17 Utah 444 | Utah | 1898
Lead Opinion
It appears from the findings of the lower court that the plaintiff in the year 1886 constructed a dam across the outlet of what is called “Thayne” or “Shadow” Lake, and by this means impounded and retained the waters flowing into said lake, and, by means of a pipe line inserted into said lake, took from the unappropriated waters thereof sufficient to fill its said pipe, and carried the same to the Crescent mine, for use in carrying on the mining operations of the plaintiff; that one of the principal sources of supply of said Shadow Lake or reservoir was the stream of water flowing from the Thayne or Jeanette tunnel, situated in and excavated upon the Thayne and Jeanette mining claims, the property of the defendant, and its grantors and predecessors in interest, which said stream of water was, at the date of the diversion by the plaintiff, as aforesaid, of the waters of said Shadow Lake, running from said tunnel into said lake; that said Thayne or Jeanette tunnel was run upon and excavated upon mining claims and mining property owned by said defendant, and its grantors and predecessors in interest, prior to the year 1883, and prior to the diversion and use of said waters of said lake, and its natural sources of supply, by said plaintiff, which said mining claims and mining property were duly patented by the United States to the grantors and predecessors in interest of defendant
The first question for determination is, did the lower court err in its conclusions of law and decree rendered in this action, wherein it found and decreed that the respond
It is not contended that the plaintiff at any time entered upon the land of the defendant, or upon said tunnel, or appropriated the waters thereof, except after the waters had been allowed to flow into the so-called “Shadow Lake;” nor is it claimed that the plaintiff at any time interferred with defendant’s possession or use of said water while it was still in the tunnel or in the mining claim of the defendant. Under such circumstances, could the plaintiff acquire, as against the defendant, any right in such water while it remained in the tunnel or in the mining claim of the defendant, from
In the case of Acton v. Blundell, 12 Mees. & W. 324, it is said: “In the case of the runing stream, the owner of the soil merely transmits the water over its surface. He receives as much from his higher neighbor as he sends down to his neighbor below. He is neither better nor worse. The level of the water remains the same. But if the man who sinks the well on his own land can acquire by that act an absolute and indefeasible right to the water that collects in it, he has the power of preventing his neighbor from making any use of the springs in his own soil which shall interfere with the enjoyment of the
If the percolating waters which collected in the tunnel were open to appropriation, as claimed by the appellant, such appropriation would clothe him with full ownership of the waters of the lake, as well as the waters in the tunnel, and deprive the defendant of the right to use them for any purpose; and, although plaintiff had asserted no dominion over the percolating waters of the mining claim or tunnel, and had not interfered with the defendant’s use thereof, he would still acquire an easement in defendant’s mining claim to use the water thereof as he saw fit, notwithstanding the fact that defendant did not object to an appropriation of the water by him after it had left the tunnel of the mining claim. The result of such a contention would be that plaintiff would acquire a right to compel the defendant, who had de
The rule is, that whenever the stream is so hidden in the earth that its course is not discoverable from the surface, there can be no such thing as a prescription in favor of an adjacent proprietor to have an uninterrupted flow of such stream through the land of his neighbor. Haldeman v. Bruckhardt, 45 Pa. St. 514; Lybes’ Appeal, 106 Pa. St. 626; Buffner v. Harris, 5 R. I. 243
It is clear that, prior to the time when the tunnel was dug upon the mining claim of the defendant, the water was percolating water, flowing, seeping, or circulating in minute particles beneath the surface thereof, without banks or denned channels, and that its course was invisible and unknown. By the construction of this tunnel, this percolating water has become an artificial stream, and has never been diverted from the defendant’s land, nor its waters taken away from the defendant or its grantors. Under such circumstances, when percolating waters have been gathered into tunnels or ditches, and allowed to flow from the proprietor’s land to the inferior proprietor, and have been used by him a greater period of time than that allowed by the statute of limitations, it has been held that no title by prescription has been gained. Gould on Waters (page 402) lays down the rule that: “Where an artificial water course is made solely to get rid of a nuisance to mines, and to enable their proprietors to get the ores lying within the mineral field drained by it, the flow of the water through that channel is, from the nature of the case, of a temporary character,
The case of Sullivan v. Mining Co., 11 Utah, 438, relied upon by the able counsel for the plaintiff, rests upon a different state of facts from those disclosed in this case, and is not in conflict with the principles here laid down. In that case defendant’s predecessors in interest dug a well upon the public lands of the United States, and used water therefrom, for domestic and other purposes, for nearly 20 years. Thereafter the plaintiff located a mining claim, embracing the well within its boundaries, and brought suit for trespass against the occupants of the well. The court held the grantors of the defendant having located the well on the public domain prior to the location of the plaintiff’s mining claim, that, by virtue of sections 2339, 2340, Rev. St. U. S., the plaintiff located his mining claim subject to the rights of the defendant and its grantors, and expressly recognized the principles here laid down — that percolating waters belong to the owner of the soil, and that the owner could dig a well upon his own ground, and thereby dry up the well, supplied by percolating waters of his adjacent neighbor without liability.
