76 Pa. Super. 491 | Pa. Super. Ct. | 1921
Opinion by
The appellant is a public service corporation which owns and operates a system of sewers and sewage disposal plant in Radnor Township, Pennsylvania. The appellees are several owners of houses which are connected with and empty their sewage into appellant’s sewage system. Following the filing, publishing and posting of a new schedule of rates by the appellant company, effective July 15, 1918, and a complaint there-against by a number of patrons, (not including the ap-pellees), the Public Service Commission investigated the matter and on April 15, 1919, filed its order directing a slight modification in the rates thereafter to be charged and collected for the service performed, and in all other respects dismissed the complaint. The appellees having refused to pay for sewage service under said schedule and its modification the company brought these actions in assumpsit.
The defense set up by the several defendants was that they were not patrons of the plaintiff company but had
The facts which they claim establish this easement may be briefly summarized from the pleadings as follows : In 1883 Anthony J. Drexel and George W. Childs were the owners of a large tract of land in Radnor Township aforesaid, which they developed into a town site, called Wayne. They laid out streets, with lots fronting thereon and constructed a gravity drainage or sewage system by laying pipes in the streets, whence the sewage flowed by gravity into large tanks located on land belonging to them and thence out through graded surface ditches into woodland also owned by them. They constructed some houses which they connected with this drainage system, and conveyed the houses to various grantees, no reference to the drain being contained in the deed. Fronefield’s and Leinhart’s properties are in this class. They also sold lots to various other grantees, the deeds containing this clause: “Together with the use of the drainage system of Wayne with the right to connect with the same.” The defendant Schwarz holds under such a deed. They also sold lots to still other grantees, with the following clause in the deeds: “Together with the free use of the drainage system of Wayne with the right to connect with the same, and also the use of the water system of Wayne, under such rules and regulations, and subject to such charges for the use of the water as may be from time to time agreed upon.” None of the present defendants hold title under such a deed, but the learned and distinguished lawyer, who filed a brief with this court as amicus curise, and who so eloquently argued this case for the appellees, represents clients who hold under such deeds. Still other purchasers of lots had no clauses in their deeds relative to the drainage system but themselves made connections therewith without any license or authority to do so. In
The brief filed by the learned counsel as amicus curise is a veritable storehouse of legal lore and learning on the subject of easements and has received, as it deserves, the most careful consideration by the court. We agree fully with the learned counsel that if the rights possessed by these defendants are such real property rights that they cannot be disturbed even by the Commonwealth under its police power or except by proceedings in eminent domain, the order of the Public Service Commission fixing the rates to be charged by the appellant is without effect as to them and they are not concluded thereby; on the other hand if their rights to this public service, secured by contract, express or implied, were such as the Commonwealth under its police power might set aside, for the greater interest of the public at large as unfair and preferential, they have no defense in these actions, for the rates herein demanded are the rates for public service duly established and prescribed according to law: Suburban Water Co. v. Oakmont Boro., 268 Pa. 243. The decree in the equity proceedings in Delaware County does not conclude the plaintiff, though unap-pealed from, because it was filed before the passage and approval of the Public Service Company Law, and the Commonwealth and its police power were not concerned in the litigation. As we pointed out in Lansdowne Boro. v. Public Service Commission, 74 Pa. Superior Ct. 203, relative to decisions holding public service companies to strict compliance with contracts contained in borough ordinances made prior to the Public Service Company Law: “In the cases in which such contracts were upheld prior to the Public Service Company Law the right of the State to set aside such unfair and preferential rates under the police power was not in question nor considered.”
Applying this definition to the facts in these cases we find that the rights here claimed by the appellees differ from true easements, as above defined, which are incorporeal hereditaments and real property, in two respects : First, the tract of twelve acres belonging to appellant, onto which appellees claim the right to discharge their sewage, is not neighboring or contiguous to the real estate, to which said rights are claimed to be annexed or appurtenant; their drains do not lead or empty directly into appellant’s land. In this respect the present case differs from Koons v. McNamee, 6 Pa. Superior Ct. 445; Dzmura v. Gyurik, 41 Pa. Superior Ct. 398, and similar cases. Appellees’ drains lead into and are connected with larger pipes or drains laid in the public streets and it is only through such drains or sewers in the public highways that appellees’ sewage is discharged on appellant’s land. The streets belong to the Commonwealth and any private grant or right founded in whole or in part on the use of the public streets of a locality is necessarily taken subject to the regulatory and supervisory powers of the Commonwealth and its general police power and must be considered to be so limited at the time it is accepted. Or, if appellees claim that their easement is to discharge sewage directly into the drainage pipes laid in the Commonwealth’s streets and not onto appellant’s tract of land, here again such rights are limited by the police power of the Commonwealth and subject to regulation thereunder and must have been so recognized when the rights were obtained; and, we may add, a drain pipe, laid in the public street,
Second, as pointed out in Mr. Gale’s definition an easement imposes no positive duties upon the servient tenement; the servient owner is only obliged “to suffer or not to do something”; he is not required by reason thereof to do anything actively. As stated in the quotation from counsel’s brief relative to servitudes, the civil law forerunner of easements: “It is a rule that a true servitude cannot consist in laying a positive duty on the owner of the servient tenement. It can only prevent such owner from doing something which, but for the existence of the servitude, he would be entitled to do, or to extract some advantage from the servient tenement, which, but for the existence of the servitude, he could not extract.” [Amos’ History and Principles of the Civil Law of Rome, p. 148.] But in this proceeding, appellees are contending that under the rights secured to them the sewerage company is obliged to perform for them free of charge the positive duties not only of keeping and maintaining the drains or sewers laid in the streets in good order and repair, but also of so treating and disposing of their sewage as to render it innocuous. The pleadings show that the construction of the disposal plant by the sewerage company was not a voluntary act on its
The judgments are reversed and the records are remitted to the court below with directions to enter judg