Dixon v. Sheffer

46 Pa. Super. 452, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295
CourtSuperior Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedApril 17, 1911
DocketAppeal, No. 23
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 46 Pa. Super. 452 (Dixon v. Sheffer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Superior Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dixon v. Sheffer, 46 Pa. Super. 452, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295 (Pa. Ct. App. 1911).

Opinion

Opinion by

Oblady, J.,

On July 23, 1909, the appellants in this case were severally served with a written notice issued by Dr. Samuel G. Dixon, commissioner of health of this commonwealth, [456]*456stating that in his opinion the discharge of sewage and the drainage of privies into the waters of a branch of Codorus Creek in the borough of Glen Rock, York county, from a building owned, occupied and used, as a factory or place for work by the appellants, “ is now injurious to the public health, and that after an examination of the building and premises, he finds and adjudges that the privies so maintained and used are a nuisance, and nuisances detrimental to the public health,” and each of the appellants was thereby ordered to abate and remove the same, and to discontinue the discharge of sewage, etc., within ten days and to not permit the same to flow into said waters, in accordance with the provisions of the Acts of April 22,1905, P. L. 260, and April 27, 1905, P; L. 312.

The authority for, and the effect to be given to such a notice, is found in two acts of our legislature enacted in 1905, which are to be construed together as relating to the same subject-matter, and as integral parts of a new and comprehensive system for protecting the general public health of the commonwealth from such reckless disregard of public duty as is shown by this record. On several occasions within the past quarter century there have been in this state dangerous and fatal epidemics of disease which resulted in a great loss of life and which were directly traced to causes having their inception in similar conditions to those existing at the appellants’ operations on Codorus Creek.

By the Act of April 27,1905, P. L. 312 (eighth section) an act entitled "an act creating a Department of Health, and defining its powers and duties,” it is made “the duty of the Commissioner of Health to protect the health of the people of the state, and to determine and employ the most efficient and practical means for the prevention and suppression of disease,” and by the ninth section it is provided that he "shall have power and authority to order nuisances, detrimental to the public health, or the causes of disease and mortality, to be abated and removed, and to enforce quarantine regulations.”

[457]*457The Act of April 22, 1905, P. L. 260, is entitled “an act to preserve the purity of the waters of the state for the protection of the public health,” and by the fourth section it is declared that “no person, corporation, or municipality shall place or permit to be placed, or discharge, or permit to flow into any of the waters of the state any sewage, except as hereinafter provided. . . . For the purpose of this act, sewage shall be defined as any substance that contains any of the waste products or excrementitious or other discharges from the bodies of human beings or animals.” The ninth section declares that “Every individual, private corporation or company shall discontinue the discharge of sewage into any of the waters of the state, within ten days after being so ordered by the Commissioner of Health.” And sec. 11 provides that “any order or decision, under this act .... shall be subject to an appeal to any court of common pleas of the county wherein the outlet of such sewer or sewer system, otherwise prohibited by this act, is situated; and said court shall have power to hear said appeal, and may affirm or set aside said order or decree, or modify the same, or otherwise fix the terms upon which permission shall be granted.”

The constitutionality of the act of April 22, 1905, was determined after a full consideration of the subject in Commonwealth v. Emmers, 33 Pa. Superior Ct. 151, and the opinion of this court as written by Judge Porter was affirmed by the Supreme Court, 221 Pa. 298, in which case it was held that, “the privilege of discharging obnoxious sewerage into the waters of the state is a matter of public concern, and it is within the police power of the state to declare that this privilege is one which ought not to be exercised by private individuals, but only by the state or its governmental agents, the municipalities, acting under the direct control of the state.”

The contention of the appellants that Com. v. Yost, 197 Pa. 171, controls this case is without merit. That case was decided by the Supreme Court July 11, 1900, five years prior to the enactment under which this proceeding. [458]*458is founded. It was there held that, “If the public have a right to receive pure water through the agency of a corporation legally authorized to take it from the stream, he who pollutes it offends against the public. If on the other hand, the water of a stream, in which riparian owners alone have an interest, be polluted, the wrong or injury is a private one, for which the individual or individuals injured may have redress: and this is true whether the riparian owner be a private person or a water company which does not take the water from the stream under the right of eminent domain,” and under the facts of that case (in being an indictment for maintaining a common nuisance), the court held “The wrong done by the defendant, if any, was to such riparian owner, the York Water Company, in depriving it of the use of pure water for ordinary domestic purposes, and any wrong committed was a private one, for which the remedy was purely civil.”

The facts in this case are radically different. It was shown on this trial, in such a way that it must be considered as regularly in evidence, that as early as February 8,1816 (6 Sm. Laws, 319), the York Water Company was incorporated, and authorized to take water from this stream, and by a further supplement to that act, dated April 11, 1840, P. L. .300, the York Water Company was authorized to proceed to bring into the borough of York “such additional supply of water as they shall deem sufficient, from such spring or springs, stream or streams as they may select,” etc.

True it is that these are private acts of assembly, and judicial notice is not ordinarily to be taken of them. However, in this case they were not only well known to the court and counsel, but they were used by the counsel on both sides on the argument of the case in the court below, and they are incorporated in the ninth finding of fact by the trial judge. With such acquiescence by appellants without any objection to such use it is now too late to say that they are not regularly in this record.

Two of the appellants are .the owners of a three story [459]*459manufacturing plant, which is regularly occupied by 130 to 150 employees at least; toilet closets are provided for use of employees on each floor, from all of which sewage and human excrement have from time to time been discharged into the stream, with the knowledge and under the management of the owners and tenants of the premises, and were being so discharged at the time of issuing the notice to the appellants to discontinue such pollution.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
46 Pa. Super. 452, 1911 Pa. Super. LEXIS 295, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dixon-v-sheffer-pasuperct-1911.