Texas Gulf Sulphur Co. v. State

16 S.W.2d 408, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 467
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 12, 1929
DocketNo. 9327.
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 16 S.W.2d 408 (Texas Gulf Sulphur Co. v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Texas Gulf Sulphur Co. v. State, 16 S.W.2d 408, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 467 (Tex. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

GRAVES, J.

This appeal proceeds from a temporary injunction, issued on the application of the state by the district court of Wharton county, presumably pursuant to articles 4444, 7467, 7577, 5351, 7572, 4026, R. C. S. of 1925, and articles 697, 698, Penal Code, effective until its further order, and enjoining appellant, its agent and representatives, “in all things as prayed for in plaintiffs petition, and especially from permitting the waters emanating and escaping from the McCarson well No. 3 and the Banker No. 12, from flowing to or in the San Bernard River. As to all defendants other than said Texas Gulf Sulphur Company, their agents and representatives, the prayer for injunction is denied. It is further ordered, by agreement of the plaintiff and the defendant Texas Gulf Sulphur Company, that this injunction Shall not apply as to any waters flowing or emanating from the said wells that might be conducted through the salt water disposal system of the Lone Star Salt Water Company, or the Texas Gulf Sulphur Company, and deposited in the San Bernard river at or below Black’s Ferry in Brazoria county.”

The wells affected were on the -Boling sulphur dome in Wharton county. The other defendants than appellant, a private corporation, were the Union Sulphur Company, a like corporation, and two individual persons. Making no complaint at the denial of the writ as to these persons, appellant does vigorously assail both its issuance against itself and the nonissuance thereof against the Union Sulphur Company, upon the contentions:

(1) That no case for the visitation of such restraining power was made out against it under either the pleadings or proof.

(2) That'the state’s petition for the order, together with the undisputed evidence received at the hearing, showed that the Union Sulphur Company alone, and not appellant, was the offender, in that it pumped hot water under pressure into nearby portions of the sulphur dome, and thereby, having made no provision for its disposition as a waste product, exclusively caused the polluted water complained of to rise to the earth’s surface inside as well as outside of appellant’s two wells, thence to flow into the San Bernard river.

Neither contention, we think, in the state of the record, can be sustained; as indicated in the beginning, this order enjoined appellant from the violation of specific statutory provisions reflected in the cited articles, particularly in R. S. art. 4444, which makes it unlawful for “any person, firm or corporation * ⅜ * to pollute any water course or other public body of water, by throwing, casting or depositing, or' causing to be thrown, east, or deposited any crude petroleum, oil or other like substance therein,” etc., and provides for injunctive relief; the precise issue, therefore, was whether or not the appellant for its part was both charged with and shown to have done this particular malum prohibitum. It clearly was in each respect; the plaintiff’s petition, after formal and other averments to the effect that the San Bernard was a water course and public body of water, within the purview of the statutes referred to, further alleged:

“4. That on or about the 3d day of November, A. D. 1928, the defendant Union Sulphur Company was engaged in the business of mining sulphur in Wharton county, and especially upon eighty (80) acres, more or less, in what is known as the McCarson tract in *410 block 22 of the Missouri Rand Company subdivision of the Stephen F. Austin 3⅛ leagues.
“5. That in such mining, on or about the date* above set out, the said defendants, and especially Union Sulphur Company, began to force into the earth in the land above described, through iron pipes, great quantities of hot water and steam, and that ever since said date said defendant has continued so to force hot water and steam into the earth at said point.
“G. That by reason of said acts of said defendant Union Sulphur Company the waters lying beneath the surface of the earth under said land and under various tracts of land nearby, and especially lying under, blocks 13, 22, and 25 of the said Missouri Rand Company subdivision, and the waters so forced into the earth in the form of hot water and steam, by said defendant Union Sulphur Company, have risen to the surface of the earth, flowing thence, as they are now flowing, into the San Bernard river, where the same lies within Wharton county.
“7. That said waters have flowed, and are now flowing, through two artificially constructed welJs, known and designated as Mc-Carson No. 3, on block 22, Missouri Rand Company subdivision of the Stephen F. Austin 3⅛ leagues, and Banker No. 12, on block 13, of the Missouri1 Rand Company subdivision, Stephen F. Austin 3⅛ leagues.
“8. Plaintiffs further allege that the openings through which said waters are escaping from the surface of the earth;' and whence they are precipitated into the waters of the San Bernard river, are located upon land owned, leased, or controlled by defendant Texas Gulf Sulphur Company, and that said openings were made and constructed by said defendant Texas Gulf Sulphur Company.
“9. Plaintiffs further allege that the waters so escaping from the surface of the earth have been and now are conducted to the San Bernard river, or to the land immediately adjacent thereto, and from whence they flow by gravity into the San Bernard rivér by ditches artificially constructed by said defendant Gulf Sulphur Company.
“10. That the flowing of these waters into the San Bernard river is not a natural flow, but that the flow of said waters-is artificially caused by the various acts of the named defendants, which acts are above described and set out.
“11. That said waters so escaping and flowing into the San Bernard river are unclean, being composed of and containing numerous chemicals and other solutions dangerous and detrimental to marine life; that they contain free sulphur chloride, sodium chloride, sul-phuric acid, and other minerals, and are poisonous to fish life, some of said fish life having been destroyed by said waters since the 3d day of November, A. D. 1928, and that, by the precipitation of said waters into said river, if continued, all fish in said -stream will be killed and destroyed, and also rendered inedible, and the public rights off fishing and bathing in said waters will be measurably interfered with, and that the precipitation of said waters into said stream thus constitutes a public nuisance, against which the public, at the' suit of the state, is entitled to protection.
“12. That said waters, being composed of and containing the chemicals and solutions above set out, are unfit for drinking by live stock, and that, by reason of the escape of said waters into said stream, said stream is rendered useless to the riparian owners of land in Wharton county, and that the flowing of. said waters into said stream constitutes, therefore, a public nuisance, against which the .public at the suit of the state is entitled to protection.
“13.

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Bluebook (online)
16 S.W.2d 408, 1929 Tex. App. LEXIS 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/texas-gulf-sulphur-co-v-state-texapp-1929.