Teller v. Bay and River Dredging Co.

90 P. 942, 151 Cal. 209, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 415
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedMay 13, 1907
DocketSac. No. 1362.
StatusPublished
Cited by53 cases

This text of 90 P. 942 (Teller v. Bay and River Dredging 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
Teller v. Bay and River Dredging Co., 90 P. 942, 151 Cal. 209, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 415 (Cal. 1907).

Opinions

HENSHAW, J.

Plaintiff: brought his action to recover damages for the unlawful flooding of his lands and consequent injury'to his growing crop. The judgment of the trial court held the dredging company alone responsible and awarded damages. That company appeals, advancing two contentions: 1. That Henry Brack and his associates were alone responsible; and 2. That the court (the cause *210 was tried without a jury) adopted an incorrect rule for the measure of damages, the application of which rule resulted in an excessive award against appellant. -

Appellant entered into a contract with defendant Frankenheimer Brothers as follows: “We, the undersigned, do hereby agree with Frankenheimer Brothers that our 20-foot ditching dredger, shall on or before the 25th day of May, 1903, be at the point in the South Fork of the Mokelumne, to be designated by said Frankenheimer Bros., ready to commence work cutting through the Brack Tract levee at a point above stated, and shall so commence. It is understood that Frankenheimer Bros, are to pay $70 per day of 22 working hours for the sole use and service of above-named ditcher and full crew for the construction of two and one-half miles of ditch; that no other costs shall be assessed to them for any other service whatsoever. We hereby agree that our dredger shall be in first class working order, and that the crew will be efficient and diligent in the prosecution of the work, which we agree will be done in a good and workmanlike manner. The time for which $70 per day of 22 workin ;■ hours is to be paid shall commence when the ditcher starts cutting through the levee, and shall end when the ditcher shall have finished cutting its way out. It being further understood and agreed that if at any time during the progress of the work aforesaid, Frankenheimer Bros, are dissatisfied with the work done by said ditcher, or with the progress of such work, that they may immediately terminate this contract on paying to the undersigned the amount due to us, at the rate above mentioned, for the time during which said ditcher has been actually employed. Any overtime said ditcher may work to be at the above named rate of $70 per day of 22 hours.”

The dredger was at the point designated and duly commenced work. To excavate the ditch it was necessary that the dredger should pass from the river through the levee, and so on to the lands of defendants. This was accomplished without injury. Before cutting through the levee the crew of the dredger, under the direction of the captain, constructed a back dam behind the dredger to restrain the water ' from flowing in through the gap in the levee. The lumber which was used in building this dam was furnished by Frank *211 enheimer Bros. The ditch was constructed along a line indicated by the defendant Brack, who, with Frankenheimers, was a lessee of the land. The ditch work was completed and the dredger ready to leave on July 14th. Prior to this date the captain requested Brack to supply him with lumber with which to build a back dam as the dredger again cut the levee for its exit to the river. This lumber was furnished, but no dam was constructed, and before the dredger was taken out through the cut, the inflowing waters inundated a large portion of plaintiff’s land, completely destroying a growing crop of beans and potatoes.

We think, upon the face of this contract as well as from the evidence of the surrounding circumstances which was properly received, that the dredging company was an independent contractor and solely responsible for the negligent omission to construct the back dam. It is true that Frankenheimer Bros, were to have the “sole use and service of the ditcher and full crew,” but it does not appear that they had any control over the ditcher, its captain, and its crew, other than the general right which would belong to any owner to designate the place of performance and the general character of the work. The provision to the effect that if Frankenheimer Bros, became dissatisfied with the work or its progress they might terminate the contract, is at variance with the theory that they exercised any right of active control, since, if so, there would have been the power to employ and discharge men, and there would have been no occasion for dissatisfaction in this regard. The corporation contracted that the dredger would be manned by an efficient and diligent crew, and that the work should be done in a good and workmanlike manner. When attention is paid to the evidence of the attendant and surrounding circumstances, the conclusion that the dredging company was an independent contractor becomes the more irresistible. Before going to the work, the captain of the dredger received his instructions from an officer of the defendant company, by whom all of the crew were employed and paid. The dredger was entirely under the supervision and control of its captain, and he in turn received his instructions from the officers of the company, saving alone the general instruction as to the location and character of the work to be performed. The Frankenheimer Bros, neither had, nor *212 attempted to exercise, any power of hiring or discharging the members of the crew, and the court finds’ upon sufficient evidence that neither Brack nor the Frankenheimers had, or attempted to exercise, any control over the captain or crew of the dredger in the performance of the work, and that the appellant and its employees had full control of the work and were in no way subject to the direction of the other defendants' save as to the place where the canal was to be excavated. Moreover, upon the face of these facts it would be a conclusion amounting almost to absurdity to say that the Frankenheimers, who were shown to be no more than farmers and unskilled in dredging work and in the use of dredgers, should be held accountable for the necessary details in the proper performance of an undertaking such as this, and that it was, or ever could have been, contemplated that they, and not the dredging company, knew how the work should have been performed, and that a back dam was necessary for its proper performance, and that they had undertaken the legal responsibility of such construction. It is concluded upon this point, therefore, that the trial court was correct in attaching the responsibility to the appellant corporation. (Callan v. Bull, 113 Cal. 595, [45 Pac. 1017] ; Hedge v. Williams, 131 Cal. 459, [82 Am. St. Rep. 366, 63 Pac. 721, 64 Pac. 106] ; Frassi v. McDonald, 122 Cal. 401, [55 Pac. 139] ; Louthan v. Hewes, 138 Cal. 119, [70 Pac. 1065] ; Green v. Soule, 145 Cal. 97, [78 Pac. 337].)

It is contended that the court erred in arriving at the amount of damage sustained by plaintiff. In strictness the contention is not that the court erred in declaring the measure of damage, but that it erred in arriving at the damage under a statement of the true measure. The true measure of damage for the total destruction of a growing or standing crop is the value of the crop in the condition it was at the time and place of destruction.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P. 942, 151 Cal. 209, 1907 Cal. LEXIS 415, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/teller-v-bay-and-river-dredging-co-cal-1907.