Commonwealth v. Sechan Limestone Industries

52 Pa. D. & C.2d 10, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 25
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas
DecidedNovember 27, 1970
StatusPublished

This text of 52 Pa. D. & C.2d 10 (Commonwealth v. Sechan Limestone Industries) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Commonwealth v. Sechan Limestone Industries, 52 Pa. D. & C.2d 10, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 25 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1970).

Opinion

HENDERSON, P. J„

— Defendant herein has been charged with a misdemeanor under the Pennsylvania Clean Streams Act, the specific charge being the discharge of industrial waste into the waters of the Commonwealth. The case was submitted to the grand jury, and the bill was approved. At the request of each party, the court agreed to try the matter without a jury provided the Commonwealth and defendant could enter into a stipulation as to all the facts. Such stipulation is filed herewith. The specific charge in question is brought under the Act of June 22, 1937, P. L. 1987, art. III, sec. 301, 35 PS §691.301, which reads as follows:

“No person shall place or permit to be placed, or discharged or permit to flow, or continue to discharge or permit to flow, into any of the waters of the Commonwealth any industrial wastes, except as hereinafter provided in this act.”

Defendant is alleged to have permitted industrial waste, namely silt, to be discharged from its limestone mining operation in Slippery Rock Township, Lawrence County, Pa., into an unnamed tributary of Slippery Rock Creek on July 13, 30 and 31,1969.

[12]*12Reference to the stipulation of facts indicates that defendant operates a limestone quarry from which it mines limestone by open-pit mining methods. Defendant’s operation is not engaged in any way with coal mines, coal collieries, coal breakers or other coal processing operations. Periodically, water collected on the floor of the quarry where it commingled with loose sedimentary material, consisting mostly of rock particles, forming a silt. This combination of water and silt was pumped into a settling basin from which, after a settling period, it was permitted to flow off the top through a pipe into an unnamed tributary of Slippery Rock Creek. On July 13, 30, and 31, 1969, a prohibited discharge of silt from the settling basin was found in such tributary. On the first two days it was traced to the overflow pipe of the settling basin and on the third day was traced to a breach in the wall of the basin.

The defense in this case is based on the position that the act in question did not apply to limestone mining operations. If it is determined that such act at the time in question did apply to limestone mining operations, defendant will be found guilty under the stipulation of facts.

In the definitions section of the act prior to the 1970 amendment, 35 PS §691.1, we find the following definitions:

“ ‘Establishment’ shall be construed to include any industrial establishment, mill, factory, tannery, paper or pulp mill, garage, oil refinery, oil well, boat, vessel, mine, coal mine, coal colliery, breaker or coal processing operations not including dredging operations within the limits of a stream, quarry, and each and every other industry or plant or works in the operation of which industrial wastes are produced.
“ ‘Industrial waste’ shall be construed to mean any liquid, gaseous or solid substance, not sewage, resulting from any manufacturing or industry, or from any [13]*13establishment, as herein defined, and mine drainage, silt, coal mine solids, rock, debris, dirt and clay from coal mines, coal collieries, breakers or other coal processing operations”: As amended August 23,1965, P. L. 372, sec. 1.

The result of the case will be primarily determined by the question of whether or not, under these definitions, the Clean Streams Act provisions were violated by defendant.

Defendant will be considered a “person” under the act.

Under the stipulations filed, it is agreed that defendant did discharge silt-laden water, or permit the flow of silt-laden water, from the accumulations in its quarry and settling basin.

The discharge or flow into the unnamed tributary of Slippery Rock Creek was a discharge or flow into the “waters of the Commonwealth” within the meaning of the act.

We find that defendant’s operation over the period in question was such as to meet the requirement of being an “establishment” within the meaning of the act. Section 1 of the act, by its terms, includes mines and quarries as a category separate and apart from coal mines or coal operations. Certainly, defendant’s open-pit limestone operation would fall, and was intended to fall, within either or both of these categories. In the last portion of the statutory definition of an establishment, we find, immediately following the word “quarry,” this general wording:

“. . . and each and every other industry or plant or works in the operation of which industrial wastes are produced.”

Defendant’s operation is a mine, as contrasted to a coal mine, is a quarry, and is the type industry, plant or works in the operation of which industrial wastes are produced.

[14]*14We further find the discharge in question was a discharge of “industrial waste” within the meaning of the act. The statutory definition as cited above includes certain liquid or solid substances being emitted or discharged by an establishment, which, in the opinion of the court, would be sufficient to satisfy the facts in the case at bar. However, the statutory definition goes on to specifically include “mine drainage, silt,” as well as certain solids relating to coal operations. We read the statute as specifically identifying both mine drainage and silt as types of industrial waste independent of coal operations, and, therefore, hold that such discharge of silt as set forth in the stipulation is covered under the statutory definition of “industrial waste.”

The Clean Streams Act has been amended in some particulars since this action arose by Act No. 222 of 1970. Defendant’s position is that the subsequent amendment indicates a legislative intent to now include such acts as defendant’s, which were previously not included. We shall review in part the changes resulting from such amendment of 1970.

Section 301 of the act has now been amended to include municipalities as possible violators of the act. This would indicate no legislative intent helpful in the determination of the case at bar.

The penalty provisions of section 309 have been changed. Each of these two amendments would indicate only a legislative intention to more forcefully require compliance with the general antipollution purpose of the act.

Section 1 has also been amended since the alleged violation in question. The definition of an “establishment” has been amended by deleting the words “coal mine,” which follow the word “mine,” and by including all industrial plants or works within the act terminology, whether or not they produce industrial waste. [15]*15Here again, these amendments show a broadening of the scope of the original purpose of the act.

Also in section 1 of the 1970 amendment we find that a definition of “mine” has been added, as follows:

“ "Mine’ shall be construed to mean any coal mine, clay mine or other facility from which minerals are extracted from the earth.”

The prior law did not include any definition of this term. Defendant argues that since limestone mining is hereby specifically included in the amendment, it can be assumed that the legislature did not intend limestone mining to be covered by the act prior to the amendment.

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Bluebook (online)
52 Pa. D. & C.2d 10, 1970 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 25, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/commonwealth-v-sechan-limestone-industries-pactcompl-1970.