By this action plaintiff procured a permanent injunction to abate á storm water nuisance resulting from the city’s causing ponded waters on its streets to be discharged upon plaintiff’s land. The bases of appeal are insufficiency of the complaint, variance of findings from the pleading, defendants’ prescriptive, easement, laches, statutory limitation and the court’s failure to find on the issue of plaintiff’s negligence in grading its tract.
Since 1902 plaintiff has been the owner of a parcel of 12 acres in the Los Angeles industrial district. It lies adjacent to East Seventh Street which bounds it on the north. Its easterly line is practically parallel to Boyle Avenue which extends northerly across the city. Between the avenue and the premises of plaintiff is a residential area within which, in 1912, the city paved two cul-de-sac streets, namely Atlantic and Garnett, which extend the 500 feet from Boyle to plaintiff’s land and which are a short distance from the Los Angeles River. They are 40 feet in width, are 10 feet higher at the avenue than at the easterly line of plaintiff’s acres, and the surface of each is more than two feet lower than the contiguous ground. Thus with the aid of sidewalks, curbs and gutters the streets have served to collect the storm waters from the area and by reason of the two per cent declivity such waters flow rapidly westward to be discharged upon plaintiff’s tract through two 14 inch steel conduits or culverts which were installed by defendants in 1912 and maintained without objection from plaintiff until 1940.
During the 28 years following the paving of the two streets, the surface of the 12 acres was “broken and uneven and abounded with deep holes and hollows” into which the storm waters flowed. There they were quickly absorbed into the gravel strata without detriment to the land. But in the summer of 1940 plaintiff obtained a permit from the city to grade and improve its realty. It removed the hills, filled the holes and leveled the depressions so that the surface of the tract was reduced to a uniform grade sloping from east to west. Thereupon, plaintiff gave notice to defendants that in the land’s improved condition the discharge of storm waters would cause serious erosion of the surface and great damage to plaintiff. Such protest was ignored by defendants who continued thereafter to discharge the collected storm waters from the two streets as they had done since 1912. The result was that the improved surface was eroded, channels and gullies were cut across the surface and it is certain that this *485 would continue with increasing detriment should the waters collected on the streets be forever discharged thereon. In its treatment of this subject the trial court determined that while the storm waters were openly and notoriously discharged upon the parcel for more than 20 years, yet at no time was such discharge caused by defendants adversely or under claim of right and, hence, defendants have neither by uninterrupted enjoyment nor otherwise acquired an easement or any prescriptive right in plaintiff’s land.
Upon these facts appropriately pleaded, by its complaint plaintiff demanded that defendants be required to make other provision for disposing of the collected storm waters and that they be permanently enjoined from allowing such waters to be discharged upon the 12 acres. Judgment for permanent injunction was entered as demanded by plaintiff and defendants were ordered to remove the steel conduits which protrude for more than 20 feet upon plaintiff’s land.
The complaint is sufficient. A cause of action for injunction is alleged. The property of plaintiff was not expropriated by the city directly or in reverse. The power of a city to proceed under eminent domain does not convert its wrongful trespass into an act of virtue because municipal agencies have precipitated accumulated storm waters upon the land of another.
(Conniff
v.
San Francisco,
A municipality is not exempt from liability for a trespass caused by its corporate act. It is liable for the damage caused by the dumping of storm water onto privately owned realty even though each act in constructing a street improvement is done according to statute.
(Stanford
v.
San Francisco, 111
Cal. 198 [
An allegation that defendants were negligent in creating the nuisance was not essential to the statement of a cause of action. A trespass voluntarily committed causes no less detriment than one resulting from neglect. Defendants achieved exactly what they set out to do, namely, to send ponded flood waters from public streets onto plaintiff’s private acres.
Neither is the complaint lacking in equity because of its failure to allege irreparable injury. The facts recited allege a nuisance per se which entitles plaintiff to an injunction. The possibility that a continued trespass might ripen into a servitude is sufficient (Learned v. Castle, supra.)
To File a Claim, Not Required In Trespass Cases
It is a vain contention that the complaint is insufficient because of the absence of an allegation of a compliance with the charter requirement (sec. 376) that a claim must first be presented to the city. Such provision applies only to claims for money. Since it is in derogation of common right it must be strictly construed.
(Giuricevic
v.
Tacoma,
*487 No Variance of Findings From Pleading
In contending that the findings do not follow the complaint appellants direct our attention to the following allegation of the complaint:
"Defendants have installed . . . and now maintain without legal right and without permission ... of plaintiff conduits or culverts for carrying off water from said streets. ’ ’ Appellants argue that this language was intended to mean that defendants have maintained the conduits without the permission of plaintiff since 1912. The complaint in its entirety completely confutes such construction. The facts found are that from 1912 until 1940, by reason of the nature of the terrain of the tract, no detriment was caused by the storm waters. It was only after the land had been leveled that plaintiff withdrew the license theretofore enjoyed by the city and demanded that its nuisance be abated. Therefore, the discharge of the waters was "without the permission of plaintiff” only after it had protested. In the light of such facts the declaration that "defendants now maintain without permission of plaintiff conduits for conducting the storm water onto plaintiff’s land” does not require any finely filtered legalistic logic to unfold its meaning, namely, that the nuisance is maintained at the present time.
