Yolo Water & Power Co. v. Hudson

186 P. 772, 182 Cal. 48, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 482
CourtCalifornia Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1920
DocketS. F. No. 9087.
StatusPublished
Cited by49 cases

This text of 186 P. 772 (Yolo Water & Power Co. v. Hudson) 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
Yolo Water & Power Co. v. Hudson, 186 P. 772, 182 Cal. 48, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 482 (Cal. 1920).

Opinion

LENNON, J.

Appellant is a corporation engaged in selling water for purposes of irrigation. It obtains the water which it sells from Clear Lake, in Lake County. Appellant proposed to increase its supply of water by raising the surface of the lake by means of a dam to a height of ten feet above the mean low-water mark. In accomplishing this purpose the various tracts of land adjoining the lake would be flooded to the ten-foot level. This action was accordingly brought for the purpose of condemning and taking in fpe the lands below the proposed ten-foot level, these lands being portions of larger tracts belonging to respondents. The jury returned a verdict, finding for appellant and awarding to respondents a sum representing the value of the lands taken and the damages accruing to the remaining lands by reason of the severance. The appeal is based upon alleged errors occurring at the trial and upon the contention that the amounts of the awards are not justified by the evidence.

The court permitted witness Rice to testify over objection that certain land known as the Mendenhall land situated in the vicinity of the lands herein involved had a market value of one thousand dollars per acre. [1] EVen if it be conceded that this was error, still it cannot be held to have been prejudicial. Although he stated that the Mendenhall lands were similar in location, productivity, and fertility to the lands in controversy, nevertheless the witness valued the latter lands at but $450 per acre. It can hardly be said with any assurance, therefore, that the ruling affected even the opinion óf the witness as to the market value of the property now in suit. Moreover, when it is considered that the value placed by the jury upon the lands condemned was only $160 per acre, it cannot be said that the verdict was influenced by the ruling or that the admission of the testimony resulted in a miscarriage of justice. Complaint is also made because the trial court over objection permitted witness Saylor to testify to the value of a crop of barley raised by him on the land of respondent Riffe. In view of the mass of testimony in *51 favor of the verdict, the possibility that the evidence so admitted was prejudicial is so remote as to warrant the conclusion that it did not affect the award.

Appellant claims that the trial court erred in instructing the jury at the request of respondents in the following terms: “You are instructed that the value of the land for any special purpose may be taken into account as one of the elements to show its market value, and if these lands of defendants be specially adapted for reservoir purposes,- its value for this use should be considered as one of the elements of the market value of the land sought to be condemned. ’ ’ [2] It appears, however, that appellant requested the court to give substantially the same instruction in these words: “Evidence of value for reservoir purposes may be considered as one of the elements tending to show market value.” [3] A party cannot complain of an instruction given at his own request or of an error in an instruction given at the instance of his adversary when he requests a substantially similar one. (14 R. C. L. 815, and cases cited.)

Appellant also criticises the instruction of the court directing the jury to exclude the consideration of benefits, if any, derived by respondents from the construction of the reservoir. Conceding the error in the instruction, it was of course harmless if there was no evidence from which the jury might reasonably have found that the lands of respondents would in fact be benefited by the construction of the reservoir. The only benefit which appellant could have desired the jury to consider was the benefit, if any, to be expected from a possible prevention of floods above the ten-foot level. This, of course, could only be considered a benefit in case there was danger of damage by overflow above the ten-foot level under normal or natural conditions. The evidence shows that the lands between the ten and twelve foot levels had very rarely been inundated, and that the result of the overflow was to leave on the land small deposits of rich sediments, the effect of which was to add to the fertility of the soil. There is no evidence indicating that these rare inundations had ever occurred at a season of the year when the land was so far under cultivation that injury or damage to the crops resulted. [4] It is clear, therefore, that the instruction could not," and did not, mislead the jury to the prejudice of appellant.

*52 Appellant also complains of portions of the tenth and twelfth instructions in so far as they declared that the jury were authorized to consider in estimating the injury to the lands not taken the “danger, if any, from underground seepage or from floods likely to be caused .by an overflow above the ten-foot level proposed by plaintiff.” [5] Where land is taken by eminent domain and the manner of its use is such as to naturally and necessarily subject the land not taken to the danger of seepage and flood, a depreciation in the value of such remaining land caused by such danger of seepage and flood is a proper element of damage. (See, generally, Colusa etc. R. R. Co. v. Leonard, 176 Cal. 109, [167 Pac. 878].) If, therefore, there was evidence upon which to base such an instruction, respondents were entitled to have the jury instructed to consider the damage resulting from such danger of seepage and flood as they might fairly consider a natural and necessary or reasonable incident to the raising of the water. It is objected, in the first place, that it was not sufficiently impressed upon the jury that the only danger which they could consider was one which was a natural and necessary or reasonable incident to the raising of the water. Torn from their context and viewed alone, it cannot be denied that the instructions in question are open to criticism on the ground stated. But it is to be noted that at the plaintiff’s request the trial court instructed the jury as follows: ‘ The court instructs the jury that in assessing the damages to the market value of the property not taken, you should not take into consideration anything as an element of damages, which is remote or imaginary or uncertain or speculative, even though mentioned or testified about by witnesses, but the only element which you should take into consideration as tending to reduce the market value are those which are appreciable and substantial and which will actually lessen the market value of said property.” At the request of defendants the court gave this further instruction: “In assessing . damages for land taken by eminent domain for the construction of a reservoir, all damages, present and prospective, that are the natural, necessary, or reasonable incidents to the raising of the water on the land of defendants must be assessed in your verdict, and no subsequent recovery for such injuries can be allowed.” [6] Considering the charge of the court as a whole, and particularly the instructions quoted, *53 we are convinced that the language employed in the instructions complained of was not such as to render it probable that the jury was misled to the prejudice of appellant. It is next contended that there was no evidence upon which to base these instructions.

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Bluebook (online)
186 P. 772, 182 Cal. 48, 1920 Cal. LEXIS 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yolo-water-power-co-v-hudson-cal-1920.