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Cite as: 38 Cal.App.3d 84 |
California Court of Appeals, Second District, Div. 3
Civ. No. 40970
March 26, 1974
COUNSEL
Harvey G. Cooper, Fadem & Kanner and Michael M. Berger for Plaintiffs and Appellants.
Archbald, Zelezny & Spray, Joseph L. Spray, W. Joe Bush and Edward L. Lascher for Defendant and Respondent. [38 Cal.App.3d 86]
OPINION
COBEY, Acting P. J.
Plaintiffs, Bessie D. Drennen et al., appeal from a judgment for defendant, County of Ventura, in their inverse condemnation action. The judgment was rendered after trial to the court of the county's special defense that the owners of the Santa Susana Airport (the Chester L. Fosters) had acquired a specified prescriptive avigation easement over certain land of plaintiffs lying next to the airport and within the normal landing corridor to the airport's sole runway. This occurred before the county on January 1, 1969, took over operation of the airport and then paved the runway. [FN 1]
Plaintiffs contend generally that: (1) an avigation easement may not be acquired by prescription; (2) there is no substantial evidence to support certain of the material findings of fact from which the trial court concluded that the Fosters had acquired an avigation easement prescriptively; (3) the prescriptive easement is not sufficiently specified; (4) trial costs, in any event, should have been awarded plaintiffs rather than defendant.
We tend to disagree with plaintiffs' contention that in this state an avigation easement may not be acquired by prescription, [FN 2] but, assuming that [38 Cal.App.3d 87] one may be so acquired, we hold here that such acquisition did not occur in this case. In this state a prescriptive easement in the land of another is acquired only by means of an actionable invasion of the rights of the other in his land for the requisite period under the requisite conditions. (See Bathgate v. Irvine, 126 Cal. 135, 141 [58 P. 442]; City of L. A. v. City of Glendale, 23 Cal.2d 68, 79 [142 P.2d 289]; Reinsch v. City of Los Angeles, 243 Cal.App.2d 737, 745-746 [52 Cal.Rptr. 613]; 3 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (8th ed. 1973) Real Property, § 367, p. 2062.) The ownership of the airspace above the lands of this state is vested in the several owners of the lands below, but this ownership is subject to the statutory right of overflight. (Pub. Util. Code, § 21402; Civ. Code, § 659.) This statutory right of overflight may be described as follows: Flight in aircraft over the land of another is lawful unless at altitudes below those prescribed by federal authority, [FN 3] or unless so conducted as to be imminently dangerous to persons or property lawfully on the land. (Pub. Util. Code, § 21403.) This statutory right of flight in aircraft includes the right of safe access to public airports. This latter right embraces the right of a flight within the zone of approach of any public airport without restriction or hazard. (Pub. Util. Code, § 21403, supra, subd. (c).)
[FN 3] We note in this connection that 49 United States Code section 1301, subdivision (24), includes within "navigable airspace" "airspace needed to insure safety in takeoff and landing of aircraft" and that 49 United States Code section 1304 recognizes and declares on behalf of all citizens of the United States "a public right of freedom of transit through the navigable airspace of the United States."
According to the Restatement Second of Torts, supra, section 159, subdivision (2), comment (k), [FN 4] flight by aircraft in the airspace above the land of another is a trespass if, but only if, both entry into the immediate reaches of the airspace next to the land is involved and the entry interferes substantially [38 Cal.App.3d 88] with the owner's actual use and enjoyment of his land. This proposition is generally in accord with existing California law. (See Pacific Gas & E. Co. v. Peterson, 270 Cal.App.2d 434, 437-438 [75 Cal.Rptr. 673]; Sneed v. County of Riverside, 218 Cal.App.2d 205, 210 [32 Cal.Rptr. 318].)
Accordingly, under the foregoing circumstances, the overflight of aircraft during the claimed prescriptive period manifestly did not interfere substantially with plaintiffs' actual use and enjoyment of their land since there was no such use and enjoyment. Therefore, the overflights did not invade plaintiffs' rights in their land. This being so, no prescriptive easement to overfly plaintiffs' land was acquired. [FN 5]
The judgment is reversed.
Loring, J., concurred.
ALLPORT, J.
I concur in the judgment.
Assuming without deciding that an avigation easement may be acquired by prescription in this state, the evidence in the instant case fails to establish that one was ever acquired by the Fosters.