159 N.Y. 323 | NY | 1899
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From the evidence appearing in the record, especially when it is amplified by the view of the premises taken by the trial judge at the request of both parties, and from the nature of the findings, which have the effect of a general verdict for the plaintiff, we are compelled to assume, after affirmance by the Appellate Division, the existence of a nuisance upon the defendant's premises that seriously injures the premises of the plaintiff. (Amherst College v. Ritch,
It is claimed that the judgment below cannot be sustained because no property right of the plaintiff was invaded, inasmuch as the defendant had authority for what it did in the statute which created it. That statute conferred no unusual power upon the defendant, but simply authorized it to construct and operate a steam surface railroad. It did not authorize it to construct this particular turntable, or to maintain this particular yard, or to concentrate the particular evils of its terminal station in the immediate vicinity of inhabited dwellings. The implied powers springing from the express power to maintain a railroad, do not extend to the grievances complained of by the plaintiff nor permit the ruin of his property without compensation. While the welfare of the public and the necessities of travel require that the plaintiff should submit to annoyances caused by a reasonable use of the property of the defendant, he is not obliged to submit to those caused by an unreasonable use, all the circumstances being taken into account. Slight injuries and annoyances to people living along the line of a railroad are a necessary incident to its maintenance and operation, but when the company *329
does, even upon its own land, such acts as seriously impair the enjoyment of the adjoining land, to a certain extent it takes such land and must discontinue the practice or make compensation. (Pumpelly v. Green Bay Co.,
So when general authority had been conferred upon a municipal corporation to build a pumping station as a part of an extensive system to supply a city with water, but leaving the site to the selection of the corporation, it was held not to confer power, either express or implied, to construct it so near the lands of another as to seriously affect the houses, subsequently built thereon, through the vibrations and noise of machinery. (Morton
v. Mayor, etc.,
The use by the defendant of its property to the injury of the plaintiff was not temporary, for the purpose of adapting it to its business, out regular, continuous, and in the nature of a partial but permanent appropriation. The distinction between a permanent invasion of land and a temporary annoyance, as by blasting, was carefully pointed out in Booth v. R., W. O.T.R.R. Co. (
When the odor from gas works was found to so pollute the *331
air as to substantially render the plaintiff's property unfit for comfortable enjoyment, it was held to be a nuisance, although the acts complained of were inseparably connected with the carrying on of the business itself, and that it was not essential to a right of action that the owner should be driven from his dwelling. (Bohan v. Port Jervis Gas Light Co.,
In Baltimore Potomac R.R. Co. v. Fifth Baptist Church
(
We close the discussion of the point under consideration by repeating the language of Judge FINCH in Hill v. Mayor, etc. (
The defendant insists that its appeal should be sustained because the trial court awarded no past damages to the plaintiff.
A court of equity has jurisdiction of an action to restrain the commission of a continuing trespass, because the injunction prevents a multiplicity of actions at law, which is a grievance to the parties and a burden upon the public. (Corning v. TroyIron Nail Factory,
While in such an action the court may also render judgment for the damages already sustained, that relief is merely incidental and is not an essential part of the main cause of action for a permanent injunction. The party entitled to damages may waive them if he chooses, by not furnishing evidence to enable the court to measure them in money, which is an advantage to the defendant, but does not defeat the action. If such substantial and continuous interference with the ordinary enjoyment of property is shown as would, when properly measured by evidence, enable the court to fix the amount of the damages, the injunction may be issued, although no damages are awarded. The extent of the injury is important, *333 but whether the amount is admeasured in dollars and cents is unimportant, unless there are benefits to be offset against the damages.
When, as in certain actions against elevated railroads, a wrongful appropriation of easements appurtenant to abutting property appears, but it also appears that the presence of the road has so increased the value of the property that the actual damages are only nominal, relief by way of injunction may be refused because the trespass is but technical and the real injury unsubstantial. (O'Reilly v. N.Y. Elevated R.R. Co.,
This is not such a case, but one where the trespass was permanent, continuing and grievous, and went to destroy the value of the property of the owner with no compensating advantages. The decision of the trial justice established the plaintiff's right, the existence of the nuisance and its injurious effect upon his property. The case was thus brought within the sound discretion of the court, and after united action by the courts below, we cannot interfere. The theory is not tolerable that, although one party to an action may be gradually demolishing the house of the other, the latter cannot have an injunction to prevent its total destruction, because the amount of the damages already sustained has not been admeasured in money.
Our conclusion is that where strong and aggravated instances of continuing trespass are shown, which must necessarily result in substantial damages to the plaintiff's property that are in no way offset by benefits, a permanent injunction may be issued, although the amount of the damages is not fixed.
The judgment should be affirmed, with costs.
All concur, except PARKER, Ch. J., and HAIGHT, J., not voting.
Judgment affirmed. *334