89 Minn. 58 | Minn. | 1903
This was an action brought to restrain the defendant from interfering with subsurface waters, which, percolating through the ground, served in part to supply a spring situated upon plaintiff’s property, which spring the latter uses to furnish its patrons, the people of Stillwater, with water for domestic use; the plaintiff’s business under its charter being to provide the city and its inhabitants with water for both fire and domestic purposes. For other than domestic purposes water is taken from McKusiek Lake by plaintiff company, but it must rely upon this spring, which is quite large, and others, much smaller, for a supply for domestic use.
The action was dismissed when plaintiff rested at the trial below, upon the ground that it had failed to establish a cause of action. The case comes here upon a bill of exceptions on appeal from an order refusing to grant plaintiff’s motion for a new trial.
Whatever may have been the issue tried in the court below, it is very evident, and both parties now concede, that there is but a single question here. It is a new and important one, not without difficulty of determination, and upon which there seem to be very few cases to which we may look for assistance. The plaintiff corporation owns and uses for its mains a narrow strip of land running from McKusiek Lake through a ravine which finally terminates in the vicinity of Lake St. Croix. At one time this ravine was the bed of a small brook, the outlet of McKusiek Lake, but a running stream no longer exists. Part way down this ravine is the spring around which the plaintiff has- built a circular wall about six feet in diameter. On the south it is less than one foot
Some time ago, on his own land, near the boundary line, and about ten feet from the center of the spring, the defendant excavated a trench, into which percolating waters were drained and gathered in quantities sufficient to affect materially the supply at the spring itself. In this trench he placed a three-inch pipe, which is used to supply water for his livery barn, some distance away. This supply comes from a small spring on one side of the excavation, which defendant has walled up so that its waters do not mingle with those gathered in the bottom of the trench. Of the pipe and its use plaintiff makes no complaint. In the bottom of the trench the defendant then placed a ten-inch tile pipe, and connected it with the city sewer. By means of the trench percolating waters were and are drawn away from plaintiff’s spring, where they would naturally and otherwise go, are gathered in the bottom of the trench, and are then conducted to the city sewer through the ten-inch pipe. Therefore waters naturally supplying the big spring, and used by plaintiff for the public good, are drained and diverted, and, instead of serving the wants of the people, are dissipated and lost. By this draining and diversion the waters in the spring were lowered and reduced one or two inches.
Upon discovering the effect of the ten-inch pipe upon the spring, plaintiff made some changes in the outlet through which the water ran and in its mains for its own protection and benefit, whereupon defendant commenced to relay his ten-inch pipe on a lower level, beginning at its intersection with the city sewer, and working toward the trench.
When a portion of this pipe had been relaid, and while defendant was engaged in the work, plaintiff secured a temporary injunction restraining him from further relaying upon this lower level. The defendant, according to the testimony, threatened to continue such work, and to bring the pipe into the trench, so that when it connects with the water it will be at least eighteen inches below the outlet of the main used by plaintiff to secure its supply from this spring. The effect is evident, and the court below found
The question in this case, reduced to its last analysis, involves the defendant’s right to collect by drainage these fugitive subsurface waters, and then to /waste them, to the annihilation of plaintiff’s business, and to the great discomfort and injury of the people who depend upon the plaintiff for water for domestic use. The books are full of cases in which the rights of an owner of the soil to collect and control percolating waters are considered and determined. A brief and comprehensive general statement of the law pertaining to the subject is found in Pixley v. Clark, 35 N. Y. 520, 527, where it is said: “An owner of the soil may divert percolating water, consume or cut it off, with impunity. It is the same as land, and cannot be distinguished in law from land. So the owner of the land is the absolute owner of the soil and of percolating water, which is a part of, and not different from, the soil. No action lies against the owner for interfering with or destroying percolating or circulating water under the earth’s surface.” This doctrine, and the reasons for it, are well stated in Frazier v. Brown, 12 Oh. St. 294, 311, in the following language:
From this statement, which is really a synopsis of the reasons which have been given again and again for the established doctrine governing percolating waters, it is manifest that considerations of public policy have been of great and controlling weight in shaping the conclusions of the courts. Legal rules, it is said, would be involved in hopeless uncertainty, if an attempt was made to administer them in respect to such waters, and any recognition of correlative rights would interfere, to the material detriment of the state, with the general improvement of the.soil. In so far as the rules laid down in the opinions from which we have quoted are applicable to a given set of facts, there is no reason why they should not be followed in this court, for they are in harmony with all that has been said in the cases heretofore before us involving the rights of landowners with respect to running streams and surface waters. Nor do they conflict in the least with the doctrine which will uphold an owner of land in diverting and disposing of percolating waters for his own beneficial use, either as a water supply for himself or others or for the improvement and drainage of his own land.
If, for illustration, th’e excavation had been made for any purpose useful to defendant, such as supplying his buildings with water, or as a means to drain or improve his own land, we should
The acts which the defendant has performed, which he proposes to continue, and to render more obnoxious and injurious by further and unnecessary drainage of waters which naturally make their way into plaintiff’s spring, have not been and are not done for his own benefit, or for the beneficial use and enjoyment of his own property, but for some purpose not apparent from the record, and which can only be surmised. If, however, he has the legal right to perform these acts, the authorities are abundant, and seemingly unanimous, to the effect that his motive and purpose are immaterial. But we have arrived at the conclusion that, irrespective and independent of his motive, he has no absolute legal right to collect these subsurface waters solely that they may be wantonly wasted, and that he may be restrained from so doing.
