58 N.J. Eq. 1 | New York Court of Chancery | 1899
This suit .is brought by the attorney-general on the relation of twenty-four persons, who are also complainants, by information and bill, to restrain the city of Paterson, a body corporate of this state, from discharging its sewage into the Passaic river, which flows through that city. The relators and complainants, are riparian owners of lands upon the Passaic river below the city of Paterson. By certain allegations it appears that at least two of them are riparian owners above what is called the “ Dundee Dam,” constructed across the river below the city of Paterson a fev^ hundred feet above the ebb and flow of the tide in the river. The information and bill do not definitely dis
The information and bill, however, complain generally of injury to specified rights of the other relators which they could not suffer except through riparian ownership above the ebb and flow of the tide and thereby it indirectly alleges such ownership; perhaps not with sufficient certainty, but no suck cause of demurrer is assigned.
The common complaint of the relators, complainants and attorney-general is that since 1890 the sewage of Paterson, in constantly-increasing quantities, has been emptied into the Passaic river by the defendant, so that now the daily discharge from its sewers into the river is about seventeen million gallons of refuse and filth consequent upon a population of about one hundred thousand persons, the effect of which discharge is to so pollute the waters of the stream that noxious and offensive odors continually arise therefrom, detrimental alike to the health and comfort of the complainants and relators and the general public in the neighborhood of the river, and so also pollute them that they have become unfit for drinking by either man or beast and for bathing or any domestic use. Thus the complainants are specially injured by deprivation of their rights as riparian owners, and with the public generally by the discomfort and ill health occasioned by the noxious and offensive odors.' The complainant Henry P. Simmons urges that he is specially injured in the destruction of an ice business he has established upon part of his wife’s riparian land overflowed from the river, and the complainant, the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City, claiming a right in virtue of statute to take from the Passaic river and Belleville a supply “ of pure and wholesome water” for the inhabitants of Jersey City, represents that the pumping plant it has erected at a great expense upon its riparian land at Belleville, has been rendered useless by the pollution complained of, and that the
Assuming that all the complainant relators except the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City are owners of portions of the banks of the river above the point to which the tide goes, their ownership extends to the middle of the stream (Attorney-General v. Delaware and Bound Brook (Railroad Co., 12 C. E. Gr. 1, 8, 631; Cobb v. Davenport, 3 Vr. 369), and they are entitled to have the water flow to them unpolluted, that they may use it for their ordinary domestic purposes and, within reasonable limits, for business or other purposes. Holsman v. Boiling Spring Bleaching Co., 1 McCart. 335; Attorney-General v. Taylor, 5 C. E. Gr. 415 ; Gould Wat. 205 et seq. Their commoa injury, beyond the discomfort and ill health occasioned by the noxious and offensive odors arising from the M'ater, is in the pollution and consequent deprivation of the uses of the M’ater to which they have a right.
The mayor and aldermen of Jersey City, merely as riparian owner upon a tidal stream, has no right in the waters of the stream distinct from the rights of the general public therein. The adjacency of its property to the M'ater merely affords convenience in the enjoyment of the common rights. The water and the land under it, where the tide ebbs and flows, is the-property of the state subject to the right of navigation. Stevens v. Paterson and Newark Railroad Co., 5 Vr. 532; Newark Aqueduct Board v. Passaic, 18 Stew. Eq. 393, 397. But as grantee of the state, of the right to take pure and wholesome-M'ater from the river at the location of its pumping plant for the uses of the inhabitants of Jersey City (P. L. of 1852 p. 419), it suffers special injury from the pollution of the stream. That injury lies not alone in the depreciation of the value of the plant erected for the purpose of utilizing the right given by the statute but also in the deprivation to the inhabitants of Jersey City of the use of the waters of the Passaic river, for whose benefit the grant was made and whom the corporate relator and complainant represents.
Thus it appears that the pollution of the Passaic river affects
It is objected by the demurrer that the relators and complainants, being the owners of distinct parcels of land aloDg the Passaic, cannot join in such a suit as this. From what has been said of the allegations of the bill it is perceived that they all suffer a common injury — the loss of the same pure and wholesome water and the substitution for it of a polluted and offensive water, from a single cause — pollution from the Paterson sewers, for which one redress is sought in this suit — the stoppage of such pollution. The same is true as to the baneful effect of the noxious odors that arise from the polluted waters. Until the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City ceased to make use of their pumping plant the smells from the water affected all complainants, even the inhabitants of Jersey City, through the water delivered to them in the same way, and now affects all other complainants than the mayor and aldermen of Jersey City in this way.
