112 N.Y.S. 374 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1908
The spring water at and near the town of Saratoga Springs is found far below the surface of the earth and under the rock which holds the water and natural carbonic acid gas under great pressure, the gas and water seeking to escape through fissúres in the rock, or wells bored into the rock. In many places the water charged with gas Comes from the bored Wells by the pressure' from within and forms flowing wells.- In others it rises to various heights in the bore and it is necessary to lift it by artificial means to the surface. Some dry wells emit gas without water. • In all these waters traces of the same minerals are found; but the springs vary in the proportion in which such minerals aye found. This large subterranean supply of carbonic acid gas and natural mineral water fills the joints, cavities, crevices and pores in the rock below, and the pres-' sure of" the gas forces the water to. the surface in places and in other places brings it within the" reach of the landowner. The pressure
The plaintiffs allege that the springs or wells are in some manner connected and that the operations of the defendant lessen the gas pressure of their and other wells and cause a deterioration of the water therein, and that by pumps of great force and reach the defendant obtains more than the natural flow of water and gas to its wells and deprives the plaintiffs and others of the natural flow of water and gas which would otherwise come to their springs. And plaintiffs further allege that their springs or wells and property and the springs and wells and property of others are being destroyed by such acts on the part of the defendant and by its use and waste of the'water and gas in the manner stated.
Many of the springs or wells are shown to have a connection with other' spirings. The plaintiffs contend that all such springs or wells are directly or indirectly connected with each other.. The defendant denies that its springs or wells have any connection with the plaintiffs’ springs or wells 4,600 feet distant, or that its operations in any way affect or prejudice the plaintiffs. It is unnecessary to consider what effect the demurrer has upon such denials.
The defendant denies any common-law liability and urges that the statute is unconstitutional as depriving it of its property without due process of law and denying to it the equ^l protection of the law.
The springs or wells at and near Saratoga Springs are of the class mentioned in the statute. The 1st section of the statute refers to. any well made by boring or drilling into the rock ” and “that class of mineral waters holding in solution natural mineral salts and an excess of carbonic acid gas,” and declares unlawful four separate acts : (1) “ Pumping, or by any artificial contrivance whatsoever in any manner accelerating the natural flow ” of such wrater from the well, or “ by any artificial contrivance whatsoever in any manner accelerating the natural flow or producing an unnatural flow, of natural carbonic acid gas issuing from or contained in ” any such well; (2) the same acts when they lessen or impede the natural flow from any other spring, or impair the quality of its waters, or diminish the quantity o.f the carbonic acid gas or mineral ingredients ; (3) “ pumping, or otherwise drawing by artificial appliance from any well made by boring or drilling into the rock, that class of mineral waters holding in solution natural mineral salts and an excess of carbonic acid gas, or pumping, or by any artificial contrivance whatsoever in any manner producing an unnatural flow of, carbonic acid gas issuing from or contained in any well made by boring or drilling into the rock, for the purpose of extracting, collecting, compressing, liquefying or vending such gas as a commodity otherwise than in connection with the mineral water and the other mineral ingredients with which it was associated; ” (4) the doing of any act or thing whatsoever whereby the natural flow from any such spring or well is impeded or diminished, or the quality of its waters is impaired, or the quantity of the carbonic acid gas or mineral ingredients diminished.
In Ohio Oil Company v. Indiana, No. 1 (177 U. S. 190) it was held that a statute of the State of Indiana declaring it unlawful to permit the flow Of gas or oil from any natural gas or oil well into the open air without being confined within the well or proper pipes or other receptacles was constitutional; and that the company which drilled wells into the oil-bearing rock, producing natural gas and petroleum, and allowed the gas to go to waste and only used the oil, could properly be enjoined from so using its well. That case fully discusses the principles which underlie this case. It is summarized and approved in Bacon v. Walker (204 U. S. 311) as follows (at p. 316): “ Of pertinent significance is the case of Ohio Oil Company v. Indiana (177 U. S. 190). There a statute of the State of Indiana was attacked, which regulated the sinking, maintenance, use and operation of natural gas and oil wells. The object of the statute was to prevent the waste of gas. The defendants in the action asserted against the statute the ownership of the soil and the familiar principle that such ownership carried with it the right to the minerals beneath and the consequent privilege of mining to extract them. The principle was conceded, but it was declared inapplicable,' as ignoring the peculiar- character of the substances, oil and gas, with which the statute was concerned. It was pointed out that those substances, though situated beneath the surface, had no fixed situs, but had the power of self-transmission. No one owner, it was therefore said, could exercise his right to extract from the common reservoir in which the supply was held without, to an extent, diminishing the source of supply to which all the other owners of the surface had to exercise their" rights. The waste of one owner, it was further said, caused by a reckless enjoyment of his right, operated upon the other surface owners. The statute was sustained as a constitutional exercise of the power of the State, on account of the peculiar nature ■ of the right and the objects upon which it was exerted, for the purpose of protecting all of the collective owners.”-
The third provision of the act above quoted makes unlawful the pumping or drawing by artificial means of such mineral waters for the purpose of extracting and vending the gas. separate from the water. The Indiana case prohibited the waste of either the oil or
It is recognized that ordinarily percolating water found in land belongs to the owner of the land and his use thereof to the detriment of his neighbor is without remedy. He may not lawfully despoil his neighbor’s land, but the difficulty in determining the real source of the waters, and the fact that an inquiry with relation thereto must rest in part upon conjecture, has permitted him to escape liability, although recent cases tend materially to qualify the rule as it was formerly understood. (Smith v. City of Brooklyn, 18 App. Div. 340; 160 N. Y. 357; Forbell v. City of New York, 47 App. Div. 371; 164 N. Y. 524; Hathorn v. Strong’s S. S. Sanitarium, 55 Misc. Rep. 445 ; Gagnon v. French Lick Springs H. Co., 163 Ind. 687.)
