188 Iowa 597 | Iowa | 1920
I. In the errors relied on for reversal, defendant, appellant, asserts that he had an abundant supply of clear, cool water “fidwing from his ground in his pasture for his live stock,” and that the court held he was entitled to take all the'water he needs for the fullest enjoyment and usefulness of his land, as land. He continues
This combination of statement, argument, assignment, and complaint is far from being a strict compliance with what the rules demand of the “errors relied on for reversal,” but it is none the less a concession that the brief points and the arguments in externo take an unduly wide range.
The court below did not interfere with anything done by the appellant up to a certain point. No matter how much harm he may have done to the plaintiff by syphoning water into his stock tank, the decree has not interfered with his doing so. If any right given to appellant, by the law has been invaded by judicial action, it is by what the decree does concerning the use made of water in the stock tank of defendant, after his horses and cattle ha<¥ finished with such water. He used it to water and make a
II. It is not made as clear as it might be just what action of the trial court is complained of. There were three decrees entered. The last one only was made by Judge Hays. The first decree entered was much more sweeping than the last one entered. In a mixture of opinion and judicial order, it held, in effect, that defendant was unduly trespassing upon the rights of. the plaintiff, not only in the provisions for furnishing drink and wallowing places for hogs, but in storing water in tanks for the.use of defendant’s horses and cattle. The second decree receded from this position, to some extent, but to some extent only. Judge Hays seems to have treated these two earlier decrees as interlocutory and amendable, and we think that this position is warranted. The real question, then, is what was accomplished by the last decree, the one entered by Judge Hays. This decree recites that the judge has visited the premises, and examined them and the spring in controversy. It finds defendant has needlessly wasted water, by permitting his tank to overflow, and letting the overflow run on the ground, in such manner as that large quantities of it were unnecessarily absorbed by the soil and exhausted by excessive evaporation. Defendant is permitted to use the syphon if he will reduce it in size so that it will not create such overflow as the decree prohibits: that is, the syphon must be so used that the supply of water for use of the hogs, and which is derived from overflow from the tanks, is not unduly accreted by needlessly overflowing such tanks. One prominent purpose of the decree is to prevent defendant from permitting water to escape from tanks so that it will run down “the branch,” or furnish pools of standing water along the branch for hogs or other stock. No limit is placed on the amount of water defendant may use for
The precise question for our determination is whether such an order as this unduly interferes with the rights of defendant.
III. Appellant contends that he has, in fact, wasted no water. Without touching, at this time, on whether such waste as the decree finds is permissible, we hold with the trial court that waste is being committed by defendant. He contends further that the water running from his tanks and over the ground flows over the land of the plaintiff, and that plaintiff may therefrom readily obtain a sufficient quantity for the use of his stock. We do not think the evidence sustains this assertion.
IV. One argument is that what the decree, in effect, accomplishes, is to relieve plaintiff from digging a well of his own, and thus obtaining his water supply; that defendant is under no obligation to construct anything that will save to the uttermost the surplus water in his own tanks — save the water running, after his horses and cattle are through with it; that, if there is to be any conserving of this water, plaintiff, as the beneficiary thereof, should provide the means of conservation. All these arguments are the premise for the ultimate claim that defendant, being the upper owner, has the right to do whatsoever he pleases with any water that runs under the surface of his own land and that of the plaintiff, and with the supply that these underground waters place into the spring, though the spring itself is on the land of the plaintiff. It may be conceded that there was a time when the law sustained this position. The question remains whether that is so still.
We are of opinion that it admits of the gravest doubt.
It cannot well be disputed that the law at no time jjRe-mitted the upper landowner to waste underground waters, if they ran in a well-defined stream. See Southern Pac. R. Co. v. Dufour, 95 Cal. 615 (30 Pac. 788) ; Wheatley v. Baugh, 25 Pa. St. 528; Springfield Waterworks Co. v. Jenkins, 62 Mo. App. 74; Barclay v. Abraham, 121 Iowa 619. In other words, if it were clear that the supply of this spring was an underground stream, with a well-defined channel, the court could enjoin the waste of the waters in that stream, both before they reached the spring and after they reached it. But it is not clear whether the subterranean supply ran in such channel, instead of being created by percolating water, and it is presumed that the supply came from percolating waters. Barclay v. Abraham, 121 Iowa 619, 622. In the state of the evidence, we déem it safer ground to assume that the underground waters were percolating. It follows that the decision here must determine whether, though the supply is furnished by percolating water, the decree below is justified.