We conclude that section 2780, Comp. Laws Utah, 1888, was intended to apply to natural water courses having a natural source of supply, and that it does not apply to
The second question for consideration is, did the court err in its conclusions of law and decree rendered in this action, wherein it found and decreed that the plaintiff was not entitled to an injunction against the defendant for the digging of the trench and laying and maintaining the pipe line across the barren, rocky, and worthless mining claims of the plaintiff, mentioned in the complaint and findings herein, but is remitted to its action at law for said acts and damages therefor? In this case the court found that the defendant did not remove the earth, rock or soil of the plaintiff’s mining claim, but simply dug a trench, and laid a pipe line therein, and covered it with the material taken out in digging the trench, and that neither the soil nor anything else was removed from the mining claim, and that said mining claim across which the trench was dug was barren, rocky, worthless, uncultivated, not used or worked, and that the pipe line and the digging of the trench did not injure said claim in any manner whatever, and that plaintiff suffered no injury, and was not damaged in any manner, except nominally, for such trespass, and that plaintiff had an adequate remedy at law for the alleged injury. Defendant owned water necessary to run his plant, located several miles away, between which water and its mine the plaintiff owned a strip of barren, rocky, worthless, uncultivated,
All the adjudged cases fix the rule to be that the. injury must be of that peculiar nature that it cannot be-adequately compensated in damages or allowed for in money. There must be some just, equitable feature or incident to take the case out of the rule, or equity will not interfere. When the facts present no matter requiring equitable relief, and the granting of the injunction will work a wrong and irreparable injury to one party, with no appreciable benefit to the other, and the remedy at law is adequate to do full justice, the court should reject such jurisdiction as not within its legitimate province. To hold otherwise would confound all principles upon which equitable jurisdiction stands. This court has already passed upon this same question in the case of McGregor v. Mining Co., 14 Utah, 47, and in Cres
The case of Uline v. Railroad Co., 101 N. Y. 98, relied upon by appellant, arose where a private owner of lots
The case of Richards v. Dower, 64 Cal. 62, relied upon by plaintiff’s counsel, materially differs from the present case, in that the defendant in that case was excavating for a tunnel, and was removing the soil from the premises, and carrying it away, to the injury of the inheritance. Under such circumstances, the injunction was properly granted.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
I concur in the judgment in so far as it affirms that part of the decree and judgment of the trial court awarding defendant the water in dispute that issues from the Jeanette and Thayne tunnel, situate and being on defendant’s mining claim, but dissent from that part of the decision holding that plaintiff is not entitled to equitable relief restraining defendant from maintaining its pipe line across and through plaintiff’s mining claims. The trial court found that plaintiff is the owner, in possession, and entitled to the possession, of the mining property across and through which defendant’s pipe line is maintained, and was such owmer, in possession, and entitled to the possession, of the same at the time said pipe line was constructed, and that defendant’s entry and occupation of the property was and is unlawful. In addition to the facts found by the court, the complaint alleges,'and the answer admits, the defendant employed a force of armed men, who, against the will and protest of plaintiff, patroled the pipe line where the same is maintained across and through plaintiff’s premises, in order to protect defendant in the commission of the trespass complained of; and it is apparent, as shown by the record, that defendant intends, and, unless plaintiff is awarded injunctive relief, will continue to maintain its pipe line across and through plaintiff’s premises, and make use of whatever force it may deem necessary to accomplish its purpose. Under this condition and state of affairs, it is
