69 N.Y.S. 193 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1901
The plaintiffs are the owners of the fee of certain real estate, embracing a portion of the bed of the Bronx river below the village of White Plains. The defendant, acting under the provisions of chapter 609 of the'Laws of 1887, and chapter 312 of the Laws of 1888, has constructed a permanent system of sewers, making use of the Powers method of precipitation. The disposal works have been constructed on the west bank of the Bronx river, about one mile below the village of White Plains, and about the same distance above the bridge which crosses the Bronx river at Fisher street in Hartsdale. The statute under which this work was undertaken provided for taking private property under the power of eminent domain, and a strip of ground was taken, by condemnation and otherwise, about 20 feet wide, extending from the disposal works to a point some 3,000 feet distant, ■ terminating at a point on the west bank of the river. A pipe has béen laid in this strip.of ground, the defendant acquiring merely an easement for this purpose, and the effluent of the disposal works is conducted through this pipe to the Bronx river, where it is mingled with the waters of that stream. It is not suggested that the defendant acquired any rights in the Bronx river; its entire claim to any right to deposit its effluent in the stream being based apparently upon an alleged estoppel, one of the original plaintiffs having been a party to some part of the condemnation proceedings by which the defendant secured the right of way to the banks of the stream. This plaintiff has since died and his daughter has been regularly substituted, but the question does not appear to have been regarded as one of any consequence and it 'may be dropped from further consideration, the defendant apparently resting upon its general right to avail itself of the stream to carry off the effluent, regardless of the rights of riparian owners below. The plaintiffs allege that this effluent is being
When this cause came on for trial the defendant moved for an adjournment on the ground that one of the plaintiffs, Mr. Hitchcock, had made a general assignment, and asked a sufficient time in which to bring in the plaintiffs’ assignee as party defendant, but this motion was denied u-pon the assurance of plaintiffs’ counsel that no claim for money damages would be insisted upon, thle relief desired being equitable.
“ Fi/rst. That the evidence in this case does not prove that the discharge of the effluent from the defendant’s works has produced sickness, and that the testimony, as to its probable future effect, is wholly inconclusive.
“ Second. That such discharge does produce at times a foul and offensive odor over the lands of the plaintiffs.
“ Third. That the waters of the Bronx river are made unfit for domestic and agricultural uses by other pollutions before they receive the effluent from the defendant’s works; that such effluent adds to the discolorment and pollution of the waters of the stream.
“ Fourth. That plaintiffs have an adequate remedy at law for the damage which it is claimed "they have suffered. A judgment in favor of the defendant in accordance with this decision will be signed.”
The plaintiffs duly excepted to the decision, and upon this appeal urge that they are entitled to a mandatory in junction, restraining the defendant from maintaining this nuisance, which is alleged to be “ in accordance with law.” "While it may be that the “ plaintiffs have an adequate remedy at law for the damage which it is claimed they have suffered ” up to the present time, we are forced to conclude, from the decision of the court and the attitude of the defendant, that the grievance complained of is a continuing nuisance, and that it is the duty of a court of equity to grant relief. The court finds a state of facts constituting a nuisance (High Inj. [2d ed.] §§ 772-774), and the defendant asserts a right to continue to discharge the effluent upon the premises of the plaintiffs because the village of White Plains is “ dependent upon the sewerage system being kept, maintained and used as it has been and is now being used in accordance with law.” The court finds “ that such discharge does produce at times a foul and offensive odor over the lands of the plaintiffs,” and “ that such effluent adds to the discolorment and pollution of the waters of the stream,” and the courts have held that to warrant - an injunction against odors and gases from an offensive business it is not necessary that the odors should be noxious, and if they are so offensive and dis
The, suggestion of the respondent, acted upon by the court below, that “ the waters of the Bronx river are made unfit for domestic and agricultural uses by other pollutions before they receive the effluent from the defendant’s works,” has no bearing upon the case when considered in connection with the further finding that “ such effluent adds to the discolorment and pollution of the waters of the stream,” and is fully met by the Strobel case, where the court quotes the rule that “ ‘ Where there is a large number of persons mining on a small stream, if each should deteriorate the water a little, although the injury from the act of one might be small, the combined result of the acts of all might render the water utterly unfit for further use; and if each could successfully defend an action on the ground that his act alone did not materially affect the water, the prior appropriator might be deprived of its use and at the same time be without a remedy.’” (P. 322; see authorities cited.) The fact is that the defendant is polluting this stream ; is using it in a manner inconsistent with the rights of the plaintiffs as lower riparian owners, and its offense is none the less because others may be contributing to the same general result; this, instead of preventing relief, may require •it. (Strobel Case, supra.)
In the recent case of Amsterdam Knitting Co. v. Dean (162 N. Y. 278) it was alleged that the defendants had obstructed the stream on which the- plaintiff had lower riparian rights, and, although it was found that the damages sustained by the plaintiff by reason of the áct of the defendants were merely nominal, a judgment was entered restraining the defendants from continuing the obstruction, and this judgment was sustained on appeal, the court holding that it is well settled that where the act complained of is such that, by its repetition or continuance, it may become the foundation or evidence of an adverse right, a court of equity will interpose by injunction, though no actual damage is shown or found. (See, also, New York Rubber Co. v. Rothery, 132 N. Y. 293, 296; Mann v. Willey, 51 App. Div. 169.)
This case, it seems to hs, comes within the general rule which gives to a person injured by the pollution of air or water, to the use of which in its natural condition he is entitled, an action against the party, whether it be a natural person or a corporation who causes that pollution (Chapman v. City of Rochester, 110 N. Y. 273, 277; Const, art. 8, § 3), and, while the power of the court should not be exerted oppressively, it should yet be put in motion so far as is necessary to preserve the rights of these plaintiffs.- The defendant, like a natural person, is within-the reason of the rule that every man must so use his own property as not to injure that of his neighbor, and the fact that it has a large investment and that it is conducting itself lawfully upon its own premises does not change the rule nor permit him to permanently prevent a material portion of the water of a natural stream from flowing over the land of a lower riparian owner or to so pollute the rest of the stream as to render it unfit for ordinary use. (Strobel v. Kerr Salt Co., supra.)
The judgment should be reversed and a new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.
All concurred.
. Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.