17 Pa. Super. 347 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1901
Opinion by
The plaintiffs filed a bill in equity to restrain the defendant from selling certain unseated lands for nonpayment of taxes which had been assessed by the county commissioners of Lackawanna county for county and township purposes for the years' 1895 and 1896. After a hearing on bill, answer and testimony,. the court below entered a decree permanently enjoining the-
The plaintiff corporations were duly incorporated and associated together under the laws of this commonwealth, “ for the purpose of supplying water to the public and the supplying, storing and transportation of water and water power for commercial and manufacturing purposes,” their combined capital being $1,050,000. For the purpose of this case the united and associated water companies may be treated as one corporation, which owns in fee twenty tracts and parts of tracts of land aggegating 6,200 acres, and supplies water for domestic, commercial, and manufacturing purposes to three cities, twelve boroughs, and eleven towns in the Lackawanna and Wyoming valleys, to a population of upwards of 200,000 people, and to some thirty collieries and manufactories. On the land mentioned are three dams andreservoirs established and maintained, with a storage capacity of about 400,000,000 gallons of water . which is conducted to the consumers through about 300 miles of pipes. All the lands are within Spring Brook township and are practically wild and mountainous highlands and foothills of the Moosic and Pocono ranges, having been many years ago heavily covered with timber which has since then been removed and succeeded by. a second growth of chestnut, maple and oak. The water company, after securing title to certain of the lands, demolished a number of houses, barns, and outbuildings erected thereon so as to remove from its intake dams and reservoirs all sources of impurity and contamination from the natural drainage surface. The land owned by the water company, a trifling proportion of which is suitable for agricultural purposes, comprises in area about one third of Spring Brook township and in assessed value a little more than one sixth of the whole, the total assessment being $16,658, on which county, school, and road taxes were duly levied. Since these were not paid, the lands were returned to the county commissioners as unseated, and, after being certified to the county treasurer, were advertised for sale for the payment of the taxes. Certain described lands of the water company were omitted from the return by the taxing authorities as being properly exempt from taxation. The water company claims that all the lands described in the
This far the court below went, but held that there was no necessity for the company to purchase or hold the extent of acreage which they do in order to keep the water pure. In Western N. Y., etc., Ry. Co. v. Venango County, 5 Pa. Superior Ct. 304, this court said, in a case concerning land on which the general repair shops of a railroad company were located, “ there is a well defined line of demarkation to be observed in determining the liability to taxation of railroad property, which it is necessary to bear always in mind, viz: the distinction between that which is indispensably necessary to the operation of the railroad as such, and that which is necessary to profitably conduct the business of the corporation.” And the same reason applies to the case in hand. The public health is best conserved by requiring the water company to supply water as reasonably pure as natural conditions will admit, and in substantial aid of this consideration the Act of May 26,1893, P. L. 158, “ authorizing water companies to relocate roads destroyed, and to acquire land to preserve water supply from contamination ” -was enacted so as
The land is described as rough, mountainous, and wild, having been denuded of its virgin timber many years ago, and because it is not suitable for agricultural purposes it is treated by the company as of no value for any other. This may be or may not be so. It is not known when the timber was removed. The character of the second growth, the mineral value of the land, the reasonable appreciation of value in the near future for present or prospective uses are not shown by the evidence. • It would be unreasonable to exempt the land from taxation and yet permit the corporation to derive independent revenue from it through sales of timber, operation of mines or quarries, or other uses unrelated to its charter purposes. To exempt the land from taxation the water company must show that the land is indispensably necessary and absolutely essential for its corporate uses so as to enable it to operate properly the water company as such. The trial judge finds as a fact that so far as the wild lands are concerned, which are uninhabited, uncultivated, and gradually assuming primeval conditions, the purposes of the corporation are fully conserved through present natural conditions without regard to the ownership of the title to the lands. If any local danger menaces the purity of the dams, reservoirs, streams or tributaries, there is ample protection furnished by the act of 1893, by which the unsafe locality may be condemned and thus become technical corporate property exempt from local taxation.
Under the evidence in this case we discover no error in the action of the court below; we therefore affirm the decree.