8 A.2d 719 | N.J. | 1939
We are constrained to modify the challenged order by the deletion of the provision enjoining appellants from "operating" their "quarry property and business * * *, or any part or branch" thereof, "in such manner as to cause, by blasting of stone, the houses of complainants, or any of them, or any part or parts of their houses, to vibrate * * *."
At the outset, it would seem that an injunction against any and all vibration, irrespective of ensuing damage to respondents, plainly goes beyond fair protective needs, and constitutes an invasion of appellants' property rights. Indeed, it would prevent the operation of the quarry, for it is inconceivable that this business could be prosecuted without the transmission at times of some degree of vibratory force to adjacent lands. *345
But however this may be, an interlocutory restraint so sweeping, even though in some cases it may reasonably be deemed necessary to protect against actual injury, should not issue unless from the pressure of an urgent necessity, i.e., to prevent pendente lite threatened injury of an irreparable character; and, where the material allegations of fact essential to create an equity in complainants' favor are met by a full, explicit and circumstantial denial under oath, such injunctive process is awarded only in exceptional cases. Citizens' CoachCo. v. Camden Horse Railroad Co.,
The essential function of the preliminary injunction is to avert such threatened irreparable mischief until an opportunity is afforded for a full and deliberate investigation of the case in the ordained mode. Attorney-General v. City of Paterson,
"There is no power, the exercise of which is more delicate, which requires greater caution, deliberation and sound discretion, and which is more dangerous in a doubtful case, than the issuing of an injunction."
We do not deem applicable the principle invoked by the learned vice-chancellor that the interlocutory injunction may issue for the "protection of one's dwelling-house against nuisances which render it uncomfortable, * * * even when the existence of the nuisance is disputed" — citing Cronin v. Bloemecke,
And there are other considerations leading to the same result:
Appellants' business has been long established, and represents a large capital investment. It was founded in 1905, when the surrounding area was wooded land, wholly devoid of residential uses. The quarry has since been continuously operated, without complaint from adjacent owners until recent years. Since 1937, it has been operated under successive *347 permits issued by the village of South Orange pursuant to an ordinance regulating blasting within the municipal confines; and there has been no complaint charging a violation of the ordinance, nor was any proceeding instituted to revoke the operating permit. The defendant operators are now under contract to furnish large quantities of quarried stone to various governmental agencies and to private industry.
Quite conceivably, this restraint would work irreparable injury to appellants; and while this is a circumstance that, in and of itself, constitutes no absolute bar to relief, it has pertinency as regards the balancing of equities, i.e., whether greater inconvenience and loss will result to complainants or defendants in the granting or withholding of preliminary relief. CompareAldrich v. Union Bag and Paper Co.,
Moreover, with knowledge of the existence of the quarry in an active state, complainants purchased their respective homes many years before the filing of their bill of complaint. The development of the surrounding area for residential purposes began in the early 1920's; and, while the growth was rapid, the adjacent dwellers were not moved to remedial action until the filing of the bill of complaint herein, in December, 1938. While this use of the neighboring lands for residential purposes, in the face of the existing quarry, did not operate to deprive respondents of the right to the injunctive process against acts destructive of their property rights, the long delay serves to outweigh the present claim of threatened irreparable loss.Tichenor v. Wilson,
There is no occasion to determine the propriety of the restraint against blasting "in such manner as to cause injury *348 or damage of any kind to the houses of complainants." We do not read appellants' argument as challenging this provision. It suffices to say that it merely relates to the duty owing under the law by the operators of the quarry to their neighbors.
The order is accordingly modified, and, as so modified, affirmed; and the cause is remanded for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
For modification — THE CHIEF-JUSTICE, PARKER, CASE, BODINE, DONGES, HEHER, PERSKIE, PORTER, HETFIELD, DEAR, WELLS, WOLFSKEIL, RAFFERTY, HAGUE, JJ. 14. *349