Stanton v. Trustees of St. Joseph's College

254 A.2d 597, 1969 Me. LEXIS 281
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJune 27, 1969
StatusPublished

This text of 254 A.2d 597 (Stanton v. Trustees of St. Joseph's College) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stanton v. Trustees of St. Joseph's College, 254 A.2d 597, 1969 Me. LEXIS 281 (Me. 1969).

Opinion

WILLIAMSON, Chief Justice.

This is an appeal from the granting of a summary judgment for the plaintiff riparian land owners, with a permanent injunction against the discharge by the defendants of treated effluent or other material emanating from St. Joseph’s College as now located into Wescott Brook, a non-navigable stream.

The Court found no genuine issues as to material facts and that the plaintiffs were entitled to prevail as a matter of law. M. R.C.P., Rule 56. We affirm.

The Court in its opinion said in part: “The Water Improvement Commission is without jurisdiction or legal competence to decide the private rights of these parties and the Court must now adjudicate these *598 rights without reference to any finding or determination by that body. Stanton v. Trustees of St. Joseph’s College (Me.) 233 A.2d 718 (1967).

“The following facts are revealed as undisputed by the documents at hand. St. Joseph’s College is located on a large tract of land on the shore of Sebago Lake and some distance from Wescott Brook; There is a natural land elevation between this location and Wescott Brook so that the College campus is not within the natural watershed of the brook. The defendant, faced with a most difficult problem of sewage disposal caused in part by its proximity to Sebago Lake, a public water supply, proposes and intends to build a treatment plant at the present college location and thence pump the treated effluent overland to be discharged into Wescott Brook. To this end it has acquired one lot on the shore of the brook and bounded by the thread of the stream. It has also acquired easements to permit discharge on or from the land of two riparian owners. Its own lot and the easement locations are upstream from some if not all of the plaintiffs. The intended rate of discharge is 50,000 gallons per day which would alone create a stream approximately 6 to 8 inches high and 6 to 8 inches wide. Wescott Brook is a small stream which is spring fed and maintains a constant flow. Above the springs, however, the stream bed is sometimes dry in a dry season. Although there remain factual disputes as to whether or to what extent the stream would be polluted by the addition of the treated effluent or acquatic life would be affected thereby, there can be no dispute that the constant addition of this liquid waste would to some extent change the nature of the water quality from its natural state and would alter the natural flow.”

“It is not disputed that the proposal is to make the stream serve the needs of defendant’s property on the shore of Sebago Lake, far removed from the stream itself. But the stream is not “subservient” to that land and cannot lawfully be made so. The proposed use is not for the benefit or in the service of either the land or easements acquired by the defendant along the stream. They are mere conduits and are themselves as such employed in the service of defendant’s non-riparian property. However reluctantly, the Court is compelled by stare decisis to conclude that defendant would not be ‘using the (brook) for a proper purpose and in the kind of business to which the stream was subservient.’ (First Turnpike case, below p. 45) Since defendant has no legal right to make the brook serve the needs of its non-riparian land, its intended use is unreasonable as a matter of law.”

The decision below was based squarely on Kennebunk, Kennebunkport and Wells Water District v. Me. Turnpike Authority, 145 Me. 35, 71 A.2d 520 (1950) (first Turnpike case). Our Court there held as a matter of law that the water district, a downstream riparian owner, having failed to establish a legal right to take water for sale to the public was not making for such purpose a reasonable use of the stream and that the water district therefore could not recover for damage to its nonriparian use by an upstream riparian owner. The test of reasonable use of the waters of a non-navigable stream by riparian owners for riparian purposes was thus not applicable. Lockwood Co. v. Lawrence, 77 Me. 297, 316; Stanton v. Trustees of St. Joseph’s College, supra; Opinion of Justices, 118 Me. 503, 506, 106 A. 865; 93 C.J.S. Waters §§ 9, 55.

Whether the acts of the Turnpike Authority rendered the quality of the water “so impure, viz., so turbid, that it was unfit for distribution by the plaintiff [water district] to its customers” was not material. (First Turnpike case p. 39 of 145 Me., p. 524 of 71 A.2d) See also Kennebunk et al. Water District v. Me. Turnpike, 147 Me. 149, 84 A.2d 433 (1951) (second Turnpike case).

In the first Turnpike case, the use held not protected was the diversion of water *599 for sale to the public. Here the defendants seek to use the water of the brook as a conduit or enlarged sewer to carry daily 50,000 gallons of sewage waste material or effluent originating outside the water shed on non-riparian land. The land used for discharging the effluent is intended to be used for no other purpose connected with the waters of the brook. For example, the College is not located on riparian land or the land is not used for grazing cattle, or for industrial purposes from which waste might be anticipated.

The governing principles were stated by our Court (first Turnpike case) as follows : (Pp. 45, 51 of 145 Me., p. 527 of 71 A.2d)

“Whether or not the [riparian owner] was making a reasonable use of the waters of the brook depends not only upon the use which it was actually making of the same but also * * * upon whether it was using the same for a proper purpose and in the kind of business to which the stream was subservient. Unless the [riparian owner] had the legal right, that is, the proprietary right, to use Branch Brook as a source of public water supply, its use of water therefrom for such purpose was neither a proper one nor was it a use to which the brook was subservient. Reasonableness of its use depends upon its legal right to exercise the same.”
“If the use exercised by a riparian proprietor be a riparian use, the right to exercise it was acquired as a usufructuary right growing out of and annexed to the ownership of the riparian land. If, however, as here it be a non-riparian use, the right to exercise the same must be acquired by purchase or grant from, or by the exercise of the right of eminent domain against those whose rights it is sought to restrict by the exercise of such use. Unless so acquired, the non-riparian use will not be a reasonable use against either upper or lower riparian proprietors, * *

See also second Turnpike case.

In principle, we are unable to distinguish the first Turnpike case from the case before us.

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Related

Kennebunk, Kennebunkport & Wells Water District v. Maine Turnpike Authority
84 A.2d 433 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1951)
Kennebunk, Kennebunkport & Wells Water District v. Maine Turnpike Authority
71 A.2d 520 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1950)
Stanton v. Trustees of St. Joseph's College
233 A.2d 718 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1967)
Gillis v. Chase
31 A. 18 (Supreme Court of New Hampshire, 1891)
Blanchard v. Baker
8 Me. 253 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1832)
Lockwood Co. v. Lawrence
77 Me. 297 (Supreme Judicial Court of Maine, 1885)
Stratton v. Mount Hermon Boys' School
103 N.E. 87 (Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court, 1913)
Lawrie v. Silsby
74 A. 94 (Supreme Court of Vermont, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
254 A.2d 597, 1969 Me. LEXIS 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stanton-v-trustees-of-st-josephs-college-me-1969.