroyed.”

“Should the defendants turn the water into the stream above the lands of the plaintiff, in the manner as hereinafter indicated, and as threatened by them, the said volume of water thus augmented would shift and change its channel from time to time, and would cause the water to flow over the plaintiff's land in various directions, and in a volume not naturally flowing therein, and would wash out and. destroy a large portion of the vines on the banks of the said channel and along the lines of the new channel that would be made by the augmented water, and would spread over, overflow, and destroy the vineyard of the plaintiff existing at the mouth of and below the natural channel on his said lands, and would cause the plaintiff’s lands to be greatly depreciated in value and irreparably injured.

“5. The Rubio canon is a cañón flowing out of the said San Gabriel mountains, and distant about one mile west from the said Eaton cañón. The said Rubio cañon is a dry canon at all seasons of the year, except during the rainy season and for a short [285]*285period thereafter, but during the rainy season a large volume of water flows down the said canon and upon the mesa and plains at the foot of said cañón, and the waters^ after passing from the cañón, flow naturally in a southerly direction across the plains toward Eaton cañón wash.

"6. During the month of August, 1895, the board of supervisors of this county, in pursuance of an act entitled 'An act to provide for the formation of protection districts in the various counties of this state, for the improvement and rectification of the channels of innavigable streams and watercourses, for the prevention or overflow thereof, by widening, deepening, and straightening, and otherwise improving the same, and to authorize the boards of supervisors to levy and collect assessments from the property benefited to pay the expenses of the same/ approved March 27, 189⅝ (Stats. 1895, p. 248), established 'Rubio Cañón Protection District/ and in pursuance of said act were, at the time of the commencement of this action, in the act of constructing a catch-basin about one mile below the point where Rubio cañón emerges from the mountains, and a ditch or canal running from said basin into the Eaton canon wash and in .a different channel than the natural channel of Rubio canon, for the purpose of controlling and conducting the waters which, in times of heavy rains, flow down Rubio canon and spread out upon the land at and below the mouth of the cañón and cause great damage to a large and highly improved section of country which forms said 'protection district/ which said canal or ditch would fif constructed) discharge its waters into the Eaton canon wash at a point about three miles above the land of plaintiff; said point of discharge being no nearer the land of plaintiff than the natural point of discharge of • said waters. Plaintiff’s land is outside of the boundaries of said protection district.

"The waters from Rubio cañón naturally flow toward Eaton canon wash, and whenever there is a sufficiently heavy rainfall, under natural conditions, a small portion of such water, if not interrupted or turned aside by artificial means, flows to and into said Eaton canon wash several miles above plaintiff’s land. Except during and immediately after extraordinary and unusually heavy rains the waters of Rubio cañón, owing to the porous nature of the soil over which it flows, and the broad surface over [286]*286which it spreads, under natural conditions, all sinks in the ground and none of it reaches Baton canon wash; and during and immediately after such rains almost all of it sinks in the ground, and only a very small portion of it reaches Baton canon wash.

“If the ditch proposed to be made by the defendants is made as proposed, it will carry substantially all the waters of the Ru-bio cañón away from its natural channel and into said Eaton canon -wash above plaintiffs land, and will materially increase the size of the stream in Eaton cañón wash as it flows over plaintiffs land above what would flow therein if said ditch is not made, and will thereby seriously injure plaintiffs land by destroying and washing away the soil thereof. The amount of such injury cannot be accurately ascertained nor estimated in advance.”

It is proper to observe at the outset that, while the sixth finding of the court describes the defendants as having established “Rubio Canon Protection District,” under and pursuant to the act of March 27, 1895 (Stats. 1895, p. 248), etc., yet in the pleadings there was and is no justification under the protection district act; no issue was made, no defense interposed, upon that ground.

The sixth finding is, therefore, so far as it relates to the Rubio Cañón Protection District, outside of the pleadings and issues of the case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 P. 400, 118 Cal. 281, 1897 Cal. LEXIS 759, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rudel-v-county-of-los-angeles-cal-1897.