58 W. Va. 296 | W. Va. | 1905
A. P. Pence and George N. Davis hied tlieir bill in equity in the circuit court of Summers county against A. C. Blair ancl B. E. Carney to enjoin them ancl their agents from unreasonably and unusually abstracting and using the water from a well sunk by them on a tract of land owned by them and from casting the same on their land, whence it flowed upon plaintiffs’ land. Upon presentation of the bill a temporal',y injunction was awarded. Defendants demurred to the bill and filed their answer. Depositions were taken and the case submitted for final hearing on March 29, 1905, on the pleadings and depositions and upon the motion of defendants to dissolve the injunction and the motion of the plaintiffs to perpetuate the injunction, and the court entered a decree sustaining the demurrer to the bill, dissolving the injunction and dismissing the bill. From this decree an appeal was allowed the plaintiffs by this Court.
The errors assigned involve a consideration of the whole case. It appears from the record substantially as follows: Plaintiffs Pence ancl Davis are the owners of a tract of land of two hundred and eighty-three acres, upon which there is a valuable spring called Pence’s Spring, known as a flowing spring as far back as 1849. So long as known by witnesses, unless interfered with by some mechanical obstruction, and until the acts of defendants complained of, this Spring has flowred continuously unaffected by rainfall. The water of this Spring is supposed to contain valuable curative and medicinal qualities, and has been widely advertised by sample. Some years ago certain improvements were made to this Spring. At that time an excavation was made to a depth of
The subject of this controversy is subterranean water. Some of the questions involved are comparatively new in the courts of this State and are of great importance. It has been truly said that the two fundamental principles underlying the consideration of the rights of adjacent or neighboring owners of land in subterranean waters are : first, that the owner of land owns from the surface upward to the sky and downward to the center of the earth; and second, that the owner must so use his own as not to injure another. Some courts have emphasized one of these principles almost to the exclusion of the other, but the greater number have made an effort to apply both in harmony. Many authorities for the purpose of applying these principles have divided subterranean waters into two classes: first, underground
Underground waters are presumed to be percolating waters until it is shown that they exist in known and well defined channels. 30 Amer. & Eng. Enc. of Law 311; Boyce v. Cupper, 37 Ore. 256; 10 Am. & Eng. Dec. in Equity, 716, and cases there cited.
The burden of proof, then, is upon the plaintiffs in this case to show that the waters in controversy exist, in a known underground stream with well defined channel, if they would have the law of a similar surface stream apply here. It appears that upon the pumping of defendants’ well, the supply at Pence’s Spring was depleted, and upon the continuance of the pumping, that the flow at Pence’s Spring ceased, and that this operation was repeated with a like effect on the Spring; and that at the points where the water came into the well and into the Spring, there were well defined crevices in the rock, but these facts do not show the existence of a stream with a known and well defined channel for the entire distance between the well and the Spring, or that both do not receive their supply from a saturated area or stratum extending under the lands of both plaintiffs and defendants. Taylor v. Welch, 6 Ore. 198; Ocean Grove Assn. v. Comrs., 40 N. J. Eq. 447; Cole v. Bacon, 63 Col. 571; Clark Co. v. Lumber Co., 80 Miss. 535; Huber v. Murkel, 62 L. R. A. 589; 10 Am. & Eng. Dec. in Eq. 693.
The underground waters which the law recognizes as existing in underground bodies or streams in well defined channels are those, and those only, which are known to so exist, or that they do so exist is ascertainable or discoverable from surface indications or other means, without subsurface excavations for that purpose. Black v. Billymena Com'rs.,
Mo surface indications other than the facts hereinbefore detailed are shown indicating a known and well defined underground stream. We think that the facts appearing, taken together, are insufficient to overcome the presumption that the waters in controversy áre percolating waters, and tend rather to show that both the well and the Spring receive their supply from an underground saturated area or stratum extending under the lands of both plaintiffs and defendants. We shall therefore treat the waters in controversy as underground, percolating waters.
