John B. Kelly, Inc. v. Lehigh Navigation Coal Co.

54 F. Supp. 472, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2618
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. Pennsylvania
DecidedMarch 15, 1944
DocketCivil Action No. 3184
StatusPublished

This text of 54 F. Supp. 472 (John B. Kelly, Inc. v. Lehigh Navigation Coal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John B. Kelly, Inc. v. Lehigh Navigation Coal Co., 54 F. Supp. 472, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2618 (E.D. Pa. 1944).

Opinion

BARD, District Judge. .

Defendants have filed motions to dismiss the complaint and motions for a more definite statement or for bill of particulars.

The plaintiff in this action is engaged in the business of brick masonry construction work, and owns a property having a frontage on the Schuylkill River, in Philadelphia, on which there are located its piers and docks. The complaint alleges that the sixteen companies named as defendants are engaged in the operation of mines and collieries located on land adjacent to the Schuylkill River or its tributary streams, upstream of plaintiff’s property. It is further alleged that defendants are discharging, and for a long time have discharged, coal dust, culm and various other refuse materials into these waters in a negligent, reckless, wilful and wanton manner, the result of which has been to impair the navigability of the river, to raise its bed and to narrow its channel. As a further result, it is alleged that any abnormal increase in the level of its waters causes it to overflow its banks and to do great damage to plaintiff’s property and business. The complaint sets forth that such damage is brought about by the “united and combined acts” of the defendants in thus discharging waste materials, and that such materials and deposits are so “united, combined and intermingled within the waters of said Schuylkill River and its tributary streams as to be impossible of tracing to any individual defendant.” Injunctive and other relief is sought in the complaint.

The motion to dismiss challenges the jurisdiction of this court to hear and determine this action. The allegation of the complaint with respect to the jurisdiction of the federal court reads: “Plaintiff is a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of Delaware and the defendants are corporations organized and existing under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania. The amount in controversy exceeds, exclusive of interest and costs, the sum of Three Thousand Dollars ($3,000.).”

Defendants’ contention is that any liability resulting from the acts set forth in the complaint is, under the law of Pennsylvania, several and not joint, and that claims against several tort-feasors may not be aggregated to establish the requisite amount in controversy for federal jurisdictional purposes.

I am of the opinion that this contention is valid under the authorities. The Pennsylvania cases have uniformly held that tile liability of two or more independent mining companies to persons injured by erosion of culm deposits and discharge of waste into streams is not joint, and that each company is responsible for only the injury caused by its own acts, no matter how difficult it may be to separate this injury from that caused by the acts of other companies. Little Schuylkill Navigation Railroad & Coal Co. v. Richards’ Adm’r, 57 Pa. 142, 98 Am.Dec. 209; Gallagher v. Kemmerer, 144 Pa. 509, 22 A. 970, 27 Am.St.Rep. 673; Eckman v. Lehigh and Wilkes-Barre Coal Co., 50 Pa.Super. 427.

In the Little Schuylkill Navigation case, supra, the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, in reversing a judgment holding one mine owner responsible for damages resulting from silt discharge on the theory that he knew that other mine owners were also discharging silt and that his acts were combined with theirs to cause a single injury to the plaintiff, said at page 146 of 57 Pa., 98 Am.Dec. 209:

“It is immaterial what may be the nature of their several acts, or how small their share in the ultimate injury. If, instead of coal-dirt, others were felling trees and suffering their tops and branches to float down the stream, finally finding a lodgment in the dam with the coal-dirt, he who threw in the coal-dirt, and he who felled the trees would each be responsible for the acts of the other. In the same manner separate trespassers who should haul their rubbish upon a city lot, and throw it upon the same pile, would each be liable for the whole, if the final result be the only criterion of liability.. But the fallacy lies in the assumption that the deposit of the dirt by the stream in the basin is the foundation of liability. It is the immediate cause of the injury, but the ground of action is the negligent act above. The right of action arises upon the act of throwing the dirt into the stream — this is the tort, while the deposit below is only a consequence. The liability, therefore, began above with the defendant’s act upon his own land, and this act was wholly separate, and independent of all concert with others. His tort was several when it was committed, and it is difficult to see how it afterwards became joint, because its consequences united with other consequences. The union of conse[474]*474quences did not increase his injury. ■ If the dirt were deposited mountain high by the stream his dirt filled only its own space, and it was made neither more nor less by the accretions. True, it may be difficult to determine how much dirt came from each colliery, but the relative proportion thrown in by each may form some guide, and a jury in a case of such difficulty, caused by the party himself, would measure the injury of each with a liberal hand. But the difficulty of separating the injury of each from the others would be no reason that one man should be held to be liable for the torts of others without concert. It would be simply to say, because the plaintiff fails to prove the injury one man does him, he may therefore recover from that one all the injury that others do.
“This is bad logic and hard law. Without concert of action no joint suit could be brought against the owners of all the collieries, and clearly this must be the test; for if the defendants can be held liable for the acts of all the others, so each and every other owner can be made liable for all the rest, and the action must be joint and several. But the moment we should find them jointly sued, then the want of concert and the several liability of each would be apparent. These principles are fully sustained by the following cases: Russell v. Tomlinson et al., 2 Conn. 206; Adams v. Hall, 2 Vt. 9 [19 Am.Dec. 690]; Van Steenburgh v. Tobias, 17 Wend. [N.Y.] 562 [31 Am.Dec. 310]; Buddington v. Shearer, 20 Pick. [Mass.] 477; Auchmuty v. Ham, 1 Denio [N.Y.] 495; Partenheimer v. Van Order, 20 Barb. [N.Y.] 479."

In Gallagher v. Kemmerer, supra, the Supreme Court said at page 517 of 144 Pa., 22 A. at page 970, 27 Am.St.Rep. 673: “It is argued, on the part of the appellants, that the injury to which the plaintiff was subjected was of such a character that it could not, as between the parties who caused it, be divided, so as to determine in what proportion it was caused by each; and that, even if the defendants’ mines had not been operated, the mining operations of the Highland Coal Company would have resulted in the same injury.. It is true that the injury complained of may have been caused in part by the operations of the Highland Coal Company, conducted contemporaneously with the operations of the defendants’ mines, and that it would be difficult, if not quite impossible, to separate and ascertain, definitely or certainly, the proportion of the whole damage done by each of these operations, respectively. But these several operations were entirely independent of each other. They were several miles apart, and the ownership, management, and control were wholly distinct and separate. There was no concert of action, or common purpose or design, which would support the theory of joint injury. The case, in this branch, is ruled by [Little Schuylkill] Navigation [Railroad and Coal] Co. v. Richards, 57 Pa. 142 [98 Am.Dec. 209].”

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Bluebook (online)
54 F. Supp. 472, 1944 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2618, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-b-kelly-inc-v-lehigh-navigation-coal-co-paed-1944.