58 F. 133 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Western Virginia | 1893
(after stating the facts.) The first question to be determined is as to the location of the spring, — whether it is in the state of Virginia or the state of West Virginia. This depends upon the ascertainment of the boundary line between the county of Tazewell, in the state of Virginia, and the county of Mercer, in the state of West Virginia, and the exact location of the spring with reference to this boundary line.
The county of Mercer was formed out of portions of the counties Giles and Tazewell, in (he state of Virginia, in 1837, and became a county in the state of West Virginia upon the formation of that state, in 1863. An act of the legislature of Virginia, passed March 13, 1847, provided for surveying and ascertaining the true boundary line between Mercer county and Tazewell county. In pursuance to the provisions of this act a, survey was made, and a plat drawn, which plat, the act further provided, should be “conclusive evidence in all controversies which may arise; touching said line.” The surveyor appointed by the court has ascertained the true line as originally surveyed and located, and traced on the plat pursuant to The said act of the legislature of Virginia, and has reported the same to the court. This report appears to the court to be correct, and the exceptions to it which have been filed must be overruled, and the report confirmed. Ac,cording to this report The spring is situate in the county of Tazewell, in the state of Virginia, and within the jurisdiction of the court. This determines the question as to the location of the spring.
The defendant company claims that it is an internal improvement company, and has the right to take private property for public uses. Wha ever may be its powers conferred by its char-tin' in the state of West Virginia, (and the court has no occasion here to express any opinion on that question,) it will not be contended that the defendant company, having no charter under the laws of the state of Virginia to do so, can exercise such powers within this stall1. The determination of the question as to the location of the spring — that it is in the state of Virginia, and not in the state of SVest Virginia — settles this contention, also, adversely to the claim of the defendant company. In the opinion of tin; court, the defendant company possesses, within this state, no greater or higher powers in relation to the taking of private property for public uses without the consent of the owner than a natural person possesses. It had tl\e power to contract with the city of Bluetield and the Norfolk & Western Railroad Company to supply them with water, just as any natural person has; but such contract could not confer upon it any such power as that which the state may exercise in its sovereign right of eminent domain.
Neither the city of Bluefield nor the Norfolk & Western Railroad Company is a party to this suit. They are not here claiming that the water of this spring is indispensable to them for public, uses. They have not constituted the defendant company their
But, even if this were otherwise, — if the defendant company came as the accredited agent of the city of Bluefield and the Norfolk & Western Railroad Company; even if the city of Bluefield and the Norfolk & Western Railroad Company were themselves the defendants here, — it would make no difference in the- condition of this suit touching this branch of the contention; for the city of Bluefield, being a corporation under the laws of the state of West Virginia, could not have the power to exercise the right of eminent domain within the state of Virginia, under its charter from the state of West Virginia, and the Norfolk & Western Railroad Company, although a corporation under the laws of the state of Virginia, could not, as a riparian owner, take water for its engines so as to affect injuriously the rights of other riparian owners; and even if it, as an internal improvement company, needed the water for public uses, the only mode by which it could acquire it without the consent of the lower riparian owners, if at all, would be by instituting condemnation proceedings as prescribed by the laws of the state of Virginia.
The court is therefore of opinion that this controversy must be decided upon the well-known principles of law applicable to the rights of riparian proprietors. These principles are so well settled and so familiar that we ought to have little difficulty in applying them to the questions involved. *
Mr. Gould, in his treatise on the Law of Waters and Riparian Rights, (section 205,) says:
“Each, riparian proprietor has a right to the ordinary use of the water flowing past his land for the purpose of supplying his natural wants, including the use of the water for his domestic purposes and for his stock. * * * The term ‘domestic purposes’ extends to culinary and household purposes, and to the cleansing and washing, feeding, and supplying the ordinary quantity of cattle. * * * But railway companies, as riparian owners, are not entitled to take water for their engines so as to afllect injuriously * * * the right of other riparian owners, such use not being domestic; and the fact that they do not require the water for domestic use does not entitle them to it for other purposes of a different character.”
