In November, 1964, the appellants began constructing a sanitary sewer trunk line on a public utility easement in close proximity to appellees’ home. The easement passed through wet lands that required temporary draining of the subsurface water so the sewer could be installed. The appellants drove 12-feet deep well points along the sewer construction trench in. order to pump water out or lower the water level during construction of the sewer trunk line. Water was pumped out of the ground to that depth and this was done in accordance with usual engineering practices. It is undisputed that the pumping of the water out of the area of the sewer construction caused appellees’ well to go dry. The well went dry on November 22d for two days and then again on November 26th, and stayed dry until January 20, 1965, when it was reactivated by a professional well man reworking the well. An action was brought in the trial court for damages on account of expenses incurred in reworking the well, in obtaining a temporary water supply, and for inconvenience caused by the interruption of the normal water supply. The trial court awarded damages of $886.98 of which $400 was for the appellees’ inconvenience.
The trial court ruled that when a person has established a lawful water supply within the confines of his own land, that water supply cannot be interfered with without consequences. Such a ruling was error. In our increasingly complex and crowded society, people of necessity interfere with each other to a greater or lesser extent. Subterranean water, which is no respecter of property lines, is often impossible to extract without water from adjoining lands percolating across the property line. The right to enjoyment of the subterranean water beneath a person’s land cannot be stated in the terms of an absolute right.
*322 The liability for interference with the subterranean water supply of a neighbor has been expressed, depending upon whether the causative activity (1) if intentional, was unreasonable, or (2) if unintentional, was negligent. See Restatement, Torts § 822, at p 226; Annotation, 29 ALR2d 1357 (1953). Since the installation of the sewer was obviously intentional, the question becomes whether that activity was reasonable.
The question of subterranean water rights has rarely been raised in the appeal courts of Michigan, and not since
Bernard
v.
City of St. Louis
(1922),
“This does not prevent the proper user by any landowner of the percolating waters subjacent to his soil in agriculture, manufacturing, irrigation, or otherwise, nor does it prevent any reasonable development of his land by mining or the like, although the underground water of neighboring proprietors may thus be interfered with or diverted.” (Emphasis added.) Schenk v. City of Ann Arbor, supra, at p 84, quoting Meeker v. City of East Orange *323 (1909), 77 NJ Law 623 (74 Atl 379, 25 LRA NS 465, 134 Am St Rep 798).
In the ease before us water was not transported to distant areas for consumption, nor was there any evidence of permanent damage to the subterranean water table. Here, water was merely moved out of the immediate area of the public easement in order to facilitate sewer construction. Improvement and reasonable development of the public utility easement required such steps. As to the surrounding areas, it was not unreasonable to have a trunk line sewer buried on a public easement, as such use was intended for the area when it was platted. Further, the sanitary sewer trunk line benefitted the area as it was so constructed to allow the surrounding homes to attach their sewers to the trunk line.
The decision of the trial court is reversed. Costs to appellants.
