C & W COAL CORPORATION v. Salyer

104 S.E.2d 50, 200 Va. 18, 1958 Va. LEXIS 153
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 16, 1958
DocketRecord 4804
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 104 S.E.2d 50 (C & W COAL CORPORATION v. Salyer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C & W COAL CORPORATION v. Salyer, 104 S.E.2d 50, 200 Va. 18, 1958 Va. LEXIS 153 (Va. 1958).

Opinion

Miller, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

An action at law was instituted by Betty Lou Salyer, hereinafter called plaintiff, against C & W Coal Corporation to recover damages for the destruction of a spring on her property in Wise county, *19 Virginia, allegedly caused by strip or open-pit coal mining carried on by the corporation on adjoining lands.

Upon submission of the case to the jury, a verdict for $1,500 damages was returned for plaintiff, and from a judgment confirming that verdict we awarded the corporation an appeal.

In the motion for judgment it is alleged that when the corporation mined coal on lands adjoining plaintiff’s property, it knew or should have known of the existence of the spring on plaintiff’s land, but nevertheless it “negligently and carelessly cut the streams of water which supplied the” spring and thereby caused it to become dry.

During the trial no proof was offered that the corporation “negligently and carelessly” caused any damage to plaintiff’s spring, and the charge of negligent and careless infliction of damage is not now relied upon. Plaintiff, however, contends that the evidence proved that a freestone spring on her premises was fed by an underground stream of water flowing in a defined channel, which was known or should have been known to the corporation and that this stream was broken, cut or diverted in the mining operations and her spring caused to become dry.

The chief assignments of error challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support the verdict.

On April 19, 1950, plaintiff acquired from her husband, Johnny C. Salyer, 5.81 acres of land with a four-room residence thereon where she, her husband and children have since lived. When this land was purchased by plaintiff, no freestone water supply or spring was known to be on the premises. Though sulphur water was available on the land, yet it is not palatable for it has an objectionable odor. Nor is it desirable for domestic use, for it discolors utensils, food and fabrics when used for cooking and laundering. Prior to discovery of the spring, water for drinking and household use was obtained elsewhere and hauled to plaintiff’s home.

In 1951, while erecting a fence on plaintiff’s land to keep cattle out of a swamp, Johnny C. Salyer observed water boiling up out of a post hole he was digging. Further excavation at this spot where it was moist and the grass was greener than elsewhere disclosed a freestone spring of considerable volume coming out of a bowl-shaped rock. In 1953, he built a reservoir around the spring and extended a pipe line to the residence. An abundant supply of water for use of the family of five flowed through the pipe from the reservoir to the residence by force of gravity. The spring also *20 furnished an ample supply of water for several head of stock and domestic fowls on the small farm, and it flowed in undiminished volume even in dry weather.

The C & W Coal Corporation was engaged in strip or open-pit coal mining on lands adjoining plaintiff’s farm on the south and southeast. In this character of mining, dynamite blasts of varying force and intensity are put off at times, and pits or excavations of considerable depth are made to shatter rock formations and to expose and expedite removal of the coal. To reach the coal top soil is first removed and the stratum or seam of coal nearest the surface is mined. If there be more than one stratum of coal in the area mined, then the subsoil above the second stratum is removed, and that seam of coal exposed and mined. Necessary blasting and the removal in sequence of each successive level of soil and rocks encountered so as to expose a lower seam of coal is usually pursued so long as the coal may be profitably mined. When the actual mining operations are completed, the subsoil and top soil are often replaced and the excavations leveled off.

On the lands adjoining plaintiff’s property there were three strata of coal, which are identified by local names. The Blair Seam, 42 inches thick, was exposed by removal of a layer of top soil varying in depth from 15 to 50 feet. After that seam of coal had been exposed and mined, another 43-foot layer of earth was removed by the corporation to uncover the Lyon Seam, 37 inches thick. Upon removal of that coal, another layer of earth about 25 feet thick was removed and the Glamorgan Seam exposed and mined. Some of the mining operations were carried on and pits sunk within 250 to 300 feet of plaintiff’s property line and about 500 to 600 feet distant from her spring.

Though the natural surface of the area mined was rugged and more elevated than plaintiff’s 5.81 acre tract of land, yet the excavations made to mine the lowest stratum of coal carried the pits in places 10 to 15 feet lower than the surface level of plaintiff’s land and spring.

Evidence showed strata of coal being mined on lands near plaintiff’s property slanted downward in a northwesterly direction toward plaintiff’s premises, and two or more witnesses, experienced in mining operations, said that underground water flowed with the slant of. the strata of coal.

The blasts of dynamite put off from time to time by the corpora *21 tion had the effect of dislodging the rock and soil, and exposing the strata of coal being mined. One witness testified that the excavations and dynamite blasts shattered, destroyed, and diverted all streams of water in the mined area to the depth of the pits, but he was not advised what effect it had below the level of operations.

On September 15, 1954, between eleven o’clock a.m. and noon, a dynamite blast was heard by plaintiff from the corporation’s mine nearby, the intensity and effect of which are described by her as follows:

“Q. Do you recall when your spring quit running?
“A. Yes, sir, I recall when my spring quit running.
“Q. When was it?
“A. The shot was fired on the 15th of September, approximately the time between eleven and twelve in the morning.
“Q. Before the shot was put off did you have plenty of water?
“A. Yes, I had all the water and more than I needed for my family.
“Q. Had the flow ever diminished or cut down any?
“A. No.
• *####*
“Q. Describe what happened on the day the spring went dry.
“A. I had two older children and the baby at the time. The baby was asleep and the two older children out playing. I was going about doing my house work when a shot was fired, and the whole house lifted, and the small objects in my windows, “what-nots” they fell out and light things like calendars on a small tack, they come off the hooks and fell in in the floor; glasses in my cabinet turned all over; and the children that were out playing came in scared to death, one of them crying and the other scared just as bad.
“Q. Where did that shot come from?
“A.

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104 S.E.2d 50, 200 Va. 18, 1958 Va. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-w-coal-corporation-v-salyer-va-1958.