The early, and we may say the general rule, was that underground, x^ercolating waters belong to the soil and that the owner of the land maj- search and explore for and obtain them at will and use them at pleasure, though in so doing he may drain or entirely divert such waters from the lands of adjacent or neighboring owners to which they would otherwise necessarily pass. This seems to be the rule in England and the rule followed in nearly all of the early and some of the later American cases. Acton v. Blundell, 12 Mees. & W. 324; Chasemore v. Richards, 7 H. L. Cas. 349; Eward v. Bellfast, L. R. 9 Ir., 172; 10 Am. & Eng. Dec. in Eq. 694, and cases there cited; 30 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 310-11-12; Miller v. Black Rock Springs Co., 99 Va. 747. Of the English cases and of the common law on this subject, Mr. Earnham in his late comprehensive work on “Waters and Water Rights,” vol. 3, page 2718, says:' “When it is remembered that the first English case dealing with percolating water arose in 1840, and that it was not decided that the land owner-might exhaust the water to furnish a municipal water supply until 1860, it will be at once seen that there was no English law on the subject at the time the common law was adopted by statute, in most of the American states, and that the opinion of the American courts as to what is the common law is as good as subsequent decisions in English courts. Therefore, in any case, the question can be decided on its merits, giving the English decisions the weight to which they are entitled, but without the necessity of regarding them as binding precedents.”
Under the early rule, considered without limitation or
In Vol. 30 of Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law (second Ed.), issued in 1905, after noting the general or early rule, it is said: “In the later cases the right of a land-owner to intercept and divert percolating waters has been subjected to some qualifications, on the ground that such right relates to the beneficial use of the waters or of the land for some purpose connected with the ordinary operations of agriculture, mining, domestic use, or improvements, either public or private. Under this doctrine it has been held that a land owner has no right, except for the benefit and improvement of his own premises, or for his beneficial use, to drain, collect, or divert percolating waters therein, where such act will destroy or materially injure the spring of another, the waters of which spring are used by the general public for domestic purposes; that he cannot drain, collect, or divert such waters for the sole purpose of wasting them.”
In Mr. Earnham’s work on “Waters and Water Rights,” issued in 1904, Vol. 3, page 2712, it is said: “It has been said that there are no correlative rights existing between proprietors of adjoining lands in reference to the use of waters in the earth or percolating under its surface. And
Mr. Freeman, who appended a lengthy note to the case of Wheelock v. Jacobs, 67 Am. State Rep. 659, also appended a note on the same subject to the case of Katz v. Wilkinshaw, (Cal.), 99 Am. State Rep. 66, issued in 1904. In the later note he says: “In our note to the cáse of Wheelock v. Jacobs, 67 Am. State Rep. 659, we treated only1 the question of what waters are percolating, perhaps under the impression, which the later and best considered cases do not sustain, that when this question was solved and the answer reached, that the waters in question were percolating, no other inquiry need be made, except to ascertain on whose lands they were found, when used, appropriated, or otherwise interfered with.” At page 71 he says: “The very decided weight of authority supports the proposition that the land owner has no right by anything done on his land to waste, whether through malice or indifferencé, the percolating waters there found, or which he therein develops or brings to the surface by means of ditches or wells, with or without pumping apparatus, if by such waste the neighboring land owner is deprived of percolating waters which otherwise would be within his land and which he there has a necessity for using. ” See authorities there cited. Tending to sustain the later doctrine of reasonable and beneficial use of underground percolating waters see Bassett v. Manufacturing Co., 43 N. H. 569; Sweets v. Cutts, 50 N. H. 439; Katz v. Wilkinshaw, 141 Cal. 116; Barclay v. Abraham, 121 Ia. 619; McClintic v. Hudson, 74 Pac. Rep. 849; Forbell v. New York, 164 N. Y. 522; Reisert v. New York, 66 N. E. Rep, 731; Smith v. Brooklyn, 160 N. Y. 357; Willis v. Perry, 26 L. R. A. 124;
We must yield assent to the later doctrine of reasonable and beneficial use, which constitutes rather a qualification of the early rule than an announcement of a new rule. The later doctrine seems to us to be sustained by the weight of authority as well as by the weight of reason. What is a reasonable and beneficial use' under this later doctrine must be determined in the light of the facts and circumstances appearing in each case as it arises. We do not desire to be understood as announcing any fixed rule applicable'to all cases as to the question of what constitutes such reasonable and beneficial use. Such reasonable and beneficial use has often been understood and held to mean, use for any purpose for which the owner of the land, upon which underground, such percolating waters are found, might legitimately use and enjoy his land. 30 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law 314; 10 Am. & Eng. Dec. in Eq., supra.
