59 Md. 96 | Md. | 1882
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an application by the Mayor and City Council of Baltimore for an injunction against the defendants, to restrain them from polluting the Gunpowder river, the source of supply of water to the city for drinking and other purposes.
By the Code of Public Local Laws, Article 4, secs. 928 to 933, the complainants were authorized to contract for, purchase, and hold in fee-simple, or to lease for a term of years, or, if unable to obtain the same by contract, to have condemned, any land, real estate, spring, brook, water and water-course, or water right, deemed necessary and proper, and to use the same forever, or for a term of years, for the purpose of enabling them to provide for, conduct, and supply the needful quantity of good wholesome water to the inhabitants of the city, for drinking and other purposes.
The bill charges that the complainants, by virtue and in pursuance of the authority thus conferred upon them, did purchase of certain persons, in fee simple, certain lands lying in Baltimore County, adjacent to and including a portion of the bed of a certain natural water-course, called the Gunpowder river, with the water rights appurtenant and belonging to the lands so purchased, including the right to use the water of the stream in its natural, pure and unpolluted condition. That in the exercise of the powers conferred upon them by the statute, and by virtue of the proprietary rights acquired by the purchase of the land before mentioned, they caused to he constructed a dam across the stream, and thereby formed a lake, and that they have also caused to be constructed' a conduit or tunnel leading from such dam or lake to a reservoir, situated near the city, and from which reservoir the water is now being distributed to various parts of the city, in order to supply the inhabitants thereof with pure water, for drinking and other necessary purposes. It is further
The hill then charges that the defendants, a body corporate, own and conduct.a certain cotton factory “situate near the Gunpowder river, or one of the tributaries thereof, above the said lake and dam, and that they discharge, or knowingly suffer and permit to he discharged into the said stream, whence the same necessarily flows into the said lake, refuse water from the said. factory, impregnated with divers injurious ingredients and substances, put into the same by the defendants at said factory; whereby the water of the said natural stream is rendered less pure and less fit for use by man, as drinking-water.” And as a distinct cause of defilement or pollution of the stream, it is charged that the defendants “have erected, and do keep, maintain and use, divers large privies and hog-pens, at or near said factory, the excrement and filth whereof the defendants cause or wilfully suffer and permit to he discharged into the waters of the said Gunpowder river, above the said dam and lake, whereby.the water of the stream so flowing into, and received by the said lake, is greatly polluted.” It is also alleged that the complainants requested the defendants to desist from the creation of the nuisances complained of, hut that the latter still persist in producing the same.
We have referred thus particularly to the matters charged in the bill, and the relief prayed thereon, for the reason, that this is an application for a preliminary or provisional injunction, and the right of the complainants to such immediate interposition of the Court depends entirely upon the sufficiency of the facts charged in the bill. If the facts, as stated upon the face of the bill, be not full, and sufficiently definite and clear, in support of the right asserted, and that such right has been violated, in the manner charged, the Court will not order the defendants to be restrained before they are heard in their defence. And in no class of cases is this requirement more necessary to be insisted on than in the class to which the present case belongs; for, in such cases, there is always danger that the injunction, if improvidently issued, may produce serious detriment to the rights and interests of the defendant, before he can be relieved of its operation; and hence, the greatest precaution is necessary to be observed in the use of this summary power of the Court.
Row, with respect to the legal principles upon which the present application is based, we think there can be no doubt or controversy whatever. Before the time of Lord Coke, the principle involved in this case would appear to
Such being the principle that determines the relative rights of the several riparian proprietors along the stream, the question is, whether the complainants are entitled to be regarded as riparian proprietors within the principle ? And in respect to this question there would seem to be no real-cause to doubt. The complainants were fully authorized by the statute to purchase the land along or over which the stream flows; and they were fully authorized to erect the dam and to make the lake to feed, by means of the artificial conduit or tunnel, the reservoir near the city. Assuming then that the land was acquired as authorized by the statute (as we may well do,) the complainants are riparian proprietors in the strictest sense, in respect of the property purchased and held by them on the stream in question. They are entitled to all the riparian rights to which the parties under whom they claim, and from whom they purchased the' land, were entitled at the time of the purchase. Unless derogated from by grant or user ripened into prescription, the complainants are entitled to all the rights of riparian proprietors, and among others to have the stream to flow into and through the lake, in its ordinary natural - purity and quantity, without any unnecessary or unreasonable diminution or pollution of the same by the proprietors above. And for this, if authority were necessary, we need only refer to the very thoroughly considered case of Wilts, etc. Canal Co. vs. Swindon Waterworks Co., L. R., 9 Ch. App., 451; and same case on appeal to the House of Lords, L. R., 7 H. L., 697.
What nature and extent of pollution of the stream will call for the active interference of the Court, is not in all cases easy to define. It is not every impurity imparted to the water, however small in degree, that will he the subject of an injunction. All running streams are, to a certain extent, polluted; and especially are they so when they flow through populous regions of country, and the waters are utilized for mechanical and manufacturing purposes. The washings of the manured and cultivated fields,
Such is the settled doctrine of the law; hut in this case, as the facts are presented on the face of the hill, that part of the case that relates to the, refuse water discharged from the factory of the defendants, is not stated with sufficient certainty to justify an injunction on the statements of the bill alone. How such refuse waters are impregnated; by what substance or material, and to what extent, are not stated; nor is the distance of the factory from the lake, or the volume of water of the stream, stated in the hill. It would he impossible to grant the injunction in the terms of the prayer of the hill, as that would put the defendants to the peril of determining what would he a prohibited pollution of the stream. The condition of the water in the lake should he stated, and its pollution,
Inasmuch, therefore, as the allegations of the bill, in respect to the alleged pollution produced by the discharge of the refuse water from the factory into the stream, are not sufficiently definite, without the aid of evidence, upon which to found an order for a special injunction, the Court below was right in refusing to grant an injunction as to that ground of complaint. The complainants may obtain leave, however, to take testimony, under the provisions of the statute of 1872, ch. 157, to be used upon motion for an injunction; or they may wait the coming in of the answer of the defendants, and move upon the merits confessed therein, if merits be confessed; but otherwise an interlocutory injunction, as to this part of the case, should not be ordered.
But, with respect to the other ground of complaint, that is to say, the existence of the privies and hog-pens on the stream above the lake of the complainants, the allegations of the hill are more definite. It is distinctly alleged that
We shall reverse the order refusing the injunction, and remand the cause, that further proceedings may he had in accordance with this opinion.
Order reversed, and cause remanded.