Nicholson v. Getchell
Before: Temple
Synopsis
Appeal from a judgment of the Superior Court of Humboldt County.
The facts are stated in the opinion.
Temple, 0. — This appeal is from a judgment entered upon demurrer to the complaint, the plaintiff having declined to amend. The action is for a mandatory injunction to prevent defendant from maintaining a certain breakwater which had already been built. Practically, the action is to abate the breakwater as a nuisance.
The demurrer is general, on the ground that the complaint does not state a cause of action. It is claimed that the complaint does not state facts which show probable damage, but only an opinion of the pleader that damage will ensue.
It is averred that the parties own land on opposite sides of Jacoby Creek, which is their common boundary; that the channel of the stream is about sixty feet wide, and makes a sharp curve into the land of plaintiff, and away from the land of defendant. On plaintiff’s side of the stream, at the curve, the bank is abrupt and the soil loose, .while on the other side the bank slopes gently.
The breakwater, or bulkhead, it is averred, consists of posts driven firmly into the ground three feet apart and planked to the height of about four feet from the ground, the upper end resting against defendant’s land, and extending down stream and out toward the center toward plaintiff’s land a distance of one hundred feet, and is continued down the creek by a fence in the bed of the creek for about ten rods, so that in the event of a rise in the waters of the creek the water will necessarily be turned against plaintiff’s land.
Jacoby Creek is a mountain stream carrying little water in the summer, but subject to sudden freshets, when it rises in a short time to a great height, falling rapidly when the storm abates.
The breakwater is located on the inside of the sharp curve, and will inevitably throw the water, in case of freshet, with great force to the concave bank, and damage will inevitably ensue.
The universal tendency is for a stream to wash from the bank on the outside of a curve, and to fill in the inside, and the effect of ibo breakwater described in the [396]complaint must inevitably be greatly to increase this natural tendency. The facts being as alleged, there was no excuse for a bulkhead on defendant’s bank. I think the complaint states facts showing that danger was probable and imminent, and therefore the demurrer should have been overruled.
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