Court Opinion

ID: 8021319
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-09-09 02:25:51.419611+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:36:40.175338
License: Public Domain

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY
delivered the opinion of the court.
In 1897 the city of Miles City installed a sewer system for the purpose of carrying off the sewage of the city. The outlet of the main sewer was then, and ever since has been, in a slough, which is in fact an arm or branch of the Yellowstone river. At the time of the installation of the sewer system, and for a long time thereafter, water flowed through this slough during most of the time in quantities sufficient to carry this sewage from the outlet off into the main channel of the Yellowstone river; but during the last few years the head or intake of this slough has become so far obstructed that only during high-water seasons is there sufficient water flowing through the slough to carry off the sewage, and for considerable periods of *409time this sewage accumulates in the slough near the outlet of the sewer, and during such periods is a constant menace to the health of the inhabitants living near such outlet. To obviate the difficulty Miles City in 1908 prepared to extend the main sewer from its present outfall in the slough on some distance across an island, with the purpose of there discharging the sewage directly into the Yellowstone river, without having purified the sewage in any manner. Acting upon information furnished it, the state board of health called a meeting of the board to consider the matter, and notified the city, which was represented at such meeting by its attorney. At that meeting there does not appear to have been any testimony taken, but the board made an order which recites the calling of the meeting, the app'earanee of the city by its attorney, and then proceeds: “And it appearing that said river is used as a source of water supply for domestic use by persons residing along said river below said Miles City, and within four days of the natural flowage of the waters of said river, * * * and the said board being fully advised in the premises, and having fully considered the matter, finds and determines that such discharge of said sewage into the Yellowstone river will produce such an unsanitary condition, and be such a pollution of the waters of said stream, as to be dangerous to public health, and believing that the same is contrary to law, wherefore, it is by the state board of health of the state of Montana here ordered that the extension of the outlet of the sewer system of Miles City, Montana, be, and the same is hereby, prohibited. And it is further ordered and directed that the said Miles City, at as early a date as practicable, dispose of the sewage of said city in some sanitary manner, acceptable to the said state board of health.” From that order of the board the city appealed to the district court. In perfecting its appeal the city, through its attorney, prepared a statement of facts, and added thereto the grounds upon which the city objected to the order. This statement has since been treated substantially as an agreed statement of facts. In the district court there was not any evidence produced, but counsel for the respective parties stipulated that the slough into *410which the present sewer system discharges is a branch or part of the Yellowstone river, and that the only effect of thé proposed change would be to alter the point of discharge of the sewer system. Upon this stipulation having been made,' the district court entered judgment annulling the order of the board of health, and from that judgment the board has appealed to this court. Since the decision of the district court does not indicate the ground of the court’s ruling, the specifications contained in the city’s statement on appeal to the district court are presented here; and, while they are six in number, they really present but two .principal contentions.
1. It is said that the state board did not hear testimony to determine whether the sewage discharged into the Yellowstone river would pollute the waters of the river. Assuming this to be true, it is not a valid objection to the order made by the board. Section 8, Chapter 177, p. 477, Laws 1907 (section 1566, Revised Codes), authorizes the board to make, or cause to be made, a thorough investigation in a ease of this character; and, if in the judgment of the board the public health so requires, the board may make such an order as the one now under review. This section does not contemplate a public trial, but rather an ex parte investigation, and the legislature, being the repository of the police power of the state, could designate the state board of health as its agent, and prescribe the manner in which such police power should be exercised. As a precaution, however, against any injustice, section 10 of the Act (section 1568, Revised Codes) provides that any party aggrieved by the order may appeal to the district court. If the board, then, informed itself by any means, the fact that testimony was not taken is altogether immaterial. The order recites that the board was fully advised in the premises, and found that the sewage discharged into the river would pollute the water to such an extent as to produce an unsanitary condition—one dangerous to the public health.
Counsel for the city misapprehend the scope of this statute. The prohibition is against the pollution of the waters of a stream which is the source of water supply. Assuming for the pur*411poses of this appeal, as counsel did upon the oral argument, that the reference in the order of the board is to the city of Glendive particularly, and assuming, further, that the intake of the Glendive water supply is many miles below the outfall of the Miles City sewer, the order of the board, on its face, is still justified; for the prohibition is not directed against polluting the waters of a river at such intake alone, but applies equally against polluting them at such outfall. The prohibition is against polluting the waters at any place within the state, and it is therefore wholly immaterial that the putrescible constituents of the sewage are not carried to the intake of the Glendive water supply, if such be the fact. The state, in the valid exercise of its police power, has said by this statute that hereafter no polluting sewage and no human excrement shall be discharged into any stream which is the source of water supply for a city or town, until such deleterious matter is rendered harmless by some means of sewage purification acceptable' to the state board of health. In City of Durham v. Eno Cotton Mills, 141 N. C. 615, 54 S. E. 453, 7 L. R. A., n. s., 321, the court had under consideration a similar statute, and reached the same conclusion which we have indicated above. In this case there is also considered at great length the general subject of police regulations, sustaining the views hereinafter set forth.
