Farley v. Crystal Coal & Coke Co.

102 S.E. 265, 85 W. Va. 595, 9 A.L.R. 933, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 42
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 17, 1920
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 102 S.E. 265 (Farley v. Crystal Coal & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farley v. Crystal Coal & Coke Co., 102 S.E. 265, 85 W. Va. 595, 9 A.L.R. 933, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 42 (W. Va. 1920).

Opinion

PoEEENBABQ-EB, JuD&E:

The judgment complained of, amounting to $1,650.00, stands upon a declaration in an action against six different coal mining corporations, whose mines and works are located at different places on tributaries of the Bluestone Biver, charging them with having polluted and defiled said river, by casting into it directly and indirectly cinder, coal, slag and other materials from their mines and coke ovens and fetid and putrid matter [597]*597from their tenant houses and privies, and so altered its condition, by means of such deposits as to cause more frequent and disastrous overflows of the bottom lands along its course, the Ailing up of its bed, narrowing of its channel and deposits on its shores, and, with having injured and damaged- the plaintiffs farm, by such means. A demurrer to the declaration was overruled and is relied upon in the assignments of error. If it was well taken and should result in a reversal, it will be unnecessary to consider all of the other numerous assignments of error.

The coal works of three of the defendants are located on Crane Creek, those of one of them on Flipping Creek and those of the other two on Widemouth Creek. All of these streams flow into the Bluestone River at distances above the location of the plaintiffs farm, not stated in the declaration. The deposits of the river according to the allegations in the declaration, have filled up practically all of the holes in the stream, narrowed its channel, cast great quantities of cinder,' coal and sand over portions of its bottom lands, made heavy deposits along its shores, destroyed the' plaintiffs fords of the river, by means of which he went from one part of his farm to another, caused mucky deposits along the shores of the stream preventing cattle from going to ■ it with safety for water and on the edges of the bottom lands of plaintiffs farm, increased the frequency and volume of overflows of the bottom lands, turned the' waters black and so polluted them that they are unfit for use and otherwise injured and damaged the plaintiffs farm. There is no allegation that the defendants acted in concert, collusion or pursuit of a common design, in the performance of the acts which are alleged to have injured and defiled the stream and damaged the plaintiffs land. It simply alleges that they did the specified wrongful acts and that the injury and damage to the plaintiffs land resulted therefrom.

For legal justification of joinder of these defendants in one action and right to recover upon a declaration so framed, the plaintiff relies upon the decision of this court, rendered in Day v. Louisville Coal & Coke Co., reported in 60 W. Va., at page 27. That action was prosecuted against a single coal mining corporation, one of the defendants in this action, by the owner [598]*598of another farm situated on the same stream, for injury and damage thereto by reason of acts of the same kind as those alleged in this declaration. But joint and several liability of all persons and corporations guilty of the wrongful acts charged in the declaration was asserted and adjudicated in that ac+ion, in the determination of the extent of the liability of the defendant therein. It was held to be liable for the entire damages to bis farm, wrought by the consequences of the acts of the defendant and all other persons and corporations whose wrongful acts of like kind had combined with those of the defendant in the infliction thereof. The substance of the court’s conclusion respecting that phase of the case, is embodied in point 2 of the syllabus, reading as follows: “When the negligent acts of two or more persons, though acting independently of each other, concurrently result in the injury to the property of another, they are liable either jointly or separately.” In -this case, the soundness of that decision is questioned by the demurrer to the declaration and also by the motion to set aside the verdict. The lack of concert, collusion, common design or any other element of connection among the defendants, is clearly revealed by the evidence. They are wholly independent concerns operating at different points on the tributaries of the river.

A careful examination of the opinion delivered in the case above referred to, Day v. Louisville Coal & Coke Co., readily discloses failure on the part of the court, to observe and apply a well defined and firmly grounded exception to the general rule of liability of joint tort feasors, given in the opinion, or, stated more accurately, a limitation of the rule of joint liability and liability for entire damages. This exception or limitation is that there is no joint liability nor liability for entire damages, when the tort feásors act independently, without concert, collusion or common design, and the injury to the plaintiff is consequential only, or remotely resulting, as contradistinguished from direct and immediate. The rule as quoted in the opinion, from Shearman and Redfield on Negligence, puts in this element of directness, saying: “Persons, who cooperate in an act directly causing injury, are jointly liable for its consequences.” Nor does Cooley on Torts, in the quotation from it, omit this element. It says: “If the damage has resulted directly from con[599]*599current wrongful acts or neglects of two persons each of' these acts may be counted on as the wrongful cause and the parties held responsible, either jointly or severally, for the injury.” The same quotation from Shearman and Bedfield is found in Boyd v. Watt, 27 O. St., 259, and the opinion filed in that case puts in the element of directness. Another quotation in Day v. Louisville Co., taken from Grand Trunk R. Co. v. Cummings, 106 U. S. 700 says: “Where separate and independent acts of negligence of two parties are the direct causes of a single injury to a third person and it is impossible to determine in what proportion each contributed to the injury, either is responsible for the whole injury. The decisions cited and relied upon in the opinion in Day v. Louisville Coal & Coke Co. all involved eases of direct injury by the wrongful acts complained of. In Boyd v. Watt, the action was founded upon a statute giving right of action against any person who had caused intoxication of another person, to the injury and damage of the plaintiff. The defendant undertook to limit his liability on the ground of contribution to the result by other persons, without his knowledge or consent. In its disposition of the case,,the court said: “If defendant was using the means calculated to produce the injury, the law presumes he intended to produce it. If others, with or without concert, were concurrently co-operating with him, using like means, they were acting with the same common design, and if the injury resulted, each is liable, though each was acting without the knowledge of what the other was doing.” It is to be observed, that the unlawful act was done directly and immediately to the subject of the injury, the person to whom the liquor was unlawfully sold. The intoxication constituting the ground work of the action was the immediate and direct consequence of the result of the unlawful act. In the opinion of the court, it was not a case of direct injury to one subject resulting in consequential injury to another. In Johnson v. Chapman, 43 W. Va., 639, the injury was the direct and immediate result of the wrongful act.

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Bluebook (online)
102 S.E. 265, 85 W. Va. 595, 9 A.L.R. 933, 1920 W. Va. LEXIS 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farley-v-crystal-coal-coke-co-wva-1920.