If all the landowners of the town of Saratoga. Springs, or any other part of the State similarly situated, were to bore wells and strive to their utmost to get a greater supply of gas than their neighbors get, conflict, riots, breach of the peace, multiplicity of law suits, great uncertainty and turmoil would result and the destruction of all the springs in that locality would probably follow.
It may be quite impossible in a given case to determine whether' the well of one owner is connected with his neighbor’s well or not or with the other wells in the same locality, or whether excessive use of certain wells is drawing the gas and mineral water from other lands not yet bored witli wells and thus making them valueless for spring purposes. It is a known, fact that many such wells
It is urged-that the defendant is using its water for profit and naturally uses it in the manner most profitable to it. But it is evident that the defendant cannot continúe its present operations long before it exhausts all the water which naturally comes from and is stored in its twenty-one acres of land. ' Its business may be profitable because by pumps of powerful reach or by the gas pressure the water and gas from neighboring lands are drawn to or forced to its premises to the great injury of other landowners. These considerations and others seem to make reasonable the exercise of the police power of the State by this legislation, declaring that such mineral waters shall not be disintegrated and destroyed in order that one owner may sap the vitality therefrom to the prejudice of all others when the value taken is very small compared with the part destroyed.
In Ohio Oil Company v. Indiana, No 1 (supra, 210) the court says: “ Hence it is that the legislative power, from the peculiar . nature of the right and the objects upon which it is to be exerted, can be manifested for the purpose of protecting all the collective owners by securing a just distribution to arise from the enjoyment by them of their privilege to reduce to possession and to reach the like end by
This statute unfavorably affects the defendant’s business and the value of its plant, but it knew or was chargeable with knowledge that the great quantity of gas it had been using and the great quantity of water it had been wasting for years could not originate entirely upon and was not stored alone in its twenty-one acres of land, and that its operations • were depleting other lands in .the vicinity of a great part of their natural value. It might readily have foreseen that the Legislature, in the exercise of the police power, might regulate the manner in which such hidden supplies of gas and mineral water should be used. It began and has continued its business with that chance always existing.
The first and second provisions of the statute, if intended to prevent all pumping and-to prohibit the landowner from taking water from his well unless it flows naturally to the surface, is unreasonable and an invasion of property rights. The landowner may make any proper use he may desire of the water contained in his land, and may by pumps^ well-sweeps and - bucket or other means, raise the water from his well for use upon his land so long as he does not take more than naturally comes to his well. But these provisions should not be given such a construction. If the language permits they should be construed in such a manner as to have force and validity. They prohibit the owner to accelerate or obtain an unnatural flow from his well. In other words, he must not by artificial contrivance bring to his well and take from it a greater supply than naturally would come there. The second provision applies only when such acts -injure other wells or springs. The first provision refers to no other wells or springs, but if a landowper has bored no well he may at some time bore one and he is, therefore, interested that the valuable mineral waters in his land should not. be 'taken from it by another. These provisions so interpreted are fairly within the power of the Legislature.
The Legislature has determined that where the water and gas escape from their imprisonment from under or in the rock, and are found above the rock, the owner of the soil shall not be pro- ' hibited from using them in any manner permitted by the common law. This is not favoring springs not bored in the rock as against those drilled in the rock. It. simply, shows that the use of such springs or wells was not considered detrimental to the public or to other property owners. Whether in fact such conclusion is well founded or not we are not to determine. Springs bored.in the rock may properly be considered in a class by themselves, and so long as legislation affects alike all of the springs or wells in the same class, and similarly situated, it is not invalid because it does not include other classes. This legislation does not deny the equal protection of the law to any spring or landowner.
The 2d section of the statute permits any citizen of the State to maintain an action to restrain a violation of the provisions thereof in any city or town in which he is assessed for and is liable to pay a tax. The plaintiffs bring this action as the owners of a spring and also as such citizen taxpayers.
The result from these considerations is that the first, second and third provisions of the statute are valid, and the fourth invalid The injunction and order ■ should, therefore, be modified as indicated, and as so modified affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the respondents.
All concurred, except Cochrane, J., who voted for reversal.
Order and injunction modified as per opinion, and ■ as modified affirmed, with ten dollars costs and disbursements to the respondents.
See State Const, art. 1, § 6; U. S. Const. 14th amendt. § 1.— [Rep.