The contention is that the injury to each complainant and relator is distinct in that the parcel of land of each is affected ■independently of the others. The import of the insistence is illustrated in the ease of Marselis v. Morris Canal Co., Sax. 31, where several persons, having distinct and independent interests, joined as complainants to prevent the entry of the defendant corporation upon their several parcels of land and excavating the same for the purpose of making a canal without making compensation to the complainants respectively for their several properties. Each complainant there had a’ distinct and independent cause of complaint, to wit, for the excavation of his or her lot, which was in nowise injurious to his or her co-complainants. As Chancellor Vroom there said, “ there was no general right to be established and no common interest in all the complainants centering upon the point in issue in the cause — no general right claimed covering the whole case.” In the same trend is Hinchman v. Paterson Horse Railroad Co., 2 C. E. Gr. 75, where owners of distinct parcels of land abutting on Market street, in Paterson, asked for an injunction to restrain the building of a horse railroad in that street because it would obstruct the use of the street and injure the value of abutting properties
In Reid v. Gifford, Hopk. Ch. 416, a watercourse was diverted from its old and natural channel, and the several owners of distinct parcels of land upon the old channel united in a bill to restrain the diversion. Chancellor Sanford, in holding that the complainants had properly joined in their bill, expressed himself in this language: “The complainants are several proprietors of distiuct lands and mills and of separate parts of the natural watercourse; and the defendants object that these complainants, having distinct rights, cannot join in this suit. This objection seems more specious than solid. The rights of the several complainants to their respective lands are indeed distinct, but the grievance in question is a common injury to all the complainants. The water in its natural descent from fhe lake becomes the property of each of the complainants successively; all the complainants thus have right in the same subject, and the nature of the case forms a community of interest in the complainants. One creditor may sue in equity for himself and other creditors having like rights, and yet the debts demanded are distinct and arise from separate contracts. The common claim of the different creditors to the same relief is considered in equity as one demand and separate suits are not necessary. The rule in equity is that matters which may be demanded by one suit must be of the same nature. This suit is founded on the injury done to all the complainants; the wrong is done or continued by all the defendants; it is a matter of one nature, and the relief sought by all the complainants is the same.”
In Cadigan v. Brown, 120 Mass. 498, owners of several lots joined in a bill in equity to restrain a continuous and permanent obstruction of a passageway in which they had a right of way in common as appurtenant to their several estates. Upon the question whether they had properly joined in the suit,'the court said : “The plaintiffs, though they hold their rights under separate title, have a common interest in the subject of the bill. They are affected in the same way. by the acts of the defendants and seek the same remedy against them. There is no danger of confusion in the trial or of injustice to the defendants from the joinder of the plaintiffs, but the rights of all persons can be adjusted in one decree and a multiplicity of suits is prevented.”
The case considered is stronger in justification of joinder of the complainants than any of these. Each has the right to have the identical water reach him in its pure, natural condition, except as the proper domestic and reasonable uses of the riparian owners above him may affect it. Above them all a riparian owner, for its own advantage, deliberately defiles, pollutes and corrupts that water, so that when it passes to those below it is burdened with noisome stenches and is utterly corrupted and unfit for the uses they each had the right to make of it. Can they not join, as may those affected by the common air defiled by the smells of a slaughter-house, in an appeal to this court not to award each his damages but to stop the defilement?
The rule governing the joinder of complainants in a suit like
It is objected also that the defendant has the right to empty its sewers into the Passaic river, whatever the consequences may be. This contention rests in part upon the ground that it is a natural and reasonable use of the river, and in part upon the insistence That legislative authority to the city of Paterson to construct sewers contemplated their discharge into the Passaic and impliedly authorized it.
The sewage in question, it is remembered, is discharged into a stream above tide and where the stream is not navigable. It does not naturally flow to the stream. It is gathered by the municipality of Paterson in sewers from numerous buildings, cesspools, culverts and drains, over a large area of land, and by uniform artificially-constructed grades is gravitated to and discharged into the river. It is vastly more than the mere natural drainage of riparian owners. I cannot conceive of any tenable ground upon which such drainage can be classed as either a natural or reasonable use of the river.. Upon this subject I need only repeat the language of Vice-Chancellor Pitney, in Beach v. Sterling Iron and Zinc Co., 9 Dick. Ch. Rep. 76, where, in treating of the drainage of a mine into a stream, he said: “ The argument was advanced by the defendant that the use of the defendant’s property for mining purposes is what was termed, unfortunately, I think, by Lord Cairns, in Fletcher v. Rylands, L. R. 3 Eng. & Ir. App. 330 (at pp. 338, 339) (1868), a natural user, and similar in that respect to plowing a field, and that if it
“ The ground of a reasonable natural user seems to be at the bottom of what was said in Merrifield v. Worcester, 110 Mass. 216, upon this topic. So far as the expressions there used favor the notion that a city or town may collect and discharge sewage-matter into a fresh-water stream, to the injury of a riparian owner without liability to action, they are contrary to the law as held in England for centuries. Higg. Pol. W. 127 et seq., where several cases besides those above cited are collected.”
