Commonwealth v. Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co.

50 Pa. D. & C. 411, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 107
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County
DecidedMarch 22, 1944
Docketno. 1784
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 50 Pa. D. & C. 411 (Commonwealth v. Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Philadelphia County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co., 50 Pa. D. & C. 411, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 107 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1944).

Opinion

Kun, J.,

The bill in this case was filed in the name of the Commonwealth ex relatione the Attorney General and the City of Philadelphia, jointly as plaintiffs, against 24 coal companies as defendants, charging each specifically with unlawfully discharging into the Schuylkill River or its tributaries coal silt and refuse allegedly affecting navigation on the river and, by such pollution of the water, endangering the life, health, and safety of the people of Philadelphia with respect to their water supply by interfering with the operation of the city’s reservoir and pumping stations causing a decrease of the intake, thereby curtailing the supply required by the people of the city for domestic and industrial purposes. Defendants filed preliminary objections to the bill, the first of which was that the record did not show that the Attorney General had joined in signing the bill or authorized its filing on behalf of the Commonwealth. This informality was promptly corrected by the filing of a so-called “amended” bill which was in fact not an amended bill but merely showed the affidavit of the Attorney General and his official joinder. This was done by leave of court. It is a serious question whether the absence of the affidavit of the Attorney General to the bill was properly made the basis of a preliminary objection to the bill under Equity Rule 48. We are inclined to the view that a motion to strike off or rule to file warrant of authority would be more appropriate. However, the subsequent filing of the appropriate affidavit by the Attorney General and his official joinder of record in the proceeding makes the question somewhat academic. Under the law, the Attorney General may intervene in any case at any time in the public interest, even without leave of court. See Act of July 7, 1919, P. L. 731, 12 PS §145.

Defendants, after the formal joinder by the Attorney General in effect validating the action previously instituted in the name of the Commonwealth, no doubt [414]*414by his authorization, could have within 10 days filed preliminary objections to the bill qua the Commonwealth but did not do so. Instead they appeared before the court more than a month thereafter and presented their arguments on their preliminary objections only so far as the right of the city was concerned, stating that they were not prepared to make any argument against the right of the Commonwealth because of their view that it was not properly a party. We considered this to have been a rather extraordinary position for defendants to take, but nevertheless granted them 10 days’ additional time from the date of the argument to file preliminary objections as against the right of the Commonwealth, if they desired to do so. The objections filed as to the Commonwealth raise no additional substantial questions.

Our review of. the matter leads us to the conclusion that defendants have sought to create a highly complicated controversy out of a matter which in the last analysis is a very simple one. The Schuylkill River is a navigable stream which at the same time is the source of water supply for a large number of communities in the eastern part of the State, the largest of which is the City of Philadelphia. The bill alleges in considerable detail the extent of the water supply plants constructed by the city, the auxiliary pumping stations and reservoirs it operates and maintains for the storage of water, pipes, conduits, filter beds, which require the use of millions of gallons of water. The bill charges defendants with unlawfully discharging into the Schuylkill River or its tributaries mine silt and coal dirt to such an extent that it impedes navigation of the river and also endangers the health, welfare,, and safety of the inhabitants of the city with respect to their water supply. If it can be shown that defendants are responsible for the condition alleged to exist, they are guilty of creating a public nuisance and may be enjoined from continuing it. The bill pleads the cause of [415]*415action fully and adequately and each of the defendants is in a position to answer the bill on the merits and say whether or not it is contributing in any way to the thing charged against it. We may state in passing that the bill here is much more comprehensive in its allegations than was the bill filed by the city as far back as 1896 in an original proceeding in the Supreme Court (Miscellaneous Docket 1, no. 246) against two of the principal defendants in the instant case and others, in which similar relief was sought and in which the right of the city was fully recognized, but the injunctive relief prayed for was deemed unnecessary because of the referee’s report that the defendants had during the pendency of the proceeding taken adequate steps to prevent the continuance of the nuisance. The Supreme Court, however, retained jurisdiction of the bill so that further application for relief might be made thereunder if it should thereafter become necessary. As a matter of interest, the city solicitor stated that when he sought to move under that case the Supreme Court directed that he file the bill in the instant case, not because of any question of the right of the city to proceed but because many additional defendants are now involved, not mentioned in the former proceeding.

It is rather strange for defendants in the face of such a background of the ease to argue that the city is not entitled on the facts alleged in the bill to the relief prayed for. Defendants start with the false premise that the city only is a plaintiff here. They then set up another false premise, that the city has no greater right in the matter than a private individual would have; and, having set up these strawmen, point to what they term to be the “leading case” of Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Sanderson et ux., 118 Pa. 126, as authority for their position that the city is not entitled to the relief sought. That case did indeed limit the application- of the maxim “sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas” as defining the duty of an [416]*416owner of property (contrary to three successive holdings otherwise in the same case by the same court, the last holding following a change in the personnel of the court in the interim, from which three of the justices dissented — on such fortuitous circumstances does the law sometimes turn). Every attempt to extend the application of that case has failed. On the contrary, its limitation has repeatedly been emphasized. The argument of defendants overlooks the core of the whole case, namely, that we are concerned here with the public use of a stream for domestic purposes which at the same time is a navigable stream. The limitation of the Sanderson case has been nowhere emphasized more strongly than in the case of Pennsylvania R. R. et al. v. Sagamore Coal Co. et al., 281 Pa. 233, decided nearly 20 years ago. There, the Pennsylvania Railroad Company and a number of water supply companies sought injunctive relief against a number of coal companies to restrain them from discharging their polluted mine water into the streams there involved. It was only after the filing of the bill by the water companies and the railroad company that the Attorney General intervened for the Commonwealth (as distinguished from the case before us in which the action was in the first instance commenced in the names of the Commonwealth and the city). Defendants there likewise sought to invoke the rule laid down in the Sanderson case as sustaining their right to drain their mine refuse into the stream. Mr. Justice Schaffer (later Chief Justice), who wrote the opinion for the court, sharply drew attention to the limitation of the Sanderson case, a suit of a private individual to redress a private wrong, by pointing out (p.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
50 Pa. D. & C. 411, 1944 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 107, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-philadelphia-reading-coal-iron-co-pactcomplphilad-1944.