Miller v. Black Rock Springs Improvement Co.

40 S.E. 27, 99 Va. 747, 1901 Va. LEXIS 105
CourtSupreme Court of Virginia
DecidedNovember 21, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 40 S.E. 27 (Miller v. Black Rock Springs Improvement Co.) 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
Miller v. Black Rock Springs Improvement Co., 40 S.E. 27, 99 Va. 747, 1901 Va. LEXIS 105 (Va. 1901).

Opinion

Cardwell, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The hill in this- case, filed by appellee, a corporation and the complainant in the court below1 alleges that it and the defendant below, appellant here, are the owners of two adjoining tracts of land lying on the slope of the Blue Bidge Mountains, near the dividing line between the counties of Bockingham and Augusta, the property of each being used as a summer resort or watering-place; that soon after appellee was incorporated and purchased its tract of land, a question arose between it and appellant as to the ownership of two springs, the smaller one a mineral spring, situated near the dividing line 'between the two properties; that litigation was the result of this controversy, and it was finally decided that the springs were upon the land of appellee, and appellant was restrained by injunction, in 1893, from using the water from the springs, &c.; and that thereafter appellant made several fruitless efforts to secure the use of these waters for his boarding-house and his guests. The bill then concludes as follows: “Finding that he had finally to give up the use of these waters by open means above the surface, Miller (appellant) has recently undertaken to tap the springs by a ditch along close to the line between the two properties, which digging has been done in the county of Augusta.

“By this means he has crossed the sources of one of the springs and turned it into the ditch he has dug and carried it down to his own property. So much so that the spring has almost entirely ceased to flow, and your orator is advised that he is going [749]*749on in liis search for the other one. This is not only an invasion of your orator’s property rights in the diversion of water whose natural flow is on the lands of the orator’s property, as it is at present used, hut an almost absolute destruction of its value for any purpose if this water is allowed to be taken away. The injury thus worked to your orator would be irreparable,” &c. The prayer is for an injunction to restrain appellant, his agent, &c., “from digging on his own land so as to strike the sources of the springs which rise on appellee’s land, or from in any way reducing the flow of the water that would naturally flow out at the springs, or from in any way interfering with appellee’s use of said water, whether above or below the ground; that he (appellant) may be required peremptorily at once, and if he does not do so promptly, that complainant may be permitted to go on his premises and fill in the ditch that he has already dug, so as to restore said stream, if it can possibly be done, to its natural flow,” &c.

Appellant demurred to and answered the bill, and in his answer admits the former litigation concerning the spring, in question, resulting in an injunction restraining him from using the water therefrom, and that he did dig upon his own land to obtain water, but claims that he was simply doing what he had a perfect right tó do; that he was not seeking to cut off the sources of any spring on appellee’s land; that he did not know and could not tell where the water which flowed from appellee’s spring came from, but if it be true, as appellee infers, that it comes from appellant’s land, he will certainly be allowed a reasonable use of waters flowing through his land, whether above or below the surface, &c. He further claims that he does not know, neither can 'any one say where are the sources of these springs other than the springs themselves, and that the digging he did on his own land was not done to vex appellee, or with malice and intent to injure its property, but was simply done [750]*750in. tlie exercise of his lawful rights ou his own soil, in order to procure' water for his own use.

Bo disposition seems to have been made of the demurrer to .the bill, and it is to be regarded as overruled (Miller v. Miller, 92 Va., 196), but this does not constitute error, as the bill upon its face states a case for equity jurisdiction.

Upon hearing the cause upon the bill and answer and the •depositions of witnesses, the Circuit Court, being of opinion that the nature and extent of the digging complained of in the bill was not plainly shown by the evidence, ordered that the complainant (appellee) take further evidence on this point. Whereupon, only the deposition of C. S. Patterson, president of the appellee company, who had twice before testified in the ■cause, was taken, and upon a final hearing the decree appealed from was made, perpetuating the temporary injunction.

A great number of cases have been considered by this court involving the correlative rights of adjoining owners of land in reference to running streams on the surface, but the question presented in this case has not heretofore been considered.

In Frazier v. Brown, 12 Ohio St. 294, the facts were almost identical with those appearing in this record, and in an able and exhaustive opinion, concurred in by the entire court, it was held (1), that in the absence of express contract and positive legislation, as between proprietors of adjoining lands, the law recognizes no correlative rights in respect to underground waters percolating, oozing, or filtering through the earth; hence, where a landowner digs a “hole” on his own land for purposes connected with the use of his own land, thereby cutting off or •diverting underground 'waters which have always been accustomed to percolate or ooze through his land to the land of an adjoining proprietor, and there form the source of a spring or rivulet, any damage thereby occasioned to such adjoining proprietor is damnum absque injuria; (2) the act, to-wit, the use of his own property, being lawful in itself, the motive with which the act was done is, a matter of indifference.

[751]*751The question ivas left open in that case, whether it would have made any difference in law if the “hole” had been dug from motives of unmixed malice, and was designed for no purpose of either ornament or use.

A large number of cases are to be found, and some of them are cited for appellee, in which it was held that an owner of an adjoining tract of land by digging thereon cannot divert the water from his neighbor’s spring or well, if the digging is done with malice, or with the intent to deprive his neighbor of the water, but they have no application to this case, as it is neither alleged nor proved that the acts of the appellant were done either maliciously or with intent only to deprive appellee of the flow of water to its spring.

The opinion in Frazier v. Brown, supra, says: “In considering the relative rights and obligations of owners of adjoining lands in respect to water passing from the lands of one to those of the other, the subject naturally divides itself into four branches of enquiry, and this on account of the four different inodes in which water may, and sometimes does, pass from one tract to another.”

“1. In respect to surface streams, which flow in a permanent, distinct, and well-defined channel from the lands of one owner to those of another.
“2. In respect to surface waters*—however originating— which, without any distinct or well-defined channel, by attraction, gravitation, or otherwise, are shed and pass from the lauds of one proprietor to those of another.”
“3. Subterranean streams which flow in a permanent, distinct, and well-defined channel from the lands of one to those of another proprietor.

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Bluebook (online)
40 S.E. 27, 99 Va. 747, 1901 Va. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-black-rock-springs-improvement-co-va-1901.