I am referred by counsel to three statutes for the authority under which the sewers of the city of Paterson have been constructed — the first, “An act to authorize the construction off sewers and drains in the city of Paterson,” approved February" 26th, 1868 (P. L. of 1868 p. 126); the second, “An act to provide for the more efficient government of the city of Paterson (P. L. of 1871 p. 808), and the third, “A general act to authorize cities to construct drains and to provide for the costs thereof” (P. L. of 1882 p. 60); but I do not find that either of these laws makes reference to the ultimate disposition of the sewage or-to the use of the Passaic river for that purpose. The first of them does refer to maps theretofore prepared, and it is possible that those maps may exhibit sewer outlets for discharge of sewage into the river; but at present the maps are not in the
That the city of Paterson has any right to pollute the waters-of the Passaic river by the discharge of its sewage into them is clearly an untenable proposition.
It is further urged for the defendant that the relief asked' should not be afforded in equity because of the laches in this application. The allegations in the information and bill show that since about the year 1890 the city of Paterson has been discharging its sewage into the Passaic river in considerably-increasing quantities, and that since the year 1895 the waters of the river have been corrupted so as to create the nuisances complained of.
I do not perceive that the defendant has suffered by the delay of which it complains. It would seem that to it the delay has-been rather a benefit in relieving it of the expense of other, disposition of its sewage and in enabling it to consider the most-economical and advantageous way of ultimately making that disposition. The Passaic river, at Paterson, is a stream of considerable size, capable of receiving comparatively large quantities of refuse matter without becoming contaminated. Besides,
Another objection made by the demurrer is that owners and occupiers of houses in the city of Paterson connected -with the sewers constructed should be made parties to this application. 'The sewers do not belong to those persons. They are the property of the defendant, and the defendant is charged with the •duty of keeping them in repair and suitable condition to afford .drainage for the properties connected with them. The question
I will overrule the demurrer, with costs.
It remains to determine what disposition shall be made of the order to show cause herein why a preliminary injunction shall not issue. The complainants ask that it shall not only prevent any increase of the quantity of the sewage discharged into the* river by the defendant, but that it shall at once stop all discharge of sewage by the defendant into the river.
The defendant objects that although the jurisdiction of this-court in matters of nuisance, public and private, is well established,, the jurisdiction does not rest upon the mere fact that nuisance-exists, but upon the lack of adequate remedy at law in the given case, and that the court will not exercise its jurisdiction if the-object may as well be obtained in the ordinary tribunals; that-in this matter, upon indictment adequate redress by abatement of the nuisance complained of may be had. The rule invoked has-been repeatedly recognized and applied in this state in cases of alleged obstruction to navigation (Attorney-General v. New Jersey Railroad and Transportation Co., 9 Gr. Ch. 136 ; Attorney-General v. Paterson and Hudson Railroad Co., 1 Stock. 526 ; Attorney-General v. Delaware and Bound Brook Railroad Co., 12 C. E. Gr. 1); and in cases of encroachments upon public highways, (Attorney-General v. Heishon, 3 C. E. Gr. 410; Attorney-General v. Brown, 9 C. E. Gr. 90 ; Morris and Essex Railroad Co. v. Prudden, 5 C. E. Gr. 530 ; Inhabitants of Woodbridge v. Inslee, 10 Stew. Eq. 397; Township of Raritan v. Port Reading Railroad Co., 4 Dick. Ch. Rep. 11); but I do not find a case in which-it has been applied where physical discomfort and ill health are-in question. On the contrary I recall two cases, Babcock v. New Jersey Stock Yard Co., 5 C. E. Gr. 296, 299, and Attorney-General v. Steward and Taylor, 5 C. E. Gr. 415, in which it was held in this court that the contamination of waters so as to-
An injunction may issue, as indicated.