International Shoe Co. v. Heatwole

30 S.E.2d 537, 126 W. Va. 888, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 56
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1944
Docket9601
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 30 S.E.2d 537 (International Shoe Co. v. Heatwole) 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
International Shoe Co. v. Heatwole, 30 S.E.2d 537, 126 W. Va. 888, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 56 (W. Va. 1944).

Opinions

Rose, President:

Upon the relation of International Shoe Company, a foreign corporation, authorized to hold property and do business in the State of West Virginia, this Court issued a rule requiring Kirk Heatwole and John W. Cook, justices of the peace of Summers County, and C. A. Byus, to show cause, if any they could, why a peremptory writ of prohibition should not be awarded prohibiting them from proceeding further in, or enforcing, a judgment rendered in favor of Byus and against the relator for $98.00 and costs in an action instituted before Heatwole but tried and determined by Cook upon the disqualification of Heat-wole.

The relator operates a tannery at Marlinton, in Pocahontas County, where it has its only place of business in this state, and has never done business, or had any property, officer- or agent in Summers County.

*890 The writ is sought on the grounds: (1) That, as a matter of law, no cause of action existed in favor of said Byus against the relator; (2) that if, in fact, any such cause of action did exist, the same arose in Pocahontas County; and (3) that no jurisdiction of the person of the relator has ever been obtained, the only service of summons having been by the acceptance thereof in Kanawha County by the Auditor of the State of West Virginia, as statutory attorney in fact of the relator.

Neither of the two justices made return, answer or other appearance to the rule. Byus answered, purporting to state the actual cause of action and insisting that the acceptance of service of the summons by the Auditor constituted legal process against the relator.

The summons in the case in no way defines the cause of action. It is simply “for the recovery of money due damages for a wrong”. This would cover actionable tort within the jurisdiction of the justice, or even money due on a contract. Taylor v. Stevenson, 82 W. Va. 677, 97 S. E. 136; O’Connor v. Dils, 43 W. Va. 54, 26 S. E. 354.

No pleading or statement of claim was filed before the justice. Such statement of the claim might have been “oral or in writing; if oral, the substance of them” should have been “entered by the justice in his docket”. Code 50-4-3. No such entry was made by the justice. The only statement appearing on the docket which in any way alludes to the cause of action is the following recital as ground for overruling the motion of the relator, on special appearance, to quash the summons and return: “* * * and it appearing to the Court that the subject matter of said action, to-wit; damage for pollution of Greenbrier River in Summers County, West Virginia, was within the jurisdiction of said Justice * * *”. This language expresses no cause of action. The simple pollution of a river would be an offense against the public, and not a wrong for which an individual could have private damages. But the court of a justice of the peace is not a court of record, and the docket of such justice is not a verity. It may be explained or supplemented by evidence extrinsic thereto. And in a *891 prohibition proceeding we must begin with a presumption that the inferior court did not unlawfully assume or attempt to exercise jurisdiction. Conservative Life Insurance Co. v. Alexander, 114 W. Va. 451; 172 S. E. 520; State v. O’Brien, 96 W. Va. 353, 122 S. E. 919.

The relator alleges in its petition that it “is informed, believes and avers that said civil action * * * against petitioner for the recovery of ‘damage for pollution of Green-brier River in Summers County, West Virginia’ was and is based and predicated wholly and solely upon the discharge into said stream by petitioner at Marlinton, in Pocahontas County, of certain waste products from its said tannery there located, and that the gravamen of plaintiff’s claim for damages was that such discharge of said waste products into said river at times discolored its water below said tannery and interfered with the fishing in said stream from Marlinton to the mouth of said river at Hinton, a distance of over a hundred miles”.

The answer of Byus controverts this allegation of the petitioner and says that he is the owner of a tract of land fronting on Greenbrier River, in Summers County, and that “tannic acid, sludge, sediment, and the draining from the tanning vats” of the relator were “discharged into the Greenbrier River at Marlinton, causing said Green-brier River to become polluted, discolored and unfit for human consumption, * * * that through the natural flow-age of said stream passed * * * into the County of Summers, West Virginia, near the place where your respondent’s property is located on the Greenbrier River * * This answer further states that: “your respondent alleged and proved at the said trial * * * that the resale value of the real estate owped by the respondent (summer home and camp) had been diminished by reason of said pollution, that his right as a riparian owner had been injured and damaged in that at the time of said pollution his family and himself could not bathe in said stream and neither could he fish and enjoy said stream, in its original beauty and pureness, at said time of pollution”; and that said cause of action arose in Summers County, “notwithstand *892 ing the source of said pollution originated in Pocahontas County”, since “it would be physically impossible to damage the said respondent until said pollution, discoloration and filth passed on and across and deposited upon the land and premises in Summers County, West Virginia”.

The relator demurred to this answer, but filed no replication and took no evidence. Therefore, the answer, insofar as it conflicts with the petition in its statement of fact, must be accepted as true.

The respondent very clearly states that he “alleged” certain facts relating to his purported injury. This we understand to mean that he pleaded orally this cause of action. The facts so alleged or pleaded are clearly based upon a claimed violation of his riparian rights. He was the owner of a parcel of land abutting on Greenbrier River and as such was entitled to have the said river flow to and past his land in its normal degree of purity, uncontaminated by more than ordinary use by the upper owners. II Farriham, Waters and Water Rights, Sec. 515. He states that the water has been periodically polluted by the relator; that this pollution interfered with the normal use of the water for domestic purposes, bathing and fishing, and that the aggregate of these several wrongs reduced the value of his land.

The unlawful pollution of a stream is a public nuisance. A private individual can maintain an action for relief against a public nuisance only when he has suffered therefrom an injury different from that inflicted upon the public in general, not only in degree, but in character. Curry v. Boone Timber Co., 87 W. Va. 429, 105 S. E. 263; Davis v. Spragg, 72 W. Va. 672, 79 S. E. 652; Talbott v. King, 32 W. Va. 6, 9 S. E. 48; Keystone Bridge Co. v. Summers, 13 W. Va. 476.

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Bluebook (online)
30 S.E.2d 537, 126 W. Va. 888, 1944 W. Va. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-shoe-co-v-heatwole-wva-1944.