196 N.Y. 421 | NY | 1909
Lead Opinion
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It is difficult to understand upon what ground the evidence offered by these defendants was excluded; unless it be the interpretation given to our decision of the case of Hathorn v.Natural Carbonic Gas Co., (
I think that the opinion of this court in the Hathorn Case,
(supra), must have been greatly misapprehended, both as to the basis upon which it was rested and as to the principles sought to be established thereby. In that case, it was, certainly, intended to determine the constitutionality of the act of 1908 and that an action brought by taxpayers, (who were, also, spring owners), upon a complaint making like charges against one of these defendants, might be maintained under the provisions of the act, as well as at common law; but it is to be, particularly, observed that, in that case, we had before us in the record the admission by demurrer of the material facts pleaded in the complaint. A careful reading of the opinion will, in repeated instances, show that in reaching conclusions attention was called to the effect upon construction of the admission of the state of facts exhibited by the pleading *431
The complaint in the Hathorn action did not differ, in its allegations, materially, from the present complaint and the demand for relief was for an injunction against the use by the defendant of pumps for the purpose of accelerating the flow of subterranean waters and gas through deep wells. Naturally, the demurrer to the complaint presented the question whether, by force of the provisions of the act of 1908, or at common law, such an action was maintainable and the equitable relief warranted. Reasoning upon the principles of the common law, as applicable to the subject of rights in sub-surface and percolating waters, it was considered that the doctrine, varying from that of the early English and American cases, which followedActon v. Blundell, (12 M. W. 324), and gave to a landowner an absolute right to all that lay below the surface of his lands, to the later restriction imposed upon that right, when its exercise was unreasonable, because not relating to the use, or enjoyment, of the land itself, became, finally, settled by the decision in the case of Forbell v. City of New York,
(
Our decision in the Hathorn case affirmed the constitutionality of the act of 1908, in question, and its applicability to the case of the plaintiffs was upheld upon the facts as they stood admitted by the defendant's demurrer. It is, of course, not proper that some isolated expression in the opinion of Judge HISCOCK should be selected, in order to give color to the argument for a broader and more unqualified application of the statute; but it should be read in connection with the context and in the light of the very careful reasoning, by which the conclusions as to the applicability of the act are guarded.
But the situation of these parties in the trial court, from which this judgment comes, was altogether different from what it was in the Hathorn action. All the allegations of this complaint were denied, which had relation to the acts of the defendants, in their effect upon the adjacent lands of other owners and upon the rights of others to the common enjoyment of the subterranean mineral waters, and, generally, to acts alleged as constituting an unreasonable use by the defendants of their properties. It was averred, in defense, that it was necessary to make use of wells and of pumps in the prosecution of the defendant's business and, further, that the mineral waters and gas were found both in wells extending into the rock and in those reaching into the soil, and that no reasonable basis existed for discriminating against the *435
former as a use of one's property. There resulted, therefore, issues which had to be determined upon evidence, before a judgment could, properly, deprive the defendants of their right to prosecute a business, which, in itself, was lawful. The legislature could not enact arbitrarily upon the subject and we should not so read the act, in question. We must read into it the intent to regulate the conflicting rights of landowners, who derive enjoyment, or profit, from the use of these waters within the earth and of their constituent ingredients and gases. In that aspect, the enactment was a proper exercise of the police power, which the government possesses and by which, among other objects of governmental solicitude, it regulates the intercourse of citizens and insures "to each the uninterrupted enjoyment of his own, so far as is reasonably consistent with a like enjoyment of rights by others." (People ex rel. N.Y. Electric Lines Co. v.Squire,
The objection to the right of the People to bring such an action, that it relates to private interests, is without force, as we held in the Hathorn case; inasmuch as the public interests are concerned in the enforcement of the statute. But whatever the argument, the language of the act investing the attorney-general with power to bring an action is explicit and that is enough. (People v. Ballard,
But, inasmuch as the proper reading of the third provision of the act forbids a construction that it is unqualifiedly prohibitory of the pumping of the mineral waters, for the purpose of separating and vending the gas as a commodity, without reference to the reasonableness of such a use of the property, relatively to the rights of others, the importance and materiality of evidence, offered by a defendant to show that his wells, with their pumping appliances, caused no unnatural flow and had no effect upon the properties of others, *438 entitled to draw from a common source of supply, become apparent. The right to equitable relief depends upon whether that which is demanded appears to be proper upon an investigation of the facts. That the statute is not applicable to their case, the defendants should have been permitted to show by any competent evidence. They were entitled to show the situation of their wells, the necessity of the pumping appliances used and that no acts of theirs, in that respect, affected any other spring, or well, or resulted in injury to any other person. Evidence to show the comparative effects upon the sources of supply of the mineral waters and gas of pumping from wells, which are bored into the rock, and from those which are driven into the soil, was, also, fairly within the issues. Of course, the purpose of such evidence was to show that the act of 1908 violates that provision of the Federal Constitution, which prohibits a state from denying "to any person, within its jurisdiction, the equal protection of the laws," in that an arbitrary classification was made of wells bored, or drilled, into the rock. That point was considered in our opinion in the Hathorn Case, (supra); where it was held that