Commonwealth v. City of Newport News

164 S.E. 689, 158 Va. 521, 1932 Va. LEXIS 274
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedJune 16, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 164 S.E. 689 (Commonwealth v. City of Newport News) 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
Commonwealth v. City of Newport News, 164 S.E. 689, 158 Va. 521, 1932 Va. LEXIS 274 (Va. 1932).

Opinion

Epes, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a bill brought by the Commonwealth of Virginia, at the relation of the Attorney-General, acting under the authority and direction of the Governor, against the city of Newport News and the members of its city council. The primary purpose of the bill is to restrain the city from dumping untreated sewage into Hampton Roads, and thereby polluting the oyster bottoms in the Roads and its [527]*527estuaries. The defendants demurred to the bill. The court Sustained the demurrer and dismissed the bill; and the cause is here on an appeal from that decree. 1 ’ >

iThe bill alleges that the city is now discharging untreated sewage into the Roads through several channels, and proposes to construct other sewer systems which 'will discharge untreated sewage into the Roads at new points and cause pollution of areas not now polluted. But as all legal questions raised by any of the allegations of the bill are raised by those relating to the present sewer which discharges into Salters Creek and the new pipe line which the city proposed to construct to carry this sewage further out into Hampton Roads, we shall recite only those which relate thereto. These allegations are as follows:

Newport News is situated on a point, the western side of which is washed by the waters of the James River and the eastern side by the waters of Hampton Roads. Some 3,000 yards northeast of the tip of the point Salters creek flows into the Roads, at the mouth of which and all along the northeast side of the point are tidal flats.

The main sewer of the city discharges into Salters creek some 800 yards from its mouth, and the sewage is carried thence by the tides and currents into Hampton Roads and up into James river. The sewage is discharged into these waters in its raw, untreated state.

Large areas of the bottoms of Hampton Roads and the lower reaches of the James river are suitable for planting and propagating oysters and other shellfish, and some of the bottoms come within the definition of “natural oyster beds, rocks and shoals.” Much of the oyster planting ground is now, and has been for a long time, leased by the Commonwealth to private persons, from which leases it derives a considerable annual revenue. Food fish are also found and may be taken in commercial quantities in these waters.

[528]*528The raw sewage discharged by Newport News into Hampton Roads has seriously polluted all the waters of Hampton Roads and James river in the vicinity of the city. The polluted area now extends up James river for more than four miles above the city, and below the city it extends fifteen miles, or more, to Old Point Comfort. In the James it extends for a mile or more off shore. As you go down the Roads it broadens out, until opposite Hampton and Old Point Comfort it extends entirely across the Roads and up into some of its estuaries on the south side of the Roads. However, it is not alleged to what extent the pollution of the lower reaches of this area is caused by the sewage from Newport News, rather than by the sewage from Hampton, Phoebus, Old Point Comfort and other settlements on the north side of the Roads and by the sewage from Ocean View, the Naval Base and the other extensive settlements below Craney Island on the south side of the Roads.

So great is the pollution caused by this sewage that the health authorities of Virginia and of the United States have declared the waters of the polluted area unfit for the propagation and taking of shellfish; and the value of these waters for purposes of fishing of all kinds has been practically destroyed. This has resulted in a diminution of the activity of tongers and planters of oysters and other shellfish, and the consequent loss of a large revenue to the State. It has also rendered these waters unfit for bathing purposes; and the health authorities of the various places along, the shore fine affected by the pollution have forbidden bathing therein. Many cases of infectious diseases are directly traceable to eating shellfish taken from these waters, and as a result of this pollution these tidal waters and the flats along the shore give off at ebb tide offensive and unhealthy odors which are injurious to the comfort and health of the people in the vicinity thereof.

By discharging this raw, untreated sewage into these [529]*529waters the city has created and is maintaining a general public nuisance.

The city is now about to construct a large sewer pipe extending from a point near the present outlet of the Salters creek sewer to a point in Hampton Roads approximately 2000 feet beyond low water mark, where the water is about thirteen feet deep, into which it proposes to divert the raw, untreated sewage now being discharged into Salters creek.

Sewage discharged into the Roads through the proposed pipe line will be carried by the tides and currents over a much larger area than that which is now polluted, and will pollute many more acres of natural rocks, planting grounds and fishing waters; and will substantially impair and eventually destroy the right of fishery in these waters.

The plans for the construction of the new sewer call for the dredging of a trench in the bottom of Hampton Roads thirty feet wide at the top and ten feet wide at the bottom, and the replacement of the dredged material after the pipe has been laid. This will constitute a trespass upon the lands held by the Commonwealth in trust for all its people thereof; and the effect of thus disturbing the bottom will be to cause sand and silt to be spread over a large area of bottoms now leased by the Commonwealth to private persons for the propagation of oysters, and destroy the oysters growing thereon.

The bill further alleges that the cities, towns and communities situated on Hampton Roads, as •well as the Commonwealth, have a peculiar interest in seeing that the waters thereof are kept free from pollution; and in this connection states:

“This territory has been, and is being, advertised as the playground of the State of Virginia; the State has made appropriations and constituted official bodies to foster the growth and development of the port of Hampton Roads; and the State Conservation and Development Commission has concerned itself in the establishment of parks in the [530]*530vicinity of Hampton Roads. At Newport News, Fortress Monroe and Buckroe Beach, as well as at Ocean View and Willoughby Beach, large hotels catering to the traveling public, particularly summer visitors, advertise among other attractions bathing, boating and fishing. * * * Large sums of money are invested in the fish and oyster industry, and property values on the water front aforesaid * * * are greatly impaired by reason of the pollution of the tidal waters aforesaid, * * *.”

The bill then charges “* * * great progress has been made in civic sanitation, and due regard for the health of its citizens has led-many municipalities to provide sewage disposal plants * * * for processing and treating raw Sewage, so that * * * the effluent is rendered innocuous and odorless; * * * such plant or system may be provided by the city of Newport News at a moderate cost * * * (and) it has become and is the duty of the said city to construct and maintain such disposal plants or systems, having regard to the health not only of its citizens, but the public in general.”

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Bluebook (online)
164 S.E. 689, 158 Va. 521, 1932 Va. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-city-of-newport-news-va-1932.