Meeker v. City of East Orange

74 A. 379, 77 N.J.L. 623, 48 Vroom 623, 1909 N.J. LEXIS 188
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedNovember 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 74 A. 379 (Meeker v. City of East Orange) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Meeker v. City of East Orange, 74 A. 379, 77 N.J.L. 623, 48 Vroom 623, 1909 N.J. LEXIS 188 (N.J. 1909).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

PitNey, CHANCELLOR.

Plaintiff brought two actions in one of the District Courts of the city of Newark to recover damages for the diversion by the defendant of percolating underground water. In each case the District Court rendered judgment in favor of the defendant, and upon appeal to the Supreme Court the judgments were affirmed. By writs of error the records are brought here for review.

The cases were submitted to the trial court upon agreed statements of fact. In one case it is stipulated that plaintiff owns and occupies a farm of about one hundred acres, situate in the valley of Canoe Brook, in the townships of Millburn and Livingston, in the county of Essex. He is a milkman, and has for a number of years used his farm for the pasture and support of his cows and horses. Canoe Brook and two small streams tributary thereto flow through his farm. Upon the farm there is also a spring, enclosed by a spring-house, the water of which has for years been used by the plaintiff for drinking purposes and for the storing and keeping of his milk. His cattle in pasture have for years resorted to the brook and its tributaries for drinking water. The defendant, the ‘city of East Orange, under the authority of “An act to enable cities to supply the inhabitants thereof with pure and [625]*625wholesome water,’ approved April 21st, 1876, and the acts supplemental thereto and amendatory thereof (Pamph. L., p. 366; Gen. Stat., p. 646), acquired a tract of land containing about six hundred and eighty acres, situate in the valley of Canoe Brook and in the township of Mill burn, and installed thereon a water plant consisting of about twenty arte-sian wells, situate further down the stream than plaintiff’s farm and distant upwards of a mile therefrom. In the construction of these wells, and of the works, mains and reservoirs connected therewith, the city has expended more than $1,000,000. A few years prior to the commencement of the action the city began to take water from the wells, and has thus taken percolating underground water which, but for its interception, would have reached the plaintiff’s spring or stream. No water other than percolating water has been taken, and no water has been taken out of any surface stream or from the spring of the plaintiff after it (the water) has appeared upon the surface or in any surface spring or stream. In this action the plaintiff seeks damages for the diversion of the underground water that otherwise would have reached his spring and streams.

In the other action the agreed statement of facts differs only in that it shows the existence upon plaintiff’s farm of a well which for years had provided water for the various purposes of the plaintiff, and that as a result of the defendant’s operations it had taken percolating underground water which otherwise would have reached this well, and had also taken percolating underground water from beneath the surface or soil of the plaintiff’s land to such an extent that his crops will not now grow as they did formerly, and the taking of such percolating water has damaged the plaintiff’s hay and crops and also has reduced the level of the water in his well. For this diversion damages are sought.

The judgments under review are based upon the theory that the city has an absolute right to appropriate all percolating water found beneath the land owned by it, and to use the water for purposes entirely unconnected with the beneficial use and enjoyment of that land, to the extent, indeed, [626]*626of making merchandise of the water and conveying it to a distance for the supply of the inhabitants of East Orange, and that although by such diversion the plaintiff’s spring, well and stream are dried up, and his land rendered so arid as to be untillable, it is damnum absque injuria.

The judgments are attacked upon the ground that the law recognizes correlative rights in percolating subterranean waters; that each landowner is entitled to use such waters only in a reasonable manner and to a reasonable extent beneficial to his own land, and without undue interference with the rights of other landowners to the like use and enjoyment of waiters percolating beneath their lands, or of water courses fed therefrom.

The law respecting the rights of property owners in percolating subterranean waters is of comparatively recent development, the first English decision bearing directly upon the question having been rendered in 1843. Acton v. Blundell, 12 Mees. & W. 324; 13 L. J. Exch. 289. This was followed by Chasemore v. Richards (1859), 1 H. L. Cas. 349; 29 L. J. Exch. 81; 5 Jur. (N. S.) 873; 1 Eng. Rul. Cas. 729. These cases may be taken as establishing for that jurisdiction the rule upon which the judgments under review are based.

They were followed by a considerable line of decisions in this country in which the English rule was adhered to, and which will be found discussed in Washb. Easem. *363, *390; Ang. Waterc., §§ 109-114, and 30 Am. & Eng. Encycl. L. (2d ed.) 310, 313.

The soundness of the English doctrine was, however, challenged by the (Supreme Court of New Hampshire in a well-considered case decided in 1862 (Bassett v. Salisbury Manufacturing Co., 43 N. H. 569; 3 Am. L. Reg. (N. S.) 223 (O. S., Vol. 12); 82 Am. Dec. 179), where it was elaborately reasoned that the doctrine of absolute ownership is not well founded in legal principles, and is not so commended by its practical application as to require its adoption ; that the true rule is that the rights of each owner being similar, and their enjoyment dependent upon the action of other landowners, their rights must be correlative and subject to the operation [627]*627of the maxim sic utere, &c., so that each landowner is restricted to a reasonable exercise of his own rights and a reasonable use of his own property, in view of the similar rights of others. This decision was followed by Swett v. Cutts (1870), 50 N. H. 439; 9 Am. Rep. 276; 11 Am. L. Reg. (N. S.) 11, where the court again laid it down that the landowner has not an absolute and unqualified property in all such water as may be found in his soil, to do what he pleases with it, as with the sand and rock that form part of the soil, but that his right is to make reasonable use of it for domestic, agricultural and manufacturing purposes, not trenching upon the similar rights of others.

The doctrine thus enunciated has come to be known in the discussion of the topic as the rule of “reasonable use.”

The question as to which of these contrary rules obtains in this state has not been set at rest by any previous adjudication in this court.

In Ocean Grove v. Asbury Park (1885), 13 Stew. Eq. 447, both parties were seeking a general supply of water for the respective summer resorts. Ocean Grove obtained by boring upon its own land a supply of water for its inhabitants. As-bury Park sought water by boring upon lands of third parties with the consent of the latter. Vice Chancellor Bird refused an injunction upon the ground that subterranean percolating waters are the absolute property of the owner of the fee, citing the leading English cases and some American decisions that follow them.

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Bluebook (online)
74 A. 379, 77 N.J.L. 623, 48 Vroom 623, 1909 N.J. LEXIS 188, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/meeker-v-city-of-east-orange-nj-1909.