40 Pa. Super. 566 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1909
Opinion by
It is a well-established rule of law regulating mining operations that the proprietor has no right to discharge culm and other refuse of the mine into a stream or to leave it where it will be carried by ordinary floods onto the land of other persons. If he does so dispose of it he renders himself liable for any damage resulting therefrom to such owner: Lentz v. Carnegie Bros. & Co., 145 Pa. 612; Elder v. Lyken Valley Coal Co., 157 Pa. 490; Hindson v. Markle, 171 Pa. 138. Where the material is unlawfully put into the stream the fact that an extraordinary. flood was a contributing cause in carrying it onto the plaintiff’s land does not relieve the person whose wrongful act placed the injurious material in the channel. A considerable part of the plaintiff’s land was injured by a deposit of culm thereon at the occurrence of a flood in the Susquehanna river in 1902. His allegation is that this resulted from the act of the defendant in discharging culm from the Dorrance and Prospect mines owned by it into the river, whence it was carried by the action of a flood and lodged on his farm.’ The evidence as to
The judgment is, therefore, reversed and a venire facias de novo awarded.