To deny the plaintiff equitable relief would force it to bring a succession and perhaps an indefinite number of suits against the defendant, or abandon that part of its mining property now occupied by the defendant. As shown by the record in this case, the plaintiff, in each action so brought, would be entitled to recover nominal damages only; therefore it would be compelled, if remitted to its legal remedy, to pursue a course of expensive, vexatious, and interminable litigation, or submit to what, in effect, would be a confiscation of its property by defendant. In the case of Wheelock v. Noonan, 108 N. Y. 178, an action brought by plaintiff to compel defendant to remove from certain lots belonging to plaintiff a quantity of rock or boulders placed thereon by defendant, Finch, J., speaking for the court, says: “But it is further said that he (referring to plaintiff) could sue at law for trespass. That is undoubtedly true. The case of Uline v. Railroad Co., 101 N. Y. 98, demonstrates, upon abundant authority, that in such action only damages could be recovered, and for the subsequent continuance of the trespass, new actions, following on in succession, would have to be maintained. But in a case like the present, would that be an adequate remedy? In such action the damages could not easily be anything more than rental value of the lot. It is difficult to see what other
The right to injunctive relief in cases of trespass, when the plaintiff’s title, possession, and right of possession of the property are admitted or established, does not depend on the amount and the extent of the damage done or suffered in each particular case, but depends more upon the nature and character of the trespass. This doctrine is invoked and followed in the case of Richards v. Dower, 64 Cal. 62, which was an action for an injunction against the construction of a tunnel through plaintiff’s lot, and 20 feet below the surface thereof. The court found: “That said tunnel has not affected, and will not, if completed, affect, injuriously or otherwise, the .surface ground of plaintiff’s said lot; that the driving of the tunnel was not, and will not, if completed, cause the plaintiff irreparable injury, or injure said lot in any way, and that the defendant is not insolvent.” The court dissolved the preliminary injunction, and ordered judgment for the defendant. On appeal the supreme court said: “The findings show that the tunnel which the defendant is constructing through the plaintiff’s land is of a permanent character. It disturbs the plaintiff’s possession,
I am unable to draw the distinction between that case and the case at bar that the majority of this court have drawn. The gravamen in that case was the removal by the defendant of a part of the inheritance, and in this case it is the continuous, permanent, unlawful and forcible occupation of the inheritance by the defendant, which occupation deprives plaintiff of its property as effectually as though defendant had excavated and carted it away. The results and consequences of the trespass in both .instances are the same.
The contention that plaintiff should be left to its remedy at law, because that portion of its mining claim over and across which defendant has laid and now maintains its pipe line is barren, rocky, and of no appreciable value, and the damage done the property only nominal, in my opinion ought not to prevail. The plaintiff’s right to protection in the quiet, uninterrupted, and peaceable possession of those mining claims, barren, rocky, and apparently worthless though they may be in the estimation of the court, is just as sacred in the eyes of the law as
The case of McGregor v. Mining Co., 14 Utah 47, and the decision of this court on a former appeal in this case (14 Utah 57), relied upon by defendant’s counsel, I do not think are in conflict with the foregoing views and authorities. In each of these cases the appeal was taken from an order granting a temporary injunction, and before a hearing was had on the merits. In the case of McGregor v. Mining Co., the defendant justified the' trespass by virtue of certain alleged eminent domain proceedings begun and concluded by it, by virtue of which proceedings it claimed a right to construct the trench and lay the pipe line in question. In this case one of the defenses pleaded and relied upon by defendant was a license from the plaintiff, permitting it to lay and maintain its pipe line across and through plaintiff’s mining claim. Under the issues thus formed in each of these cases, the court very properly set aside and reversed the order of the trial court granting an injunction pendente lite. The opinion in each of these cases was undoubtedly based on the theory that the defenses pleaded, in view of the affidavits
I am of the opinion that the cause should be remanded to the lower court, with directions to enter judgment perpetually restraining defendant from continuing the trespass by maintaining its pipe line across and through plaintiff’s premises.