Newcomb v. Tisdale
Newcomb v. Tisdale
Opinion of the Court
In this action, which was brought to recover damages for
This instruction took from the jury the defense set up, and in effect directed them to disregard it.
This was repeated in the direction given by the learned Judge to the jury when he read to them Request vii. of defendants.
For this error, the judgment and order are reversed, and cause remanded for a new trial.
Ross, MoKinstey, and Sbaepstein, JJ., concurred.
Dissenting Opinion
This action was brought to recover damages for the wrongful and unlawful cutting of an embankment of earth on the west side of the Sacramento River, in Colusa County, whereby water was caused to flow from said river and flood and inundate the lands of plaintiffs and destroy plaintiffs’ growing crops of grain. The plaintiffs resided and had growing crops on the west side, and the defendants with their families resided on the east side of the river.
The defendants in their answer averred that at times the said river is subject to great floods and overflows; that when the river becomes full of water the bed of the river is insufficient to hold the body of water; that along the river there are several natural outlets for the drainage of the river, which was designed by nature, and which do and did carry off the surplus water, and thereby ease the volume of water flowing in the stream; that on the westerly side of the river
There is no averment that the other outlets referred to were filled up or obstructed; there is no distinct averment that the said other outlets were insufficient to carry off the surplus water; neither is there any averment that the removal of the obstructions in Wilkin’s Slough accomplished the result desired, or eased the flow, or saved life or property.
The case was tried before a jury, and a verdict of $1,000 in favor of plaintiffs returned; for which amount, with costs, judgment was rendered. Defendants’ motion for a new trial was denied, and the appeal was taken.
The plaintiffs also proved that subsequent to the erection of the levee across Wilkin’s Slough, a levee was constructed by defendants and others along the east bank of the river, extending several miles above and below the slough, which said levee crossed at their source two small sloughs which had formerly served as outlets to the waters of the Sacramento River. The defendants’ testimony tended to prove that in former times, before the Wilkin’s Slough was stopped up by the levee of the Reclamation Company, their lands were high •and dry above high water; that the effect of the stopping of Wilkin’s Slough by the levee was to raise the waters from three to four feet on the easterly side of the river, and to threaten to overflow the lands of the defendants from two to three feet, thereby threatening great damage to defendants; that to protect themselves as best they could, they had built levees, at their own expense, from six to seven feet high; that for several days before December 22, 1879, the Sacramento River at Wilkin’s Slough was at a very high state of
Even granting, which I do not, that the defendants would have been justified in cutting the levee, and thus removing the obstruction, so that waters of the river during a flood could flow through the Wilkin’s Slough, yet, in the case as presented by the transcript, they were not justified in their acts. The transcript states that the evidence tended to prove “ that the effect of cutting the levee was to turn the waters of the river into the slough, which then filled up to its full capacity, and then ran out of the slough over the lands occupied by plaintiffs,” and did the damage- complained of, and there is no conflicting evidence as to that fact. It thus appears that the plaintiffs’ lands and crops were outside of and higher than the slough, and that the water, in consequence of the cutting, ran into the slough in such volume as to be unable to find an outlet, and therefore submerged plaintiffs’ lands. There is no evidence that the lands of plaintiffs owed the servitude to have the waters of the river flow over them. Necessity, to save their own property, would not have justified defendants in this destruction of plaintiffs’ property. Necessity, to save life, does not appear; because, if the defendants had the means of crossing a turbulent river in a great flood, to the side where life and property were then secure, they could doubtless have removed their families as well.
The defendants urge the proposition, that the law authorizing the construction of the levee, and its construction by the Reclamation District, were unconstitutional and void, in that defendants’ property could not be taken without compensation, and that flooding their lands, even occasionally, is taking their property. Conceding that if the land had been flooded it was a taking within the meaning of the Constitution, it is sufficient to say that it was not flooded. On both
Assuming, under the facts as presented and the law applicable thereto, that the Reclamation District was properly formed and the levee legally constructed and maintained, I do not see that the defendants were justified in cutting the levee, and in causing the injury complained of.
I do not think it necessary to pass upon the instruction given to the jury “ that the flooding,” etc. (vi., p. 17, Transcript), nor upon the instructions asked for by the defendants as to what is a nuisance and their right to remove it; the matters therein contained were not applicable to this case. Even if it be conceded that the levee was a nuisance, the defendants had no right to cut it and thus cause the waters to flow into the slough in such volume as to exceed the capacity of the slough and overflow its banks.
McKee, J., concurred in the foregoing dissenting opinion.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- S. NEWCOMB v. JAMES B. TISDALE
- Status
- Published