142 P. 609 | Or. | 1914
delivered the opinion of the court.
One of the defenses to the suit is that the present sewer system is a great improvement upon the offensive surroundings and unsanitary conditions existing prior to the construction of the sewer; but that does not affect the questions involved. The issue is as to whether the present sewer system is a menace to the lives and health of the citizens in the vicinity of the
“Whatever may be the rule with respect to surface water, there seems to be no authoritative decisions asserting the right of municipal corporations, merely as riparian owners and without legislative authority, either express or implied, to drain sewage into waters to the injury of others, although there is an intimation to that effect in Valparaiso v. Hagen.”
Defendant cites and places much reliance on the case of Valparaiso v. Hagen, 153 Ind. 337 (54 N. E. 1062, 74 Am. St. Rep. 305, 48 L. R. A. 707), but this case stands almost alone on this question. Farnham on
“It is almost impossible for a municipal corporation of any size to turn its sewage into a water body for any length of time without creating a nuisance, and the question whether it has a right to make such disposal of its sewage depends, therefore, upon its right to create a nuisance, or the power of the legislature to authorize it to do so. * * The right of a municipal corporation to dispose of its sewage and garbage by turning it into water bodies will be materially simplified by first determining the necessity for doing so. * * But if it shall appear that it is not only not necessary to dispose of such material by casting it into the water, but that such, method of disposal is crude, unsanitary, and more harmful than beneficial, and that it has been abandoned throughout all of the more advanced centers of population of the old world, there would be little to justify a holding that there is power to make such disposal of the waste products.”
Then follow about two pages of description of the septic tank and its effectiveness, after which he continues:
“ ‘This is accomplished, too, with an entire absence of injury, or even offense, to persons living in the
However, these cases and notes are largely discussing private injuries or their effect upon private property or individuals, while in this case the suit is brought by the state board of health to enjoin a public nuisance in the interests of public health. Here there is no complaint that private property has been taken, nor that the health of any individual or community has been affected. It is not alleged that such is the result, but that the lives and health of citizens are endangered thereby, and the proof is to that effect. Neither is it contended that the stream is rendered foul-smelling or otherwise offensive. But two questions are discussed or presented, namely, as to the authority of the state board to maintain this suit against a city in Marion County, and the right of the defendant to drain the city’s sewage into Silver Creek. Defendant first insists that such a suit can be instituted only by the state in the name and by the authority of the district attorney.
There is a criminal penalty attached to this section, but the section necessarily includes authority to have the nuisance abated. In a proper case this may be done by injunction: See 21 Cyc. 398; Gould v. Rochester, 105 N. Y. 46 (12 N. E. 275). It is said in Parker and Worthington, Public Health and Safety, page 102, that the health board may maintain actions in any court or restrain by injunction violations of and noncompliance with its orders: 21 Cyc. 401. No doubt, such authority in the board extends only to nuisances which endanger the health of individuals or communities, and to places where the sanitary laws are inoperative. But the power of the board to act must be made out upon satisfactory evidence that the act of the city creates a public nuisance; or if the danger is only apprehended, as. in this case, facts must be established which show the danger to be real and imminent. It is said in High, Injunctions, Section 811:
“Where the injury resulting from the pollution of water by sewage from a city is not imminent and will result, if at all, only in the future, * * relief by injunction will be denied, * * where the fact of the nuisances is not made out by clear and satisfactory evidence.”
See, also, Hutchinson v. Delano, 46 Kan. 345 (26 Pac. 740); Newark Aqueduct Board v. Passaic, 46 N. J. Eq. 552 (20 Atl. 54, 22 Atl. 55); Parker and Worthington, Health and Safety, §§ 183, 184, 221.
The actual existence of the nuisance must be established: Eagan v. New York Health Department, 20
‘ ‘ Injunction is a proper remedy to abate a nuisance, but it is not every case in which it will be granted in the first instance. If the discharge of sewage into the stream does not create a nuisance, an injunction will be refused. And, in view of the public necessities involved, the court will be slow in granting the injunction, if any other form of relief is available. The injunction will also be refused if the nuisance is merely anticipated.” See cases cited in note to this text.
Again, at page 544, it is said that the authority does not justify arbitrary action; that, if the property does not constitute a nuisance, the board has no power to interfere with it.
The plaintiff has not established the fact that a public nuisance has been created, and is not entitled to an injunction. The case will be reversed, and the suit dismissed. Reversed. Suit Dismissed.