Stevens v. Spring Valley Water Works & Supply Co.

42 Misc. 2d 86, 247 N.Y.S.2d 503, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1998
CourtAppellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York
DecidedMarch 4, 1964
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 42 Misc. 2d 86 (Stevens v. Spring Valley Water Works & Supply Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Terms of the Supreme Court of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stevens v. Spring Valley Water Works & Supply Co., 42 Misc. 2d 86, 247 N.Y.S.2d 503, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1998 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1964).

Opinion

Nicholas Pette, J.

This action was brought to recover $6,000 damages to plaintiffs’ real property, alleged to have been caused [88]*88by defendant’s interference with the source of a stream of water which for many years flowed through plaintiffs’ land. It is alleged in plaintiffs’ complaint that defendant caused the stream to dry up by installing a powerful pump in a well on its property and connecting this well with its distribution system. Defendant’s answer denies the allegation and pleads a separate defense that it is a public utility, that its authorization by the State to include this well in its distribution system was conditioned upon its stopping an existing overflow, and that in compliance with "this directive which was legally binding upon it, it cut off the surface discharge from its well.

Since 1924 plaintiffs have owned 2.13 acres of land at the northwest corner of Viola Road and Forshay Road in the Town of Ramapo, improved with a 7-room frame house in which they live, and a large barn. The plot has a frontage of about 185 feet on Viola Road and about 500 feet on Forshay Road. A watercourse originating on defendant’s land runs north, crosses under Viola Road in a culvert, then enters plaintiffs’ land and continues through,the full length of plaintiffs’ property. The distance from defendant’.s well to the southerly line of plaintiffs’ property was estimated variously by witnesses testifying at the trial to be from 1,000 feet to 1,400 feet.

Plaintiff Edward Stevens testified that about 50 feet north of defendant’s well there is a small pond which contains a spring; north of the pond there is a swamp extending several hundred feet, and throughout this swamp there are, or used to be, many small springs. The brook flowed from the pond, through the swamp, then north to Viola Road. The overflow from the pond and water from the springs in the swamp fed the brook. He saiid that in 1924 this brook on his property was a constantly flowing stream of fresh, clean water, 4 to 5 feet wide and 4 to 6 inches deep. He remembered observing this stream flowing in the same way as early as 1910, and one of his witnesses testified that it was flowing there in the same way in 1892. The stream dried up in 1959, after defendant had connected its well with its distribution system, and it has remained dry since, except that during the Spring months and after heavy rains it carries away some surface runoff.

The land on which defendant’s well is situated belonged at one time to Rocklalnd County. The county had the well drilled in 1939 to supply, water to the County Welfare Home, then situated on the opposite side of the road now known as College Road. Defendant’s witnesses testified that this well is 232 feet deep and that before it was connected to defendant’s distribution system there was a constant overflow from it, estimated by [89]*89one of defendant’s engineers to be about 80 gallons per minute. This overflow ran into the pond, and thence into the brook, until it was cut off by defendant in 1959.

After running tests in 1956 with temporary equipment, defendant purchased the well and 10 acres of surrounding land from the county in 1957. It then ‘ ‘ rehabilitated ’ ’ the well in 1959. Defendant’s chief engineer testified that the permanent pump now in use there is a centrifugal multistage pump driven by a 75-horsepower motor. This witness also testified that in his opinion the overflow from the well had been the primary source of the water in the brook. In answer to questions by the court as to the source of the water in the brook before the well was . drilled in 1939, he said that it could only have been surface runoff.

A neighbor called as a witness by the plaintiffs testified that he had lived in this vicinity since 1941, and had a well on his property, about 50 feet deep, and situated approximately 1,000 feet away from defendant’s well. He said that the water level in his well had fallen so much after defendant started pumping from its well in 1959, that he could no longer use his well. Records of measurements of water in his well, and of other observations made by this witness, were received in evidence subject to connection.

A professional sanitary engineer testified as an expert on behalf of plaintiffs that he had examined the stream and the surrounding area in May, 1962 and that at that time the stream was 4 feet wide and one-half inch deep where it flowed under Viola Road. He explained how streams are formed from the precipitation which falls on a certain area called a ‘£ catchment area”. Some of this water drains into the stream as surface runoff, and some of it, after percolating into the ground and reaching the water table therein, eventually seeps out and emerges as springs at a place where the water table intersects the surface of the ground. It is this ground water that feeds a stream in dry weather. This witness testified also that the water level in the neighbor’s well was of significance as far as the stream was concerned, that it reflected the operation of defendant’s well. In answer to a hypothetical question embodying the facts already testified to, he said it was his opinion that the operation of defendant’s well had caused the stream to dry up.

A real estate broker testified on behalf of plaintiffs that he had inspected their property on May 21, 1962 and again on October 7,1962 and on both occasions had observed the dried-up watercourse running through it. He said that this property is [90]*90situated in an area of steadily rising values, one that is changing from farm and orchard lands to a community of single-family homes; that the area is zoned for private dwellings; and that in his opinion the value of plaintiffs’ land and buildings with the flowing stream would be $34,440, and without it $28,440; that the value of the land alone, with the stream, would be $12,390, and without it $6,390; that although plaintiffs had made no use of the stream in 1959 before it dried up, a stream of clean water 4 feet wide and 6 inches deep would add $6,000 to the value of the land.

Defendant contended on the trial that there are two water tables in the ground in the vicinity of its well, one above an impervious layer called an “ overburden ”, and another underneath this impervious layer; that no water from the lower water table ever fed the stream, and that the pumping of water from its deep well could not possibly have had any effect on the water table above the impervious layer. Engineers employed by defendant testified that defendant’s well is a ££ rock well” consisting of a steel pipe 10 inches in diameter sunk through the ££ overburden ” to bedrock and then drilled the rest of the way through the rock. Its total depth is 232 feet, but these witnesses did not know the depth or composition of the overburden inasmuch as defendant had not drilled the well and did not have access to the driller’s log. Although these witnesses admitted that pumping from defendant’s well would cause a £ £ zone of depression ’ ’ and a drop down of the water table in the ground below the overburden, they said this pumping could not have affected the flow of water into the stream. Defendant’s chief engineer did ¡admit, however, that the operation of defendant’s well might have had some effect on the neighbor’s well.

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Related

Stevens v. Spring Valley Water Works & Supply Co.
22 A.D.2d 830 (Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of New York, 1964)

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Bluebook (online)
42 Misc. 2d 86, 247 N.Y.S.2d 503, 1964 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1998, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stevens-v-spring-valley-water-works-supply-co-nyappterm-1964.