Town of Cloverdale v. Smith

60 P. 851 | Cal. | 1900

This action was brought to abate and enjoin a nuisance alleged to be caused by the construction and maintenance by defendants of a bulkhead, embankment, and ditch, whereby surface waters were conducted and thrown upon the streets of the town of Cloverdale. Defendants had judgment, from which and from an order denying a new trial plaintiff appeals. It appears that the waters in controversy are surface waters which collect in the hills to the west of defendants' lands, as well as on the land of defendants and other flat lands, and at the time the case arose flowed in a *233 well-defined ditch or channel in an easterly direction to and across defendants' lands and into the streets of the plaintiff, cutting down the gutters and otherwise injuring the same.

The answer specifically denied the allegations of the complaint that defendants constructed the bulkhead, embankment, and ditch, and continued to maintain the same, and thereby an issue was raised not only as to their construction, but as to the maintenance of them as well, and this issue as to the maintenance of the ditch by defendants became particularly material by reason of the ninth finding, which is as follows:

"That said ditch does divert the said surface waters from their natural flow southeasterly across said town, and by means thereof said waters are forced and thrown violently upon First street in said plaintiff town and have cut away the gutters of First and Washington streets."

The court also finds that the bulkhead and embankment divert no waters from their natural flow and that defendants did not construct the ditch complained of, but there is no finding as to whether they maintained such ditch. If they did maintain the ditch, clearly, under the ninth finding, plaintiff was entitled to judgment against them; for it seems to be the settled law of this state that no person can divert surface water away from its natural flow and onto the premises of another, where it has not been accustomed to flow, to the injury of such premises and against the objection of the owner, without being amenable to the charge of maintaining a nuisance. If one maintains a ditch which diverts surface waters away from their natural flow and onto the land of another to the injury of such land, he maintains a nuisance. This was the rule at common law as well as under the civil law (Gould on Waters, sec. 271); and in this state prevails as well in cities of every class as in the country. (Stanford v.San Francisco, 111 Cal. 198; Conniff v. San Francisco, 67 Cal. 45; Cushing v. Pires, 124 Cal. 663; Gray v. McWilliams, 98 Cal. 157; 35 Am. St. Rep. 163.) The case here is to be distinguished from those cases where the effect of improving city property is to dam up the outlet and cause surface water, which does not assume the form of a running stream and *234 which falls in the immediate vicinity, to stand upon the adjoining property. The rule in those cases can have no application in a case where the water is actually conducted onto the land to its injury. (Lampe v. San Francisco, 124 Cal. 546;Los Angeles etc. Assn. v. Los Angeles, 103 Cal. 461.)

The failure to find on the question as to whether defendants maintained the ditch is not obviated, as respondents seem to think, by any want of notice to defendants that the ditch was a nuisance. Upon this question of notice there is, again, no finding, but the complaint alleges as follows: "That plaintiff has demanded of defendants that they fill up the said ditches, remove the said embankment and bulkhead, and relieve the said streets of plaintiff of the said waters; but defendants have failed and refused so to do, and still and do now maintain said ditches," etc. The answer denies as follows: "Deny on information and belief that plaintiff has ever demanded of defendants or either of them that they or either of them should remove any embankment or bulkhead or relieve any streets of plaintiff of any water, or that defendants ever failed to comply with any legal or lawful demand made by plaintiff, or that defendants or either of them maintained any ditch," etc. Waiving the objection that this denial, of a fact that must be within the knowledge of defendants, is made on information and belief, it will still be seen that there is no denial at all of the demand and refusal to fill up the ditches. It must then be taken as admitted by the pleadings that defendants refused, upon the demand of plaintiff, to fill up their ditches. If the defendants did not already know the effect of the ditch on the streets, this demand was sufficient to put them on inquiry as to that matter, and their refusal to comply with the demand obviated the necessity of any further notice to them, and as the record stands they should be treated as having had full notice that the maintenance of the ditch was a nuisance to plaintiff. It was therefore very material to determine whether defendants in fact maintained the ditch, and the judgment should be reversed and a new trial had for failure to find upon that material issue.

A question is raised as to the validity of certain ordinances of the plaintiff, but it would seem entirely unnecessary *235 to determine such question. As the case appears to us now on the record before us, its solution depends upon the answer to the question as to whether defendants maintained the ditch. The facts found in the ninth finding show that such ditch constituted a nuisance which plaintiff was entitled to have abated under the general law governing the matter and irrespective of the ordinances in question.

The court did not err in excluding the judgment-roll in the case of McEllerney v. Cloverdale, as the defendants here were not parties to that suit and are in no way bound or estoppel by the judgment therein, and it was not evidence as against them of the facts therein determined.

We have examined the other objections contained in appellant's brief, as to alleged errors of the court in rulings in reference to the admission of evidence, and find nothing in them requiring particular notice. As the case must go back for a new trial any discussion as to whether the findings are supported by the evidence is unnecessary.

There can be no merit in respondents' contention that plaintiff's remedy is barred by laches. There is no plea of laches. There is in the answer a plea of several statutes of limitations, but it is clear that such a plea is not good in the case here. (Civ. Code, sec. 3490; Ex parte Taylor, 87 Cal. 91, and cases therein cited.)

We advise that the judgment and order be reversed.

Haynes, C., and Cooper, C., concurred.

For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion the judgment and order are reversed.

Van Dyke, J., Garoutte, J., Harrison, J. *236

midpage