the classification was valid, if "based on some sufficient reason and not on mere caprice or arbitrary election. * * * Under the admitted allegations of the complaint * * * a proper basis existed for the classification made by the Legislature." From those allegations it appeared that differing conditions prevailed in the two classes of wells and that pumping from those bored into the rock was much more exhaustive and destructive of the common rights. There, as here, the complaint showed that the excess of gas existing in the cavities of the rocks exerted a great pressure, which tends to expel the waters and gas and to cause them to flow naturally to the surface, and that the mineral springs were dependent for their existence upon such pressure. But, in the present case, these allegations were put in issue. It was claimed, in the answers, as a ground for assailing the constitutionality of the act, that the acceleration of the flow by pumping from wells, whether extending into the rock, or into the soil, and *439 the effect upon the gas and the water charged therewith, in either case, were, in all respects, the same. I think that the defendants were entitled to give any competent evidence that they had, in support of their defense to the validity of the act, that, as its provision rested upon no real basis, in discriminating against wells bored into the rock, the prohibition was an unreasonable exercise of power. Such proof would not be objectionable, because going to show the statute to be on its face invalid; it would bear upon the reasonableness of its classification and go to show whether its provisions, in attempting a regulation of the conflicting rights of all to a common, natural, supply, operated unequally upon the rights of a class of property owners. On its face the third prohibitory provision of the act appears to be valid, as we have held in theHathorn case. The legislature assumed the existence of a fact, so notorious in external nature as to be a matter of common teaching and knowledge, that gas, as an elastic aeri-form fluid, when confined, exerts pressure; that the natural tendency will be to expel the waters, which hold them in solution, when generated, through any vent, or opening, in the rocks, where confined, and that the boring of wells into such rocks would diminish the pressure and thereby destroy, or seriously impair, the force, which was necessary to the natural flow observed in the mineral springs. If the defendants were able to show that this scientific fact in the natural world had no application to their situation and that there was no difference, in the effect upon the general source of supply, between pumping from wells bored in the rock or from those driven in the soil, or in the effect upon the springs of other landowners, I think they were entitled to present that evidence for the consideration of the court in determining the reasonableness and validity of the legislative measure.
As to the burden of proof I think it rested upon the defendants. There was enough admitted as to the situation, the character of the waters and the nature of the work conducted by the defendants, to bring them, prima facie, within the operation of the act. The People were entitled to rest upon *440 the presumption of the validity of its provision and upon the support to their case in the admissions made and in the inferences of facts from the operation of natural laws, until the evidence of the defendants established, or tended to establish, their defenses that the statutory provisions were inapplicable to their case; that such regulations were unjustly discriminative; or that they were not chargeable with making a use of their property, which was unreasonable because injurious to the rights of others.
For these reasons, I advise that the judgments in these four actions be reversed and that new trials be ordered; with costs to abide the event.
Concurrence Opinion
I concur in the opinion of GRAY, J., for reversal of the judgments appealed from in these cases, but desire to add a word in answer to one argument pressed on us by the learned attorney-general. It is urged that the public have such an interest in the mineral waters of Saratoga, because of their great curative and health giving properties, that the legislature may interpose for their protection under the right of the state in the exercise of its police power "to protect and develop its natural resources", even though the waters themselves are the property of private persons. I deny that the police power vests in the legislature any such right. "The police power of the government, as understood in the constitutional law of the United States, is simply the power of the government to establish provisions for the enforcement of the common as well as civil law maxim, sic utere tuo, ut alienum non lœdas" (Tiedeman's Limitations of Police Power, p. 4), that is to say, one cannot use his own property so as to injure the rights of others, nor can he use it in such a manner as to offend against public morality, health or peace and good order. In the exercise of this power, doubtless, the legislature may not only prohibit acts of commission on the part of the owner, but acts of omission, provided the result of such omission is to invade the rights of others or those of the public. But under that power the legislature *441
cannot require an owner to use his property for the advantage and benefit of others or of the public, or even for his own benefit, nor restrain him from devoting it to such purpose as he sees fit, or even from wasting it, provided such use does not conflict with the rights of others or the public. (Matter of Ryers,
That the right to appropriate springs and subterranean waters is an incident of the ownership of the land is settled by a long line of authorities, to one of which only it is necessary to refer. (Bloodgood v. Ayers,
I concurred in the affirmance of the judgment in the *442 Hathorn case because, on the facts alleged in the complaint in that case, I thought the defendant's use of the water unreasonable within the doctrine of the Forbell case, and I concurred in upholding the statute because I deemed it an adjustment of conflicting private rights and the apportionment of a common property right among several owners. That is a recognized branch of the police power. (Dorrity v. Rapp,
HAIGHT and WILLARD BARTLETT, JJ. We concur in the result reached in the opinion of GRAY, J., and concur in the opinion of the chief judge in so far as he discusses the right of the state, in the exercise of its police power, to interfere with the production of mineral water by private persons upon their own land.
EDWARD T. BARTLETT, WERNER and HISCOCK, JJ., concur with GRAY, J., and CULLEN, Ch. J.; HAIGHT and WILLARD BARTLETT, JJ., concur in result in memorandum.
Judgments reversed, etc.