It is true that this action must be disposed of upon principles involving natural rights of property, and, while we are first to look to the extent of the defendant’s ownership in the land in which he has dug the trench, we are not altogether to lose sight of the fact that he has collected the water for no worthy purpose,
This maxim has been repeatedly recognized in this court when considering the perplexing subject of surface waters, and it has been held that they must be used and disposed of so as not unnecessarily to injure another person. And an examination of the cases in which the maxim, “Whose is the soil, his it is even to heaven and to the middle of the earth,” has been applied, discloses that in nearly every one the person interrupting, collecting,, and diverting percolating waters upon his own land was doing so' that he might improve and benefit it, or was himself making some, beneficial use of the fugitive waters with which he was interfering. We see no reason why the maxim, “So use your own property as not to injure another,” should not be applied, in a proper case, to percolating waters, or why the limitation found therein is not pertinent when reason and justice suggest the need of it, or why the doctrine of reasonable use and correlative rights should not be applicable where the owner of the soil, for no'beneficial purpose to himself or to his estate, and to the positive injury of his neighbor or the public, insists upon turning pure spring water into a city sewer, that it may be absolutely wasted. And this doctrine of correlative rights and obligations between landowners respecting the appropriation and use of percolating waters has been maintained in at least one state. Bassett v. Salisbury, 43 N. H. 569; Swett v. Cutts, 50 N. H. 439, — in which the maxim, “Sic
The subject of wholesome water for domestic purposes in our cities is fast becoming one of overwhelming importance, and the courts may have to step forward and out of the beaten paths to formulate additional, and perhaps new, rules in order to protect our citizens, and to preserve for their use a wholesome and sufficient supply. It may become absolutely necessary, in order to secure the public health, that noticeable departures be made from the doctrines which have heretofore prevailed, but which have become inefficient, inapplicable, or possibly, radically wrong, under changed and developing conditions. When that time comes, and the subject is presented, no court should feel itself bound to adhere to a previously announced rule of law, for which no substantial reason can be given, or for which a good ground no longer exists. Great injury, distress, and disaster to the public must be prevented, although time-honored precedents, of no value, are swept aside. The justification for such a course lies, as it often does in matters for legislative action, in the fact that the public is vitally and sufficiently interested, and must be protected. In Toledo A. A. & N. M. Ry. Co. v. Pennsylvania Co. (C. C.) 54 Fed. 746, 751, the following language, which should meet the approval of every equity court, was used: “Every just order or rule known to equity courts was born of some emergency, to meet some new conditions, and was, therefore, in its time, without a precedent. If based on sound principles, and beneficent results follow their enforcement, affording necessary relief to the one party without imposing illegal burdens on the other, new remedies and unprecedented orders are not unwelcome aids to the chancellor to meet the constantly varying demands for equitable relief.”
But in holding as we do, and in laying down a rule which confessedly is something of a departure from the general doctrine found in the books, and is an advanced position, we are not really
Attention is here called, as an authority for this proposition, to Smith v. City (Sup.) 46 N. Y. Supp. 141, an exceedingly well written and able opinion, affirmed in 160 N. Y. 357, 54 N. E. 787. It was there said, in substance, that it seemed clear from the reasoning in several cases, which were cited, that the right to collect and appropriate percolating waters, which right has always been upheld, relates to the beneficial use of the waters, or to the beneficial use of the land for some purposes for which it can be used connected with its enjoyment as land, for the ordinary purposes of agriculture, mining, domestic purposes, or improvement, either public or private; and it was held — going much further than necessary in this case, and establishing a radical rule
The doctrine we- now lay down has been to some extent recognized in other cases, although the exact question was not presented. See Chatfield v. Wilson, 28 Vt. 49; Pixley v. Clark, supra; Frazier v. Brown, supra; Burroughs v. Saterlee, 67 Iowa, 396, 25 N. W. 808; Wheatley v. Baugh, 25 Pa. St. 528; Collins v. Chartiers, 131 Pa. St. 143, 18 Atl. 1012, and the New Hampshire cases before referred to. In no case brought under our observation has the right of the owner of the soil to collect percolating waters that he may dissipate and waste them been recognized or upheld.
This doctrine also finds support in the reasoning found in the opinions filed in the somewhat noted case of Ohio v. State, 150 Ind. 698, 50 N. E. 1124, affirmed in 177 U. S. 190, 20 Sup. Ct. 576. The legislature of the state of Indiana had prohibited the wasting of natural gas and petroleum oil from wells by permitting the escape of either into the open air. An action was brought and successfully maintained by the state to enjoin and restrain an oil company from allowing natural gas to escape and waste in violation of this statute. The rules which govern subsurface waters, coal oil, and natural gas — all minerals — are the same under the authorities, and the arguments made in that case in behalf of the defendant and in support of the contention that the statute was unconstitutional were based upon the claim that, as the gas in or under the defendant’s land is part of the land itself, which was conceded, the owner of the soil had the lawful right to assert absolute dominion over all that is found in or under it, including all minerals, to the center of the earth, and for an unlimited distance upwards from the earth’s surface — the exact claim assérted here. It was there held that the statute was constitutional, and that the state, representing its citizens, had the right, as a matter of public
Order reversed, and a new trial granted.