Hecksher v. Shenandoah Citizens Water & Gas Co.

2 Foster 273
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Schuylkill County
DecidedNovember 16, 1874
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2 Foster 273 (Hecksher v. Shenandoah Citizens Water & Gas Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Schuylkill County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hecksher v. Shenandoah Citizens Water & Gas Co., 2 Foster 273 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1874).

Opinion

Opinion delivered November 16. 1874, by

Green, J.

This is a bill in equity brought for the purpose of enjoining the defendants from diverting a certain stream of water from the complainants’ colliery and appropriating it to their own use. It sets forth that the plaintiffs are the owners of an extensive colliery erected under a lease from the owners of the land, John Gilbert et. al., having a number of years to run; that the colliery has eleven boilers for the purpose of generating steam and that it is dependent for its supply of water upon a stream running through the land on which they have built two dams, that the colliery cost about two hundred and fifty thousand dollars and employs about three hundred miners and laborers; and that in addition to the colliery the stream supplies the wants of about twenty-five families residing in the immediate neighborhood, and of about thirty-five head of horses and mules employed by the plaintiffs. It further sets forth that the defendants threaten and have attempted to appropriate the said stream so as to deprive the plaintiffs of the same without making compensation or giving security therefor. An injunction is asked to restrain the defendants.

A good deal of evidence has been taken, but as to most of the facts of the case there is no dispute. The evidence showed that the defendants intended to appropriate only a portion of the stream. Whether this would leave the plaintiffs with a sufficient supply of water for all the purposes of their colliery during a period of drought is a question as to which there is considerable conflict of testimony. It would seem that [274]*274during an ordinary season neither the plaintiffsnor the defendants would require the portion of the stream in dispute — that it is only in seasons of dry weather as that region is now suffering under that it becomes important and valuable The defendants not only supply the borough of Shenandoah with water, but also five or six extensive collieries in and around the borough and one in the Mahanoy valley.

The sources of the stream in question are two springs upon the mountain, some distance apart, upon what are generally known as the Girard Lands. The lower spring appears to be of somewhat greater capacity than the upper, and the streams flowing down the mountain from them unite some distance above the plaintiffs’ dam. A three or three and a half-inch pipe would probably carry all the water from the two springs. The defendants have laid a two inch pipe to the lower spring for the purpose of tapping it and appropriating it to their own purposes. This they claim they have a right to do under their charter without making compensation beforehand or giving security therefor.

This raises a question of law. Can the legislature of the State give authority to appropriate a stream for public uses, making no provision for compensation, without violating that section of the declaration of rights of the constitution which declares that “private property shall not be taken or applied to public use without authority of law and without just compensation being first made or secured?” Or is there no such taking of private property in the present instance, as is contemplated by the constitution, and is the injury done to the plaintiffs only of such a consequential character that they are entitled to no redress? We must determine what the nature of the property is which a riparian owner has in the stream, and whether it is of such a character as may be taken away in the constitutional sense.

A very marked distinction appears to run through the cases between streams which are navigable and those which are not, in respect to the property which riparian owners may have in them. In a navigable stream the .owner of the soil owns only up to low water mark, the ownership of the soil beyond that, and of the water, remaining in the state. But in a stream that is not navigable the owner carries his title to the soil usque ad filum medium aquce, and if he owns on both sides then he is the owner of the entire bed of the stream and has a qualified ownership in the water itself. He has such a property in it that his neighbor above may not deprive him of it nor divert it out of its accustomed channel so as to change its course over his land.

This distinction is very clearly recognized and followed in the case of Shrunk v. The Schuylkill Nav. Co., 14 S. & R., 71. The common law of England defines a navigable river to be one in which the tide ebbs and flows, but in Pennsylvania this definition is decided to be too [275]*275narrow, and rivers like the Susquehanna, Lehigh, Allegheny &c., are declared to be navigable rivers owned by the public, with all the rights of navigation and fishing unimpaired by any rights of the owners of the -soil along their banks. The remarks of Chief Justice Tilghman in the case cited are very suggestive of the distinctions we have spoken of. He says “as for the soil over which our great rivers flow, it has never been granted to any one, either by Wm. Penn, or his successors or the state government. Care seems to have been taken from the beginning to preserve the waters for public uses, both for fishing and navigation ; and the wisdom of that policy is even more striking than ever, from the great improvements already made and others in contemplation, to effect which it is often necessary to obstruct the flow of the waters in some places and in others to divert its course. It is true, that the State would have had a right to do these things for the public benefit, even if the rivers had been private property; but then compensation must have been made to the owners, the amount of which might have been so enormous as to have frustrated, or at least checked these noble undertakings.” The same distinction is recognized in the Monongahela Bridge Co. v. Kirk 10 Wright, 112. The court says that the Monongahela river was by the settled law of Pennsylvania, independent of any act of assembly, a navigable river, and the soil of the river up to low water mark, and the river itself were the property of the Commonwealth, .as clearly as any tide water river in England is the property of the Crown, and that whilst by the common law of England mighty waters such as the Mississippi, Missouri and others were not navigable rivers, but were the subject of private property, yet a more common sense view has been adopted in this State, and all rivers recognized as navigable which were really so. In McKeen v. The Delaware Division Canal Co. 13 Wr. 424, the same doctrine is held. It is there said that “many laws have been passed, stamping upon numerous smaller streams the same character, to preserve the public control of the benefit of the highway. The courts have maintained the absolute power of the Commonwealth over navigable streams for their improvement as great highways of the people.” And further says “every one who buys property upon a navigable stream purchases subject to the supreme rights of the Commonwealth to regulate and improve it for the benefit of all her citizens.”

Whilst therefore under these decisions it is doubtful whether an owner of land upon a navigable stream can have such a property in the stream as to entitle him to compensation if it were taken away, I conceive there can be none, as to an owner of land upon a stream that is not navigable. But the defendants contend that the only property the plaintiffs have is the right to the use of the water as it flows by — not an absolute [276]

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Bluebook (online)
2 Foster 273, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hecksher-v-shenandoah-citizens-water-gas-co-pactcomplschuyl-1874.