By the later doctrine, is not much of the difference between the rules of law governing underground streams existing in well defined channels, and the rules of law applicable to underground, percolating waters virtually extinguished? It may be so, but we do not decide here that it is so. We must keep in mind, however, in investigating the subject here involved, the fact that water in some form is necessary to the very existence of man and to the enjoyment of his land. Without it his land becomes a desert, of no value for agricultural purposes and unfit for habitation. In this respect, water may be unlike oil or gas, or other such subterranean substances, which, while useful to man, are not absolutely necessary to his existence or to the enjoyment of his land and may be abstracted therefrom without destroying the value of the land. These substances may be termed merely commercial products, but we are not deciding any question in relation to these products termed commercial products.
Applying the law to this case, we believe that the facts alleged in the bill, if sustained by proof, are sufficient to entitle the plaintiffs to relief in- equity, and the demurrer to the
“Q. — In operating this well, do you know what pumping was or was not necessary in operating it as they were operating it?
A. — They pumped the water out so they could work down in there.
Q. — Wasn’t it necessary to pump the water out so they could work down in there?
A. — It might have been necessary; I wasn’t there.
Q. — Don’t you know they could not work down in that well with that shaft with the water and without pumping it out?
A. — No, I don’t see how they could have worked without pumping the water out.”
J. 1). Pence, a son of plaintiff A. P. Pence, on cross examination testified as follows:
“Q. — The pumping that you have spoken of from this well was necessary in the operation of sinking the well, wasn’t it?
A. — That depends upon how you have reference to sinking the well.
Q. — Is that as far as you can answer this question?
A. — It is, until I know further about how the well is to be sunk.
Q,. — Don’t you know how that well was being sunk?
A. — It was sunk by means of a steam drill, and also by ■means of pick and shovel.
A. — I do.
Q. — I will ask you again if this pumping was not necessary in the operation of sinking this well, as it was being sunk?
A. — As they were working at it I should say it was.”
This evidence seems to be conclusive. We cannot say that the pumping and wasting of the water from defendants’ well was such an unreasonable use of the water as to violate the rule of reasonable and beneficial use by defendants. We hold, therefore, that plaintiffs were not entitled to a perpetuation of the injunction against such temporary use of the water from defendants’ well as is disclosed by the evidence..
Plaintiffs claim that under the allegations of the bill they were entitled to have the injunction perpetuated because defendants had cast the water upon the earth and the same had flowed upon and over plaintiffs’ land, by reason whereof the damage to plaintiffs was irreparable. There is no allegation that defendants were insolvent, and no facts constituting irreparable injury are alleged in the bill or shown by the evidence in relation to the water which flowed upon plaintiffs’ land, and plaintiffs were not entitled to a perpetuation of the injunction on the ground that such trespass or injury was irreparable. See Farland v. Wood, 35 W. Va. 458; Becker v. McGraw, 48 W. Va. 539; Merriner v. Merriner, 54 W. Va. 169.
It is claimed that the motion to dissolve the injunction should not have been considered at .a time when a rule was pending and undetermined against defendants for violating the injunction. On the 13th day of January, 1905, an order was entered by consent of both parties, continuing the consideration of the rule. This cause was submitted for final hearing, among other things, upon motion of plaintiffs to perpetuate the injunction, without having the question of the rule determined. No objection to the final hearing was made in the court below because of the pendency of the rule, and we think, under these circumstances, that the decree cannot be reversed because of the pendency of the rule, at the instance of the plaintiffs. Endicott v. Mathis, 9 N. J. Ch. 110; Crabtree v. Baker, 51 Am. Rep. 424; Hebb v. County Court, 48 W. Va. 279. It appears to us from the whole case that
For the reasons stated it is ordered that the decree of the circuit court entered in this cause on the 29th day of March, 1905, be modified so as to overrule the demurrer to the plaintiffs’ bill, and, as modified, that the same be affirmed without prejudice to the right of the plaintiffs to proceed by a bill for an injunction, or otherwise, against the defendants for any future unlawful extraction, use or waste of said underground water which may be found or obtained upon their lands, resulting in injury to the property or rights of the plaintiffs.
Modified and Affirmed.