Thomas v. Bolsa Land Co.

82 P. 207, 1 Cal. App. 335, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 39
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 20, 1905
DocketNo. 11.
StatusPublished

This text of 82 P. 207 (Thomas v. Bolsa Land Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Thomas v. Bolsa Land Co., 82 P. 207, 1 Cal. App. 335, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 39 (Cal. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

GRAY, P. J.

This action is brought to recover damages suffered by reason of a dam constructed by defendants, which had the effect to hack up and cause certain waters to sub-irrigate and injure and destroy the celery crop of plaintiffs. On a trial without a jury the plaintiffs had judgment for *336 $982 and costs. The defendants appeal from the judgment, and from an order denying them a new trial.

The plaintiff Thomas owns a certain forty acres of land in Orange County, upon which the plaintiffs, under an agreement between them for cropping the land on shares, had growing some eleven acres of celery. The story of injuries complained of is aptly told in the findings of the court, the important parts of which are as follows:—

“That the said land is situated about two miles from and above the dam described in said complaint and therein alleged to have been built by the Bolsa Land Company. That said land of the plaintiff Thomas was, as early as the year 1892, to some extent drained by the construction of ditches along and through it, and prior to the construction of said dam had been drained to such an extent as to render it tillable and susceptible of raising, and had raised, good crops of celery and other farm products. That prior to the building of said dam the ditches used in the drainage of the lands of the plaintiffs and other lands contiguous thereto emptied into a natural stream known as Freeman’s River, and from thence into Bolsa Chica Bay, and from said bay through a natural channel and outlet into the Pacific Ocean.
“That prior to the 1st day of October, 1899, the plaintiff D. H. Thomas had expended money in draining said land, and in preparing for, and in reducing the same to cultivation, and in cultivating said land, and in digging and keeping open ditches for the purpose of draining said land into said Bolsa Chica Bay, and had, prior to the building of said dam, drained said land and kept the water off and from under the same by running said water into Bolsa Chica Bay, from which bay it flowed out into the Pacific Ocean by a natural channel, carrying away the surplus water from said lands, by means of said ditches, river and bay and natural channel into the Pacific Ocean.
"That during the year 1899 the plaintiffs planted the land described in the complaint as belonging to the plaintiff Thomas with celery and other crops; that eleven acres of said land were planted -with celery, and that plaintiffs were the owners of said crop of celery. That before said celery was planted the land was properly prepared and put in a fit state of cultivation for the planting of celery, and said land was *337 cultivated in the usual and customary way. That the said ■crop of celery was growing and maturing up to about the 15th day of December, 1899, and was then worth in the field the sum of eleven hundred dollars, and was worth said sum when it was damaged and destroyed, as herein stated, and had it not been for the building of said dam and the consequent backing of the water in said bay and ditches said celery could have been sold at the time in the field and at harvest time for the sum of eleven hundred dollars.
"That said dam was constructed by the defendants at and in said Bolsa Chica Bay and at the place alleged in said complaint, and was an obstruction in and to the channel of said bay, and prevented the water of said bay from flowing through the natural channel and outlet, and out of the bay into the Pacific Ocean, and as maintained by the defendants the waters of the bay were dammed up and rose in said bay and in said ditches and filled up the drainage ditches and prevented the waters from said ditches and from the land of the plaintiffs from flowing away from said land into the Pacific Ocean, and caused said land to become subirrigated and the celery to become wet, damaged, decayed and destroyed, and to be'come unfit for market and unsalable, and the said crop of celery was lost to the plaintiffs, except a small portion thereof, which was sold for the sum of one hundred and eighteen dollars, which was all of said crop that could be sold, and was all that could be realized therefor.
‘ ‘ That about the 1st day of November, 1899, and after said crop of celery had been planted, and while it was growing on the lands of the plaintiffs, the said defendants built, erected, and maintained in and across said Bolsa Chica Bay, and across the channel thereof running into the Pacific Ocean, a riam extending above the high tide of the said ocean which was maintained and kept above the high tide up to the month of March, 1900.
“That for more than two years next prior to the building of said dam the land of the plaintiff Thomas had been cultivated and planted with celery, and good celery crops had been grown thereon, and were matured and harvested, and said crops kept in good condition and were fit for market, and were marketed, and sold for from one hundred to one hundred and twenty-five dollars per acre in the field.
*338 "That the ditches constructed for the purpose of draining the land of the plaintiff Thomas had not been used continuously and adversely for the period of five years before the commencement of this action.”

The first and main contention of appellants is that “plaintiffs showed no right to maintain their ditches and to drain water into the Freeman River and the bay through their ditches, and hence cannot complain of the obstruction to the flow of water therein.”

In considering this question, it may be well to notice in tb.e beginning that this is not an action in equity to restrain defendants from maintaining their dam. It is an action to recover only for an actual loss and injury to property suffered by plaintiffs because of this dam. The property injured consisted of a growing and nearly matured crop of celery. The soil upon which this celery was maturing had been cultivated, drained, and made fit for the growth of the crop at a time anterior to the construction of the dam, and the celery had been planted and was rapidly maturing at the time the <in.m was built. There is nothing to show that plaintiffs were not in every respect acting strictly within their rights at every step they took in the draining and further preparation of this land, as well as in planting and bringing' into existence the property destroyed by the subsequent acts of defendants. So far as the drainage ditches are concerned, the map in evidence shows that the river and Bolsa Chica Bay were the natural conduits of the drainage from this land, and that if the land was drained at all it must have been by ditches, either into the river or into the bay direct, or into some other slough or stream connecting with the bay, and of necessity the dam would have affected disastrously any system of drainage that the plaintiffs could have reasonably adopted. The plaintiffs were in possession of a drainage system to the river. No part of this system was upon the lands of defendants, and it connected with a natural water course. From this possession a presumption of title and right of possession arises, It cannot be said that the use of this drainage system invaded any right of the defendants—at least, not up to the time of the construction of the dam.

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Bluebook (online)
82 P. 207, 1 Cal. App. 335, 1905 Cal. App. LEXIS 39, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thomas-v-bolsa-land-co-calctapp-1905.