Salstrom v. Orleans Bar Gold Mining Co.

96 P. 292, 153 Cal. 551, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 497
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 12, 1908
DocketS.F. No. 4652.
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 96 P. 292 (Salstrom v. Orleans Bar Gold Mining Co.) 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
Salstrom v. Orleans Bar Gold Mining Co., 96 P. 292, 153 Cal. 551, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 497 (Cal. 1908).

Opinion

ANGELLOTTI, J.

This is an appeal from a judgment and an order denying a new trial in an action brought by plaintiffs for damages to their land, alleged to have been caused by unlawful acts of defendant in conducting its hydraulic mining operations. There was a verdict in plaintiffs’ favor for nine thousand dollars. On motion for new *553 trial, the trial court ordered that the motion be granted unless plaintiffs remitted all over and above seven thousand dollars, and costs of suit, in which event the motion was to be'denied. This plaintiffs did by filing their written consent to the modification of the judgment within the time and in the manner prescribed by the trial court.

Plaintiffs were the owners of a tract of land containing about seventy-eight acres, in Humboldt County, extending on the easterly side to and there fronting on Camp Creek for a considerable distance. The defendant owned land adjoining plaintiffs’ land on the creek frontage and running northerly along said creek for- a considerable distance above plaintiffs’ lands. The theory of plaintiffs’ case as shown by the complaint was that defendant, in making a large prospect-cut in its land opposite plaintiffs’ land, had thrown a large quantity of gravel, boulders, and earth into the creek, forming a bar therein, and that in operating a placer mine above plaintiffs’ premises, it had caused a large amount of “boulders, gravel, detritus and debris” to be placed in the waters of Camp Creek, which were prevented from being carried down said creek past plaintiffs’ land solely by reason of said bar, the result being that the waters of the creek were diverted from their natural and ordinary channel and thrown with great force against and upon plaintiffs’ land, washing away a portion thereof, with a growing crop of grain thereon, and covering such portion with a deep deposit of gravel and boulders.

1. There was evidence sufficient to sustain the conclusion of the jury that the injury to plaintiffs’ land and crop was solely due to the acts of defendant so alleged in the complaint. This was not questioned in defendant’s opening brief, which was devoted exclusively to the discussion of alleged errors in instructions given to the jury, and the claim that the damages awarded were excessive. An attempt is made in the closing brief to show that the evidence demonstrates that the injury was in part caused by mining operations by plaintiffs themselves and others, but the record shows that the evidence was conflicting on this proposition, and that there was evidence sufficient to warrant the jury in finding that the acts of plaintiffs and others in no degree contributed to such injury.

2. Complaint is made of the following instruction given to the jury at plaintiffs’ request:

*554 “One engaged in mining has a right to deposit his tailings "in a running stream to a reasonable extent, but he has no right 'to flood a lower owner’s land, and by depositing tailings and •debris thereon to substantially injure or ruin the latter’s ¡property although he may have used all reasonable means to prevent such damage. No person or corporation has a right, ■directly or indirectly, to cover his neighbor’s land with mining ■debris, sand, and gravel or other material so as to injure or ■damage the same. So I instruct you that if you find upon the evidence that the plaintiffs are in the possession of the land described in the complaint and were in such possession at and during the times therein mentioned, and if you further find that while they were in such possession the defendant caused to be placed in the channel of Camp Creek and upon the lands of plaintiffs a large obstruction, by placing in said creek and upon said land a large mass of earth, gravel, rocks, and boulders which caused the waters of said creek to flow upon and against plaintiffs’ land, washing it away and damaging and injuring it, and if you further find that said defendant, after making such obstruction commenced mining operations by the hydraulic process upon its land and above plaintiffs’ land and in so doing caused to be placed into Simm’s Gulch a large mass of earth detritus, debris, gravel, rocks, and boulders, tailings from its mine, and if you further find that said detritus, debris, gravel, rocks, and boulders came down said gulch into Camp Creek and were thence carried by the -waters of Camp Creek down stream to said obstruction and were there by reason thereof diverted to and upon the said land of plaintiffs, damaging and injuring the same, then you should render a verdict for the plaintiffs.”

It is said that a portion of this instruction was outside the issues, but we think the whole thereof was pertinent to the issues and in line, with the theory of plaintiff’s case which was that by reason of the bar placed by defendant in the creek, and its deposit of debris in the creek above such bar, it caused a 'portion of plaintiffs’ soil to wash away, and deposited on the subsoil remaining and on other adjoining land of plaintiffs a large amount of debris.

The instruction is not objectionable in that it ignores the question of negligence on defendant’s part. It is thoroughly established that no matter how carefully the miner may con- *555 ■duet Ms operations, he has no lawful right to flood or wash away his neighbor’s land, or deposit mining debris thereon, to its injury, and that if by the deposit of mining debris in the stream he causes such a result, he is liable for the resulting damage. The fact that he uses all the care for the protection ■of his neighbor’s property consistent with the successful conduct of his mining operations is immaterial. (See 2 Lindley on Mines, sec. 843 ; Hill v. Smith, 27 Cal. 481 ; Robinson v. Black Diamond Coal Co., 57 Cal. 412, [40 Am. Rep. 118] ; Hobbs v. Amador etc. Co., 66 Cal. 161, [4 Pac. 1147] ; Fitzpatrick v. Montgomery, 20 Mont. 181, [63 Am. St. Rep. 62, 50 Pac. 416].) The instruction was not objectionable on the ground that it was argumentative, or contradictory and confusing.

3. It cannot be held that the evidence was not sufficient to support a conclusion that the damage to plaintiffs amounted to nine thousand dollars, which was the amount of the verdict. The evidence on this point was given entirely by plaintiffs’ witnesses, defendant making no attempt to contradict such witnesses, and contenting itself with its effort to show that the damage was not caused by its acts. There is some difference between counsel on this appeal as to the quantity of land destroyed and injured, defendant’s counsel asserting that only some three acres were thus affected, while plaintiffs declare the quantity to have been over eight acres. There was ample evidence to sustain plaintiffs’ counsel in this regard. Plaintiff Jonas. Salstrom testified that the portion of his land .available for agricultural purposes and which he was engaged in farming extended to a certain line pointed out by him on the ground to a surveyor, and that the soil so available had been washed away as a consequence of defendant’s acts to the present line of his agricultural land. The surveyor tes- ' tilled that the amount of land between these lines was 5.10 acres.

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Bluebook (online)
96 P. 292, 153 Cal. 551, 1908 Cal. LEXIS 497, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/salstrom-v-orleans-bar-gold-mining-co-cal-1908.