152 A. 829 | Pa. | 1930
Three tenants in common, plaintiffs in this case, owned a small farm in Pine Township, Allegheny County, containing about nine acres, having thereon a frame house with a water well under the kitchen. In 1920, oil was discovered on an adjoining property and drilling operations were begun. The same year defendant took several leases on adjacent land, and acquired also the right to enter on the plaintiffs' farm, and did construct the well known as Aronson No. 1. During the three years succeeding, several others were opened in close proximity by different prospectors, one within 200 feet of the Schlichtkrull home, and some across an intervening *556 stream, of about the same level as the well in question, and into which waste water found its way, but on the opposite slope. In 1922, after the first Aronson drilling, salt appeared in the well water, but, after complaint, and the installation of proper drainage, this condition was corrected. During the summer of 1925, the defendant caused a second boring to be made, 988 feet from the house, and with which we are concerned in the present proceeding. It was driven through the bluff or fresh sand some 80 feet from the surface, but as no water then appeared, it was continued to a much lower depth, without the insertion of any casing, as some witnesses testified was customarily done to prevent the salt water, — reached at lower levels, — coming in contact with the fresh, which passed through the strata above. In failing to so protect from possible contamination, the jury has found on disputed testimony that defendant failed to exercise due care.
In 1926 the well water became salty and bitter, and so continued until the time of bringing this suit. It was claimed that a permanent injury to the land resulted, for which loss damages were asked. An expert for plaintiffs, by the use of a violet dye inserted at the point of drilling, disclosed some connection between the salty water there present and the contents of the well, though differing in other chemical contents, as shown by an analysis, and the jury was justified in finding that the water passed in some way through the ground from one point to the other. Other wells on the farther slope also produced salt water, as in the case of the one located on the Utes property on the opposite side of the stream. No connection between them and the house water supply appeared from the evidence produced. The operation last mentioned had been in use for 20 years, during part of which time at least the water of plaintiffs was in good condition, not having become again polluted until 1922, and later in 1926, after the Aronson No. 2 was drilled. *557
In passing on the complaint here made, we have in mind the established principle, that interference with subterranean waters seeping into private wells shall be treated as damnum absque injuria, where no negligence causing the injury is found, but that a recovery may be had where the loss is shown to have resulted from the failure to use due care: Collins v. Chartiers V. Gas Co.,
The substantial question raised is the proper measure of the compensation to be allowed. In the statement of claim, a permanent injury to the land was asserted and not denied in the affidavit of defense, though this averment was not required in such a pleading. The case was tried, without objection by defendant, on the theory that the difference in the market value of the property as a whole, before and after the injury to the well, was the proper method by which the loss should be estimated. No points suggesting the application of a contrary rule *558
were presented by appellant, and it was not until the motion for a new trial that it was urged a different test should be applied. It is of course true that damages done by a trespasser, or the one conducting a nuisance, is limited to compensation for the injury at the time inflicted, for the continuance of such wrongdoing may be restrained (as illustrated by Seely v. Alden,
"If the injury is caused by erecting a structure or making a use of land which the defendant has a right to continue, the injury is regarded as committed once for all, and action must be brought to recover the entire damage, past and future": Shaffer v. Penna. Co.,
Defendant did offer during the trial to show the Aronson Well No. 2, complained of, was no longer a paying proposition, and that it was the purpose of the oil company to abandon it within six months, in which event it would be plugged, as provided by the Act of May 26, 1891, P. L. 122, or if defendant failed to perform that duty, the plaintiff could require that it so proceed, under the third section of the statute referred to. There was, however, no offer to show that the result of such action would be to restore the property to its former condition, nor to prove that the plugging would prevent the continued rise of the salt water in the uncased hole, thus preventing its coming in contact with the fresh, which passed through the intervening land to the well, or, if so, the length of time that would be required to accomplish this result. The proposed testimony, indicating a purpose to close the oil boring in the near future, was insufficient.
A review of the record leads to the belief that the liability of defendant was properly established, the correct measure of damages applied, and the offer to show an intention to cease the wrongdoing, so as to limit the amount of the recovery, was insufficient, and therefore the assignment of error directed to the refusal of the evidence tendered to show the fact last referred to must be overruled.
The judgment is affirmed. *560