Heninger v. McGinnis

108 S.E. 671, 131 Va. 70, 1921 Va. LEXIS 9
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedSeptember 22, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 108 S.E. 671 (Heninger v. McGinnis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Heninger v. McGinnis, 108 S.E. 671, 131 Va. 70, 1921 Va. LEXIS 9 (Va. 1921).

Opinion

Saunders, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a controversy over the diversion of the waters of a spring, referred to in the record as the “Mountain Spring,” and situated on the land of A. M. McGinnis, in Burk’s Garden, Tazewell county, Va.

In March, 1904, McGinnis and wife conveyed a portion of this land, containing about fifty acres, to Cleveland T. Heninger and others. Later, Heninger acquired several of the shares of the other tenants.

From a diagram in the record, it appears that the fifty-acre tract adjoins the balance of the McGinnis land on the [72]*72west, and is at a lower level than the spring, which was on the northern slope of a mountain. The dividing line between the two tracts is indicated on the diagram as a due north and south line. North of the spring, possibly half a mile, and near the line on the McGinnis side, is a house which, at successive periods, has been occupied by parties who testify in this case. The “Mountain Spring” is described as a medium-sized, constantly flowing spring. A couple of hundred yards, more or less, below this spring and west of the dividing line that is on the McGinnis side, its waters disappear in a small piece of marshy ground. These waters flow-in a defined gulley, or drain, from the spring to this little marsh, or place of disappearance. Below this marsh there is dry ground and sod, and a slight elevation across the course of the gulley. On the other side of this elevated ground is a hollow, starting on the mountain south of the “Mountain Spring,” and running downwards in a somewhat northeasterly course. This hollow starts and runs on the McGinnis land until a point is reached just above and south of the house mentioned, supra. Here the course of the descending hollow crosses the line between McGinnis and the fifty-acre tract, and, about fifty yards further on, it terminates in a sink-hole in said tract. All water coming from the mountain along this hollow, or channel, supra, disappears in this sink.

In 1911, A. M. McGinnis and wife sold and conveyed to J. B. Meek and M. Castle the “Mountain Spring,” with the right to maintain a pipe line therefrom, save “as to the amount of water that would be carried by a half-inch pipe, which was reserved for the benefit of the land on which the spring was situated.” Thereupon the said. Meek and Castle proceeded to wall in the spring, and lay a one-inch pipe therefrom in a ditch along the course of the boundary line between McGinnis’ land and the fifty-acre tract, crossing the water channel above mentioned near the house on the [73]*73McGinnis side. This ditch was dug and the pipe line laid in May, 1911. At the spring, a half-inch pipe was inserted in said line. This pipe ran to a trough on the McGinnis land, and the overflow of the trough flowed by gravitation along the old channel of the spring to the little marsh heretofore described. There it passed below the surface and disappeared.

It is the contention of the complainant, Heninger (appellant here), that the waters of the “Mountain Spring,” after disappearing in the swamp south of the dry sod and little ridge, su/pra, follow a subterranean channel, and appear on the other side of said ridge in the hollow which heads in the mountain. By natural flow in this channel, these waters would then run past the house previously described, and thence upon the fifty-acre tract, where they would be lost in the sink-hole fifty yards or more beyond said house.

In the year 1919, eight years after the diversion of the waters of the “Mountain Spring” by Meek and Castle, Cleveland T. Heninger, part owner of the fifty-acre tract, filed his bill in chancery against said Meek and Castle, and A. M. McGinnis, in which he set up his interest in said tract by reason of his purchase from McGinnis and others, and alleged that the operations of said parties in walling in the “Mountain Spring” and piping away the flow of same had deprived him of water to which he was entitled. Complainant specifically alleged in said bill that after the establishment of said pipe line, he was “wholly deprived of all water on said fifty-acre tract,” and to his very great detriment was compelled to drive his stock, pasturing on said tract, “off said land, a distance of about a quarter of a mile, to water.” Further, that “this interruption of the natural flow of water to which he was entitled, and the consequent loss to his tract, operated to greatly depreciate the value of his land.” The court was asked to issue an injunction [74]*74against the defendants, restraining them from continuing “to divert the flow of water from said spring away from its natural bed and channel * * * and to remove all of said obstructions to said natural flow, and to permit the whole of the natural flow of said spring to flow into and follow the natural bed and channel in which it would naturally flow, upon the removal of the obstructions, except . so much as might be reasonably necessary for the reasonable use and purposes of A. M. McGinnis, to be used by him on his own land upon which said spring was situated.”

The defendants answered this bill, denying—

First: That the flow of water from the “Mountain Spring” “had a fixed, permanent and well-defined channel and bed through which it flowed to where it crossed the boundary line of the fifty-acre tract.”

Second: That “the water from said spring always flowed in a fixed, permanent and well-defined bed and channel by gravitation through and upon the said fifty acres of land.”

The answer alleged further, by way of defense, that the water which, for the greater part of the year, flowed in the hollow heading in the mountain, and thence upon the fifty-acre tract, came from sources other than the “Mountain Spring;” that these sources of supply were springs in the hollow and seepages from the sides; that there was no evidence that the overflow from the “Mountain Spring,” after it sank at the little marsh on the McGinnis land, ever reappeared at any portion of the course of the hollow below said spring; that the flow from this hollow upon the fifty-acre tract had never been constant, but was dependent upon the rains, and was, therefore, irregular and capricious; that the hollow, or water course, was dry at times, both before and after the pipe line was established from the spring, and that the pipe line was in no wise responsible for any interruptions of flow in this channel at any time after its establishment; that the flow of water down said hollow, [75]*75which extends on to the fifty-acre tract, is not and never has been in any way diminished by reason of the removal of the water which respondents removed from the said spring through said pipe line.

The complainant filed certain exceptions to this answer, which were overruled. Thereafter, both parties took depositions, and the case coming on to be heard upon the pleadings and depositions, the court dismissed the plaintiff’s bill. An appeal from, this decree brings the controversy before this court for review. The questions presented are largely questions of fact, as the exceptions appear to have been properly overruled.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 S.E. 671, 131 Va. 70, 1921 Va. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heninger-v-mcginnis-va-1921.