In re Water Rights

39 Pa. D. & C. 261
CourtPennsylvania Department of Justice
DecidedAugust 5, 1940
StatusPublished

This text of 39 Pa. D. & C. 261 (In re Water Rights) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Department of Justice primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re Water Rights, 39 Pa. D. & C. 261 (Pa. 1940).

Opinion

Adams, Deputy Attorney General,

We have your letter of May 15, 1940, in which you ask five questions with regard to the administration of the Act of June 24,1939, P. L. 842, 32 PS §631, which act relates to the acquisition of rights to divert water from [262]*262rivers, streams, natural lakes, and ponds, or other surface waters within the Commonwealth.

This act is the only presently effective authority for the acquisition of water rights as appears from section 5 of the act, which reads as follows:

“Section 5. No public water supply agency shall hereafter acquire any water rights except as provided in this act, and any acquisition of water rights hereafter, except as provided in this act, shall be deemed to be unlawful null and void”; with the exception of water rights heretofore or hereafter acquired under the Act of June 14, 1923, P. L. 704, 32 PS §591, which refers to water power and water supply permits.

Your first question is:

1. Do wells, drilled or artesian, and springs come within the terms of the above act? [Act of 1939, supra.]

Section 1(c) of the Act of 1939, supra, defines “water rights” as follows:

“(e) ‘Water rights’ shall mean the right to take or divert water from any rivers, streams, natural lakes and ponds, or other surface waters within or partly within and partly without the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, except water rights heretofore or hereafter acquired under the Act of June 14, 1923, Pamphlet Laws 704.”

Wells and springs not being specifically included in the definition of the term “water rights”, the question arises whether wells and springs are included within the term “surface waters”.

Surface waters are defined in 67 C. J. 862, §286, as “those which fall on the land from the skies or arise in springs, and diffuse themselves over the surface of the ground following no defined course or channel, and not gathering into or forming any more definite body of water than a mere bog or marsh, and are lost by being diffused over the ground through percolation, evaporation, or natural drainage.”

The same authority also states that surface water is a term which has been defined or used variously, and that [263]*263a few of the definitions impose statements which would imply that it is a term appropriate to be applied to all fresh water upon the surface of the earth, not ponded, which is not that of a water course. Other definitions given are that, in its ordinary sense, it means water collected on the surface of the ground. Inasmuch as the term “or other surface waters” is used in the alternative sense with rivers, streams, natural lakes and ponds, we are of the opinion that the term “surface waters” is used in the sense of meaning waters collected on the surface of the ground.

The phrase “artesian well” is defined in 5 C. J. 590 as a perforation or boring into the ground, deep enough to reach a subterranean body of water of which the sources are higher than the place where the perforation is made, and so force up to the surface a constant stream of water.

A “well” is defined in 68 C. J. 168 as a hole sunk or drilled into the earth to such a depth as to reach a supply of water.

In view of these definitions, we are of the opinion that artesian wells or drilled wells do not come within the definition of “surface waters”, as that term is used in the Act of 1939, supra.

Turning to the question of whether “springs” are within the definition of “surface waters”, we find “a spring” is defined in 58 C. J. 1307 to mean “A fountain of water; a place where water by natural forces issues from the ground; a place where water comes naturally to the surface of the ground and flows away . . . The term is said to be correctly used to denote the natural source of water supply.” (Italics supplied.)

However, we do not consider that springs are, in all cases, excluded from the terms of the above act, but are of the opinion that they are within the terms of the act where a stream is created by a spring, which stream flows in a natural channel, and without the act where a spring [264]*264is diffused over the ground and follows no defined course or channel.

In 67 C. J. 675, §2, it is said:

“In the absence of statutory regulations or private agreements, all waters are, in contemplation of law, regarded as either flowing or percolating. The former consists of those bodies, such as lakes or ponds, and streams, which are upon or beneath the surface of the earth, and whose boundaries and courses are well defined and reasonably ascertainable, and whose existence is not of a temporary or ephemeral character. All other waters are percolating waters.” (Italics supplied.)

In 67 C. J. 836, §252, it is said:

“The general rule vesting the ownership of percolating waters in the owner of the land has been held not to apply to the waters of an artesian basin underlying the lands of several owners. . . ”.

In 67 C. J. 836, §251, it is said:

“A spring which does not constitute the source of a watercourse, the flow of' its waste or surplus being subterranean and concealed and a matter of uncertainty as to direction and volume, belongs to the owner of the land, who may appropriate and use its entire flow, subject to contract or easement rights that may exist in others, even where the waste spreads over the surface for some distance and onto the land of the adjoining owner before going underground.”

In the case of Brown v. Kistler et al., 190 Pa. 499 (1889), it was said by the lower court, on page 500:

“It is the law that water that is in the earth and finds its way through the soil by percolating or seeping, and has not a defined flow in a stream either underground or above the ground is absolutely the property of the man who owns the land in which that water is found; he has the same right to it as he has to anything else in the ground. But where there is a defined stream, whether on or below the surface, a flow of water that is visible, a [265]*265channel as it has been called in this case, a gutter in which it flows, and it passes through the lands of one to the lands of another below him, there the rule is different . .

In 67 C. J. 834, 835, §250, it is said:

“In the absence of express contract or positive legislation pertinent and contrary thereto, percolating water existing in the earth is regarded as a part of the soil in which the person owning the land has a property right . . (Italics supplied.)

We call attention to section 9 of the Act of 1939, supra, which reads as follows:

“Section 9. All public water supply agencies heretofore or hereafter incorporated under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and holding a permit issued by the board under the provisions of this act, shall have the power and may exercise the right of eminent domain as respects the appropriation of the water and the water rights authorized by said permit and land covered by said waters: Provided, however, That such right shall not apply to private spring and private water supplies.”

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Related

Brown v. Kistler
42 A. 885 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1899)

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Bluebook (online)
39 Pa. D. & C. 261, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-water-rights-padeptjust-1940.