Chase v. Silverstone

62 Me. 175
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 1, 1873
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 62 Me. 175 (Chase v. Silverstone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Chase v. Silverstone, 62 Me. 175 (Me. 1873).

Opinion

Yirgin, J.

This court has had frequent occasion to enunciate the rules regulating the relative rights and liabilities of riparian proprietors and apply the principle of “reasonable use” to the peculiar circumstances of each particular case; and in two cases— Lansil v. Bangor, 51 Maine, 521, and Greely v. Maine Cen. R. R. Co., 53 Maine, 200 — have determined the rights and liabilities of landowners in relation to mere surface water. But this is the first case which has called upon us to declare the law which governs proprietors of adjacent lands in relation to sub-surface waters not gathered into a fixed, known channel.

Is a landowner, who, by digging a well in his own land for his own domestic purposes, thereby diverts underground waters and thus prevents them from percolating into a coterminous' proprietor’s spring to the owner’s damage, liable for such damage ; or, does such a diversion fall within one of those large and distinct classes of cases cropping out over the whole domain of “wrongs independent of contract,” in which appreciable damage and loss are incidentally occasioned to an individual by the act of another, and yet no redress is given him by the law, and to which the law applies the phrase — “damnum absque infiria ?”

[177]*177We feel compelled by tbe vastly preponderating weight of authority to place the decision upon the latter alternative; and shall content ourselves with- briefly alluding to a few of the principal adjudicated cases without any extended discussion of the principles upon which they are based:

An eminent jurist has well said that the doctrine of the civil law — “cum eo qui in sua fodiens, vicini fontem avertit, nihil posse agi ; nec de dolo : Et sane actionem non debet habere ; si non animo vicino nocendi, sed suum agrum meliorem faciendi id fecit” or, (as translated by Maule, J., in Acton v. Blundel, 12 Mees & W., 335,) “if a man digs a well in his own field, and thereby drains his neighbor’s, he may do so unless he does it maliciously,” — contains the germ of the present English and American law upon the subject, so far as that may be regarded as settled.

Such was the view of the court in Greenleaf v. Francis, 18 Pick., 117, as expressed by Putnam, J., — “By the common law the owner of the soil may lawfully occupy the space above as well as below the surface, to any extent which he pleases, in the absence of any grant, agreement, or statute or police regulation to the contrary. * * These rights should not be exercised from mere malice. * * He may' obstruct the light and air above and cut off the springs of water below the surface. * * The defendant dug his well in that part of his own ground where it would be most convenient for him. It was a lawful act, and although it may have been prejudicial to the plaintiff, it is damnum absque injuria.”

So, in Parker v. B. & M. Railroad, 3 Cush., 107, in discussing the relative rights of owners of lands, G. J. Shaw, on page 114, said: “Each owner of land has a right to make a proper use of his own.estate, and sinking a well upon it is such proper use; and if water, by its natural current, flows from one to the other, and a loss ensues, it is damnum absque injuria.”

The first leading and most frequently cited English case wherein the rules regulating riparian rights were held inapplicable to percolating waters, is that of Acton v. Blundel, 12 Mees. & W., [178]*178335, decided in 1843, in the Exchequer chamber. The plaintiff’s cotton-mill was carried by water raised from a well in his own land. Subsequently the defendant sunk a coal-pit in his own land, one-half mile from the plaintiff’s well, whereby the latter’s supply of water was destroyed. Tindall, C. J., after discussing the known state and condition of water in surface-channels and the well settled rules governing riparian rights, says : “But in the case of a well sunk by a proprietor in his own land, the water which feeds it from a neighboring soil does not flow openly in the sight of the neighboring proprietor, but through the hidden veins of the earth beneath its surface; no man can tell what changes these underground sources have undergone in the progress of time; it may be, that it is only yesterday’s date that they first took the course and direction which enabled them to supply the well; again no proprietor knows what portion of water is taken from beneath his own soil; how much he gives originally, or how much he transmits only, or how much he receives; on the contrary, until the well is sunk, and the water collected by draining into it, there cannot properly be said, with reference to the well, to be any flow of water at all. * * If the man who sinks the well in his own land can acquire by that act an absolute and indefeasible right to the water that collects in it, he has the power of preventing his neighbor from making any use of the spring in his own soil which shall interfere with the enjoyment of the well. He has the power still further of debarring the owner of the land in which the spring is first found, or through which it is transmitted, from' draining his land for the proper cultivation of his soil. * * The advantage on one side, and the detriment to the other, may bear no proportion. The well may be sunk to supply a cottage, or a drinking place for cattle, whilst the owner of the adjoining land may be prevented from mining metals and minerals of inestimable value. And, lastly, there is no limit of space within which the claim of right to an underground spring can be confined.” The opinion concludes as follows: “¥e think this case for the reasons given, is not to be governed by the law which applies to rivers and flowing streams, but that it rather [179]*179falls within the principle which gives the owner of the soil all that lies beneath the surface; that the land immediately below is his property, whether it is solid rock, or porous ground, or venous earth, or part soil, part water, that the person who owns the soil may dig therein, and apply all that is there found to his own purposes at his free will and pleasure; and that if, in the exercise of such right, he intercepts and drains off the water collected from underground springs in his neighbor’s well, this inconvenience to his neighbor falls within the description of damnum absque injuria, which cannot become the ground of action.”

In 1852, the Court of Exchequer, in Dickinson v. Grand Junc. Canal Co., 7 Exch., 282, held, that at common law, the defendants, by sinking a well upon their own premises and thereby preventing water from percolating in its natural course into the river on which the plaintiff’s mill was situated, to his damage, were liable in an action therefor. But the same court, four years later, in Broadbent v. Ramsbotham, 11 Exch., 602, held that where the plaintiff’s mill had, for more than fifty years, been worked by the stream of a brook supplied by the water of a pond filled by rain, a shallow well supplied by subterranean waters, a swamp and a well formed by a stream springing out of the side of a hill, the waters of all which occasionally overflowed and ran down the defendant’s land in no definite channel into the brook — the plaintiff had no right 'as against the defendant, to the natural flow of any of the waters.

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Bluebook (online)
62 Me. 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/chase-v-silverstone-me-1873.