The claims that the city’s agencies entered upon the property in the course of public works in 1912 and that the conduits have since 1912 been "maintained openly, notoriously and against the will of plaintiff and without his consent,” are not supported by any evidence in the record and the finding is to the contrary. Moreover, it was the duty of the court to find in favor of plaintiff since there were no facts to compel the conclusion that the city’s use of the 12 acres as a dumping ground for the storm waters was adverse prior to December, 1940.
(Brandon
v.
Umpqua Lumber & T. Co.,
Action Not Barred
The action was barred neither by laches nor statutory limitation. Should we consider the protest of December,
*488
1940, as the date on which the canse of action arose, only seventeen months elapsed prior to the filing of the complaint herein. There is no such period of limitation prescribed by statute to bar an action for the recovery of an interest in land. (Sec. 321, Code Civ. Proe.) Laches is a fact to be determined by the court from the evidence. No date was established on which the cause of action arose. After the license to discharge the ponded waters upon plaintiff’s tract had been revoked no occasion for legal action could have arisen until defendants should cause other flood waters to pour upon the land. There is no direct evidence of the date upon which that event occurred. In the absence of such proof it is assumed that the court below drew inferences from established facts to warrant the finding that plaintiff was free of laches. The maintenance of the conduits to discharge the waters onto plaintiff’s acres was a continuing potential wrong which ripened into actuality when the storm waters poured through. Having never asserted a claim of right adversely to plaintiff’s title prior to filing their answer, no period of prescription ever started to run.
(Livermore
v.
Beal,
Moreover, the plea of laches must fail where no damages are proved to have been suffered by the pleader. Conceding that defendants relied upon the perpetual acquiescence of plaintiff in allowing the discharge of the storm waters, they neither expended money in improvements upon the land, paid taxes thereon, nor made any other investment by reason of such reliance either before or after plaintiff’s protest. Neither had they on any account suffered detriment by reason of plaintiff’s delay in filing suit. (19 Am.Jur. 343, sec. 498.) This fact alone is sufficient to defeat the plea. (30 C.J.S. 541.)
No Easement Established
No easement or prescriptive right was established. Titles to lands are not readily snuffed out by the brandishing of a slight presumption or by deductions from wishful thinking. Since the nomad ceased from his wanderings the progress of man has been reassured by his consciousness that his ownership of land was by the custom of his tribe or by the
*489
law of his state rendered secure against the predatory rapacity of the greedy and the malevolent. An owner cannot be disseized of his land or be deprived of its free enjoyment without fair consideration.
(Niles
v.
City of Los Angeles,
Gist op This Action, To Abate a Nuisance
In support of their claims (a) that they hold a prescriptive right in the 12 acres and (b) that the action is barred, defendants contend that the installation of the conduits was a part of a completed public improvement. They pursue their logic by invoking the application of authorities which are not in point and by boldly asserting that the action arose out of the mere presence of the two conduits projecting from the streets onto the land involved. If this action had been brought solely to effect the removal of the steel pipes it would have slight basis for recovery. They might have been by plaintiff severed at the property line after a reasonable delay following the protest. The gist of this action is the abatement of the nuisance created by the discharge of the accumulated waters onto plaintiff’s land. Should such flow cease the damage caused by the presence of the pipes would be darmum absque injuria.
*490 Appellants’ Authorities
The cases cited treat of those situations in which public corporations or other agencies of the State were vested with the right to invoke the power of eminent domain and which, without condemnation proceedings, entered upon private lands, completed public works thereon and used them for a time with the acquiescence of the owner of the premises. Equity denies relief under such circumstances for three reasons, namely: (1) the owner could not have defeated expropriation proceedings; (2) a possessory right should not be used as a means of extortion; and (3) the public convenience outweighs the owner’s possessory right. Such doctrine controlled in the eases cited by defendants.
(Newport
v.
Temescal Water Co.,
Of course, if the public has no interest in the construction whose removal is sought, the rule protecting such improvement from injunctive relief does not apply.
(Miller & Lux
v.
San Joaquin L. & P. Corp.,
The Conduits, Only Incidental
The contention that the pipes are a part of a completed public work and for that reason cannot be abated is therefore without merit. The streets were not constructed upon plaintiff’s property. But at the time of their construction they were graded so that flood waters falling upon the area served by them would flow toward the 12 acres. When the pipes shall have rusted away the sloping pavements will still continue to discharge their accumulated waters upon the 12 acres unless the judgment now under review be sustained. It is the damage to the land caused by the flow of such flood waters that plaintiff would avoid and which the chancellor below decreed should not be repeated. A city has no right to arrange and maintain its paved streets so that in seasons of flood they will serve as channels for draining surface waters resulting in the deposit of silt, sand and debris upon adjacent lands or in the cutting of gullies in them to the detriment of the owner.
(Farrell
v.
City of Ontario,
The judgment is affirmed.
Wood (W. J.), J., and McComb, J., concurred.
A petition for a rehearing was denied October 4, 1943, and appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied November 8, 1943. Gibson, C. J., Edmonds, J., and Traynor, J., voted for a hearing.