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It may be assumed that, at one time, the upper landowner was at liberty to deal as he pleased with subterranean percolating waters. We hold with appellant that Huber v. Merkel, 117 Wis. 355 (94 N. W. 354), declares that the upper landowner may waste a supply created by such
It is said in Gagnon v. French Lick S. H. Co., 163 Ind. 687 (72 N. E. 849, 852), that the strong trend of the later decisions is toward a qualification of the earlier doctrine that the landowner could. exercise unlimited and irresponsible control over subterranean waters on his own land, without regard to the injuries which might thereby result to the lands of other proprietors in the neighborhood; that local conditions, the purpose for which the landowner excavates or drills holes or wells on his land, the use or non-use intended to be made of the water, and other like circumstances, have come to be regarded as more or less influential in this class of cases, and have justly led to an extension of the maxim, “sic ut&re tuo ut atienum non laedas,” to the rights of landowners over subterranean waters, and to some abridgment of their supposed power to injure their neighbors without benefiting themselves. In Springfield Waterworks Co. v. Jenkins, 62 Mo. App. 74, the existence of the older rule is recognized, but held that, despite that rule* the right to appropriate percolating waters is not absolute or unlimited; that the upper owner cannot obstruct or divert it without benefit to himself or his land, merely to injure the adjoining proprietor, who is subjecting it to beneficial use. It is ruled, in Pence v. Carney, 58 W. Va. 296 (52 S. E. 702), that while, if the diversion of percolating water is not wasteful, equity will not interfere, although the effect may be to temporarily decrease the supply of wa
We think Barclay v. Abraham, 121 Iowa 619, 621, is in line with these decisions, and holds that equity may interfere, where the upper landowner is utterly wasting water that his neighbor needs. It is true that, in the Barclay case, it is found the record strongly indicates that the motive was to maliciously cut off the water supply of the water proprietor. It is also true that the trial court acquitted defendant of having acted through malice. But this was held in connection with, or at least on giving consideration to, a contempt proceeding, instituted for alleged violation of the earlier decrees; and it may fairly be said that the malice which the court found absent was express malice. We think the Barclay case speaks of malice as that term is understood in law. There is much in the record that indicates bitter feeling lay behind the insistence of the defendant to obtain his water supply at all costs. But we will assume there was no express malice. > We do find, however, that there was malice in law, and that hence the interference by the chancellor was justified, though the water supply interfered with was created by percolating waters only. In so holding, we follow the almost universal declaration of the courts that, where the diversion is malicious and detrimental to another proprietor, injunction may restrain it. See Miller v. Black Rock S. I. Co., 99 Va. 747 (40 S. E. 27). That malice in law is referred to, rather than express malice, is made clear because, for instance, the diversion has been held to be actionable where the harm was caused by negligence (Wheatley v. Baugh, 25 Pa. St. 528 [approved in the Barclay case]); or is caused by reck
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In reaching our final conclusion, we have been moved in some degree by the fact that defendant demands unrestricted license, in order to supply his hogs with drink and wallowing places, while the plaintiff is, among other things, urging his needs in supplying human beings with water. The relative need and use has always had some consideration in equity. We have held that the use of water for natural purposes takes precedence over the right to use it for artificial ones. Willis v. City of Perry, 92 Iowa 297. It is ruled, in Katz v. Walkinshaw, 141 Cal. 116 (70 Pac. 663 and 74 Pac. 766), that the owner of a portion of a tract which is saturated below the surface with an abundant supply of percolating water may not remove water from wells thereon for sale, if the remainder of the tract is thereby deprived of water necessary for its profitable enjoyment by its owner; and in Forbell v. City of New York, 164 N. Y. 522 (58 N. E. 644), that the drainage of the land of a private owner by means of a city pumping works, which exhausts from the ground and that in its vicinity the natural supply of underground or subterranean waters, and thus interferes with the successful raising of crops, renders the city liable for damages, and gives the owner the right to an injunction against the continuance of such wrong.
Upon a careful examination of the evidence, we hold that, though the interference here was -with the use of a supply created by percolating waters, that there was such malicious interference, by means of wasting, to the detriment of
V. The decree first entered taxed all the costs to defendant. The second one entered decreed that defendant pay two thirds of the costs. The final or amending decree seems to have adopted this last order, and so leaves two thirds of the costs to be borne by defendant. This assessment is complained of, but we see no justification for interfering with it. — Affirmed.