78 N.Y.S. 210 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1902
On or about the 10th of September, 1895, the Commissioners of Fisheries, Game and Forest of the State of Hew York, as they were lawfully authorized to do, duly leased by instrument dated on that day to Smith Watts for the term of fifteen years from said date, a tract of land consisting of six and four-tenths acres, known as lot Ho. 226, in Jamaica Bay and under the waters thereof, the same being in water adjacent to territory formerly known as the town of Flatlands, it being expressly understood and provided in said lease that the same was given and accepted on the condition as required by law, that the said land» should be used for shell fish cultivation and for no other purpose.
On or about the 7th day of February, 1898, Smith Watts, the lessee in said lease named, duly assigned the same to plaintiff, who-has ever since been and now is the lawful owner thereof and in possession of said premises and who was at the time of said assignment and has ever since been a resident of the State of Hew York.
The sewer for the purpose of restraining the operation of which this action is brought, was constructed from that portion of the city of Hew York formerly known as the town of Flatbush, in conformity with chapter 161 of the Laws of 1889, of the State of Hew York, which act purported to authorize said commissioners to devise and make a plan for building one or more trunk sewers to take and discharge the sewage matter of said town of Flatbush into the water aforesaid.
The said act did not give or purport to give said commissioners or said town of Flatbush the right to build or maintain, any sewer in other than a lawful manner or to discharge the same at such a point or in such a manner as to- injure, appropriate, or interfere
The map or plan for the construction of said sewer was duly prepared and filed by said commissioners and said sewer, constructed in accordance with said plan, was ready for use either in the fall of 1892 or the winter of 1893. Subsequently to the passage of said act and pursuant to the provisions of chapter 356 of the Laws of 1894, the town of Flatbush ceased to he a separate municipal corporation and one of the political divisions of the county of Kings, and became annexed, merged in and made part of the city of Brooklyn, and the city of Brooklyn including the said town as aforesaid, pursuant to provisions of chapter 378 of the Laws of 1897, ceased to be a separate municipal corporation! and one of the political divisions of the county of Kings, and became annexed to, merged in and made a part of the city of Flew York, and embraces that portion of said county of Kings in which said oyster bed is located.
At the time of the assignment of said lease to plaintiff, and subsequently thereto, until about the month of June, 1899, the waters of Jamaica bay at the point at which the land covered by said lease was located were uncontaminated and unpolluted by any discharge from said sewer. Said land and the waters covering the same were in every respect adapted to oyster culture. On or about the 16th day of May, 1898, plaintiff having entered into the possession of said land proceeded to plant 1,300 bushels of seed oysters thereon. This seed ran about 1,600 to the bushel, and in the ordinary course of nature and except for the pollution of said water by the operation of said sewer, would have increased in the succeeding eighteen months eight-fold, so that in the ordinary course of oyster culture the said' crop would have been matured and ready for harvest in the spring of 1900, and at the ratio named would have amounted in the aggregate to about 10,400 bushels.
Soon after the said sewer had been put in operation in the spring of 1893, the said sewer broke down at a point some distance from its mouth in such a way that subsequently sewage therefrom was not discharged into the waters so that the same flowed over plaintiff’s lands but was discharged on the flats at a considerable distance from the mouth of the sewer. In June, 1899, the sewer was repaired in such a way that subsequently the sew
'“That the plaintiff is entitled to an injunction restraining the city of ¡New York from continuing the operation of said sewer in such manner as to prevent the use of the land for the purpose for which it was leased and is now held by the plaintiff, but in view of the fact that the said city is endeavoring to remove or obviate the objections to the sewer, the injunction will be suspended until the 1st day of ¡November, 1903, with leave to defendant to then move for an extension of time on satisfactory proof that the condition of the city requires a longer time for completion of the sewer project; during such extension, if granted, the damages for usable value of the said ground shall continue at \_a proportionate rate stipulated, namely, $500.
That the plaintiff is entitled to a judgment for damages for a loss of crop amounting to $8,176 and damages to the usable value
Judgment accordingly.