Canada v. City of Shawnee

1936 OK 803, 64 P.2d 694, 179 Okla. 53, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 804
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedDecember 15, 1936
DocketNo. 24873.
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 1936 OK 803 (Canada v. City of Shawnee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Canada v. City of Shawnee, 1936 OK 803, 64 P.2d 694, 179 Okla. 53, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 804 (Okla. 1936).

Opinions

PHELPS, J.

The defendant, city of Shawnee, purchased 70 acres of land some seven or eight miles from the city. The plaintiffs for 30 years or more have owned farms adjoining and near the defendant’s 70-aere tract. The plaintiffs’ farms and all of the surrounding country had always been abundantly supplied with clear, pure, cold water in wells and gushing springs. The supply of water was described as apparently inexhaustible.

For the purpose of augmenting its water supply the defendant city dug 12 wells on its 70-acre tract 'and equipped each well with a 7y2 horse power motor and pump. Enormous volumes of water were thereby pumped from under the lands of the defendant and of plaintiffs, which water was by the defendant transported in pipe lines to the city and there sold to the inhabitants.

Soon thereafter the wells on all of plaintiff’s lands went dry. The springs ceased to produce water. Plaintiffs had no water for their stock, or for irrigation, or household qr personal uses. There wag some evidence that the land itself, even that early, began to dry out, so that it became less productive. The overwhelming weight of the evidence was that the injury thereby inflicted upon plaintiffs was very real, substantial and irreparable.

The plaintiffs brought this action to enjoin the defendant from pumping its wells. The trial court denied them relief, and they appeal. The main argument on appeal involves the law of waters, the defendant contending that the rules thereof entitle it to draw as much water as it pleases from its own land, regardless of the effect on plaintiffs and their property.

In legal consideration subterranean waters are divided into two classes: (1) Percolating water, ’and (2) underground streams. Percolating waters are those which seep, ooze, .filter, and otherwise circulate through the subsurface strata without definite channels. Underground streams are simply what their name implies: water passing through the ground beneath the surface in defined channels.

Different rules are ordinarily prescribed for the two classes of water. The eases and authorities are generally agreed that subterranean water will be presumed to be percolating water unless it is definitely shown to be of the other class. There was not such showing here, and the parties concede that this action is governed by the rules applicable to percolating water. .

Often this class of water will be found in great abundance at shallow depths, due to an underlying hard strata which is immune to percolation. Its movements are induced probably more by gravity and porosity of the soil than by anything else, but it is unnecessary to consider the scientific phases of the subject further than to notice that artificially induced pressure or vacuity at any point in the saturated region will repel or attract water to or from that point throughout the entire water region.

The English or common-law rule concerning rights in percolating waters was first announced in the case of Acton v. Blundell (1843), 12 Mees. & W. 324, 152 Eng. Reprint 1223, 15 Mor. Min. Rep. 168. It is in effect in probably the majority of American states today. That rule is that rights in percolating waters are regarded as belonging to the owner of the freehold, like the rocks, soil, and minerals found there, and that such owner may, in the absence of malice, intercept, impede, and appropriate such waters while they are upon or beneath his premises, and make whatever use of them he pleases, regardless of the fact that his use'cuts off the flow of such waters to adjoining land and deprives the adjoining landowner of their use.

At an early day, however, the courts expressed dissatisfaction with the common-law or English rule, and began applying what they called, variously, the rule of “reasonable use” or rule of “correlative rights” or the “American rule.” The digests reveal that in those cases and states where the English rule was adopted the decisions, with a few exceptions, were promulgated prior to the year 1900, while those recognizing and using the rule of reasonable use, or American rule, are of more recent origin. It is further significant that in recent years six of the states (California, Florida, Indiana, New Jersey, New York, and Utah) which had formerly adhered to the English rule adopted the rule of reasonable use.

Stated generally, the rule of reasonable use is that each landowner is restricted to a reasonable exercise of his own rights and a reasonable use of his own property, in view of the similar rights of others. This does not mean that there shall be an apportionment of subterranean percolating water between' adjacent landowners, for such a thing is often if not always, impossible, and it was this same impossibility which gave rise -to the English rule itself. The rule of reasonable use as to percolating water is merely the application of the same rule as it affects all property, for ownership of property does not vest one with *55 the right to injure his neighbor with or with the use of that property. If the rule of reasonable use should attempt in actual practice an apportionment of percolating water between adjacent landowners, it would but serve to illustrate the necessity of the English rule, and so it happens that the virtue of the rule of reasonable use lies not so much in its statement as in its application to concrete eases. The history of law is replete with illustrations of how a new rule was born from the unfair and unjust use of an existing rule; it was those who sought an unfair and unconscionable advantage froni the English rule who necessitated a limitation on that rule, and, as we view it, the rule of reasonable use, as it is actually applied, is not a different rule from the English rule at all, but is merely a limitation thereon.

We spoke above of the fact that the rule of reasonable use is best illustrated in its application. As typical of the situations wherein it has been used, the New Jersey court had before it a case in which percolating water was forcibly being extracted from the land in large volumes and sold at a distance, resulting in drying up adjacent farms (Meeker v. East Orange, 77 N. J. L. 623, 74 Atl. 379, 25 L. R. A. [N. S.] 465, 134 Am. St. Rep. 798). The court said that the rule of reasonable use as applied to percolating waters

“does not prevent the proper use by any landowner of the percolating waters sub-jacent to his soil in agriculture, manufacturing, irrigation, or otherwise; nor does it prevent any reasonable development of his land by mining or the like, although the underground water of neighboring proprietors may thus be interfered with or diverted, but it does prevent the withdrawal of underground waters for distribution or sale for uses not connected with any beneficial ownership or enjoyment of the land whence they are taken, if it thereby results that the owner of adjacent or neighboring land is interfered with in his right to the reasonable user of subsurface water upon his land, or if his wells, springs, or streams are thereby diminished in flow, or his land is rendered so arid as to be less valuable for agriculture, pasturage, or other legitimate uses.”

In Flanigan v. State, 183 N. Y. S. 934, 113 Misc.

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Bluebook (online)
1936 OK 803, 64 P.2d 694, 179 Okla. 53, 1936 Okla. LEXIS 804, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canada-v-city-of-shawnee-okla-1936.