Mr. Minor, in tbe third volume of Ms Institutes, (not yet published,) has exhaustively investigated the subject, collated the authorities, and states the law. Be says:
“Prima facie the ■ proprietor of each bank of a private (or unnavigable) stream is the proprietor of half the land covered by the stream; but there is no property in the water, but only a mere usufruct, while it passes along. Every proprietor has an equal right to use the water which flows in the stream, and to have the full benefit thereof, in the state in which it exists naturally, as it was wont to rim, (currere solebat,) uncontaminated and sub*137 stantially imdiminislied (save for tlie most necessary uses of life) by the acts of landowners above him, and without prejudice from the acts of tin» proprietors below him; and that, not in consequence of any presumed• grant from any one, but ox jure naturae, — by the law of nature. ‘Aqua eurrit et dobet currore’ is the language of the law. Though, he may use the water while it runs over his land, he cannot unreasonably detain it, or give it another direction, and lie must return it to the ordinary channel when it leaves his premisos. Without the consent of the other proprietors who may be affected by his operations, no riparian owner can either divert or unreasonably diminish the quantity of water which would descend to the proprietors below, nor pollute it, nor throw the water back upon the proprietors above.” 3 Minor, Inst. pp. 15, 1C, and the long list of authorities there cited. ;
“By the general law applicable to running streams, every person through or past whose» land a natural water course runs has a right to the reasonable use of the water, and no proprietor, above or below, has a right to divert or obstruct it. This right is not an easement, but is inseparably annexed to the soil, and passes with it.” Carpenter v. Gold, 88 Va. 552, 14 S. E. Rep. 329.
Would the removal and diversion of the water of the spring, the source of the stream in question, in the manner and quantity proposed by the defendant company, unreasonably dimmish the quantity of water which would descend to the complainants land View? it appears from the evidence that the stream from this spring first enters upon the complainant’s land a short distance below the spring, flows through it for several hundred feet, then leaves it, and flows through others’ lands for a distance of between one-fourth and one-half mile, then re-enters upon complainant’s land, and flows through it for a distance of a little more than a mile. Between the spring and the point at which the stream first enters upon the complainant’s laud, as the evidence shows, there are no tributaries of sufficient size to be considered. The complainant’s right to the use of the water which flows in the stream, and to have the full benefit thereof, uncontaminated and substantially undiminished (save for the most necessary purposes of life) by the acts of the landowners above Mm, is fully established at the point where the stream first flows upon his land, and is as valid in respect to the several hundred feet of its course through his land which it first makes as it is in respect to the mile or more of the course it makes through his land lower down, after its second entrance on it; and the complainant claims than he purchased that portion of his land through which the stream first flows mainly for the benefit of the water which the stream affords, and that he would not have purchased it hut for that consideration. The defendant company denies that the removal and diversion of the water*, as proposed by it, would in any way injure the complainant, or lessen the value of his land, and contends that there would be an abundance of water left for all lawful and necessary purposes. From measurements made by the defendant company’s engineer, the flow of the spring for each 24 hours, at different dates, is shown to be as follows: January 28, 1892, 1,100,968 gallons; February 9, 1892, 2,227,548 gallons'; April 19, 1893, 1,222,793 gallons; April 29, 1893, 2,281,983 gallons. The engineer states that the measurement taken on January 28th is low on account of the ground and the small tributaries being frozen up; that taken on February 9th is high on account of heavy
But the complainant’s riparian rights are equally valid in respect to the longer course, of a mile or more, which the stream makes through his land after- its second entrance upon it, lower down, as in respect to the shorter course which it makes through his land at first. Between the- point at which the stream leaves his land, after its short course through it, and the point at which it again enters upon it to make its longer course through it, a distance of something less than half a mile, the stream receives the water from John A. Bailey’s spring branch and from Wilson creek. The defendant company’s engineer’s measurement of the flow of the stream after receiving these tributaries, taken at a point about 800 feet above the point at which it enters upon the complainant’s land for the second time, showed the quantity of water
Upon a 'careful consideration of the evidence in this cause, and of 1 he law applicable to the same, the court, is of opinion that the removal and diversion of the water of the spring in question, in the manner and quantity which would be removed and diverted by the proposed operations of the defendant company, would be an unreasonable diminution of the quantity of water which would descend to the land of the complainant, who is a riparian proprietor below, and would deprive him of his equal right to use the water which flows in the stream, and to have the full benefit thereof in the state in which it exists naturally, as it was wont to run. “Accordingly, the diversion of a natural stream is a, private nuisance, and therefore, from an early period, (.he courts of equity have granted relief by way of injunction, in such cases, at ihe suit of the injured party. The jurisdiction is founded upon the notion of restraining irreparable mischief, or of preventing vexatious litigation or a multiplicity of suits.” Carpenter v. Gold, 88 Va. 553, 14 S. E. Rep. 329. “And it, is to be specially observed that if the use be unreasonable, or otherwise illegal, the party whose rights are affected may maintain an action, although there may have been no actual, but only potential, damage, — that is, a possible future injury from the present inva-' sion of the right,.” 3 Minor, Inst. p. 17, and authorities there cited.
The preliminary injunction must be made absolute and perpetuated.