97 Misc. 273 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1916
The action is for an injunction and for damages. Plaintiff owns a farm consisting of 196 acres in the town of DeKalh, 'St. Lawrence county, N. ¥., upon which he maintains about forty-five head of cattle and four or five horses. He bought it March 16, 1905. The defendant company was incorporated in 1906. Its railroad was built by a predecessor a few years before plaintiff bought, but was not under operation at that time. The road runs through the farm for a distance of twelve hundred feet on an embankment, from twelve to fourteen feet high, made of rock, sand and pyrites tailings. A ditch is at the foot of the embankment and carries surface water northerly for a distance and thence to the westerly side by a conduit running through it. The tailings are from a pyrites mill, located about a mile southerly from the farm. They come from the metal in the separation of the ore from the rock. They contain iron and sulphur. The iron comes out in oxidized form and looks rusty. The sulphur goes to make sulphuric acid, which dissolves in solution. The seepings contain aluminum and sulphate of iron, forming an aluminum sulphate compound. When thrown and left on the ground, oxidation of the air, together with rain and moisture, will dissolve the ingredients and carry them into the ground. Water contains alkaline properties, bicarbonate of soda, calcium and magnesia and when the compound comes in contact with those properties a white precipitate, in the carbonate form, aluminium hydroxide, is formed. And it is not potable. A spring, blasted out of rock and ten feet deep in the
Judgment accordingly.