2. It is further contended that the city of Miles City has acquired by prescription the right to discharge its sewage into the Yellowstone river. The seriousness with which counsel for the city have urged this impels us to give it attention. The cases cited in their brief, however, do not sustain them. Those cases refer to rights acquired as against private individuals; but when the city asserts that it has acquired such prescriptive right as against the state, and that it is a right of such character as that against it the police power of the state cannot be invoked, it assumes an altogether unique position. In the first place, a city is but one of the governmental agencies of the state, and as such agent it could not acquire the right by prescription; for the elements of adverseness, exclusiveness, and claim of -right are absent during the entire period of the *412city’s use of the river, and those elements are essential to the establishment of a right by prescription. (Talbott v. Butte City Water Co., 29 Mont. 17, 73 Pac. 1111.) Furthermore, the right which the state is attempting to assert through the agency of the state board of health is a public right—a right to protect the health of the people of the state—and as against such public right prescription does not run. (Commonwealth v. Moorehead, 118 Pa. 344, 4 Am. St. Rep. 599, 12 Atl. 424; 22 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, 2d ed., 1190.) There is yet another reason why the city cannot acquire such a right by prescription as that against it the state may not invoke its police power. It is now generally conceded that the police power is such a power, inherent in the state for the protection of the public, that' the state may not waive or devest itself of the power to exercise it. (In re O’Brien, 29 Mont. 530, 75 Pac. 196; 8 Current Law, 36; Portland v. Cook, 48 Or. 550, 87 Pac. 772, 9 L. R. A., n. s., 733; 1 Abbott on Municipal Corporations, 209.) It would seem to follow, then, as a matter of course, that notwithstanding the length of time the city has enjoyed the privilege of discharging its sewage into the river, the state may, in the interest of the public health and safety, regulate such use, or, if necessary, prevent the continuance -of it. Indeed, if the state had consented to the use of the Yellowstone river by Miles City for the purpose of discharging its sewage therein, such consent would not have amounted to more than a license, which the state might revoke whenever public interests require it. (Portland v. Cook, above.)
But if it was possible for the city to have acquired the right which it asserts, that fact of itself would not preclude the state from enforcing any reasonable police regulations, even though such regulations called for an abandonment of the right asserted in the manner asserted; for all property is held subject to the right of the state to so regulate and control its use as to secure the general safety and public welfare. (City of Helena v. Kent, 32 Mont. 279, 80 Pac. 258; Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, p. 830.) And in the proper exercise of this police power one may even be restrained from doing a thing in itself lawful and *413right (City of Butte v. Paltrovich, 30 Mont. 18, 104 Am. St. Rep. 698, 75 Pac. 521), or may have his property destroyed, even though he himself is not at fault (Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, p. 878). In fact the reason for the exercise of this power finds expression in the two maxims, “Sic utere tuo al alienum non laedas,” and “Solus populi suprema lex.”
The statute does not deprive Miles City of any property right. It does not forbid the city using the Yellowstone river for the purpose of discharging its sewage, provided the sewage has been subjected to some practical means of purification. The statute looks only to a proper regulation of the use asserted, and not to a denial of the use; and the mere fact that the city was making use of the river for discharging raw sewage into it at the time this statute was enacted, which modifies such use, is not any valid objection 'to the statute. (Cooley’s Constitutional Limitations, 7th ed., Chap. 16; Health Department v. Rector, 145 N. Y. 32, 45 Am. St. Rep. 579, 39 N. E. 833, 27 L. R. A. 710.)
3. Upon oral argument it was suggested that the state board attempted to proceed under Chapter 110, page 265, Laws 1907 (sections 1474-1511, Revised Codes), but there is not anything before us to bear out the suggestion. Chapter 110 is the general law creating the state board of health, and defining its powers and duties. The suggestion made is not warranted, for the statement on appeal, prepared by the city attorney, alleges that the board was proceeding under Chapter 177, which is an Act to prevent the pollution of public water supplies.
4. Finally, it is suggested that, since the state board did not produce any evidence before the district court in support of its order, the judgment of the district court must be sustained. It appears that the cause was not set down for trial, or, at least, it was not deemed necessary to take any evidence. Just what view the trial court entertained as to the burden of proof, if that question was suggested, we are not able to know; but, since the statute is couched in prohibitive terms, and, in addition thereto, provides that pending the appeal to the district court the order of the board shall continue in force, unless otherwise *414ordered by tbe board, the conclusion would seem irresistible that the city in this instance had the burden of showing that the order was not justified. This it might have done by showing (a) that the sewage does not contain any human excrement, and that without such excrement it is not of such character and quantity as to pollute the waters of Yellowstone river; or (b) that the sewage had been rendered harmless by being subjected to some practical method of sewage purification satisfactory to the state board of health, or which ought to have been satisfactory to such board. In the absence of a showing of either of these facts the court could not annul the order, unless upon its face the order bore evidence of its own invalidity, which the one now under review does not.
The judgment is reversed, and the cause is remanded to the district court, with directions to proceed to a hearing with the cause in conformity with the views herein expressed.

Reversed and remanded.

Mr. Chief Justice Brantly and Mr. Justice Smith concur.