59 Cal. 97 | Cal. | 1881
This cause arises out of an action to abate an embankment in a watercourse, and to recover damages for injuries caused thereby. The Court below found for the defendant, and from the judgment in his favor the plaintiff appeals, upon the ground that the findings of the Court are not only not sustained by the evidence, but are directly opposed to the evidential facts of the case. It is alleged in the complaint that “ on the 4th day of January, 1876, there run and flowed, and has ever since run and flowed, and still runs and flows, a watercourse, or stream of water, through, over, and from the land of the plaintiff to, over, and across the land of the defendants,” in the channel of which the defendants have, on their own land, unlawfully erected and maintained an embankment, which backs the waters of the stream upon the plaintiff’s land and drowns it.
The existence of the stream, as it is described in the complaint, is not denied by the answer. It is objected, however, that the description given in the complaint is not sufficient to locate the stream upon the premises of the parties. But the plaintiff, in his testimony, further described it as “ a stream of water known as the Major’s Mill Stream, which
The findings ignore the existence of the watercourse admitted by the pleadings and proved by the evidence, and of an embankment in the channel of the stream.
A finding which negatives the existence of a fact admitted by the pleadings is a finding against evidence, and the judgment rendered thereon is erroneous. When an action is tried •before a Court without a jury, upon an admission of the truth
Judgment and order reversed and cause remanded for a new trial.
McKinstry, J., and Boss, J., concurred.