82 N.Y.S. 973 | N.Y. App. Div. | 1903
The plaintiffs bring this action to restrain the defendant, Hickory Grove Cemetery, from acquiring certain lands in the town of Mamaroneclc, Westchester county, for cemetery purposes, and from establishing a cemetery thereon. The claim of the plaintiffs is that owing to the character of the soil and the juxtaposition of running streams the seepage of the proposed cemetery would be carried down through the soil and find its way into their wells, thus menacing the life and health of the community, and especially that of these plaintiffs, whose property is near the proposed cemetery. It is also urged, and the evidence upon this point does not appear to be disputed, that by reason of the establishing and maintaining of the proposed cemetery the property of these plaintiffs would be depreciated, and that they would have no adequate remedy at law for the damages which they would thus be called upon to sustain. While the evidence in support of the first proposition may not be conclusive, we are of opinion that, in view of the importance of preserving the public health, and the concéded menace which the interment of the dead in the vicinity of water supply sources entails, a court of equity may very properly take jurisdiction in this case, and that the plaintiffs are entitled to the relief demanded unless the defendants have complied with all of the provisions of law neces
The evidence in - this case, it seems to us, is sufficient to show that the property rights of the plaintiffs will be trespassed upon by maintaining the proposed cemetery. If the evidence falls short of establishing a nuisance created by. the percolation of germ-charged seepage into the wells and streams upon the premises of the plaintiffs (and upon this point there is room .for a fair disagreement), there is no dispute upon the proposition that to use the proposed lands for cemetery purposes would operate to depreciate the value of the property of the plaintiffs, and they would be without an ade
By the provisions of section 41 of the Membership Corporations Law (Laws of 1895, chap. 559), any seven or more persons are permitted to become a cemetery corporation by making, , acknowledging and filing in the proper offices a certificate specifying each county, town, city and village in which the cemetery is to be located, the name of the proposed corporation, etc., and, on filing the same, in pursuance of law, the signers thereof, their associates and successors, become a corporation in accordance with the provisions of the certificate. Section 42 (as amd. by Laws of 1896, chap. 193) — and it is one of the conditions under which the corporation is organized— provides that a cemetery corporation shall not take by deed, devise or otherwise any-land in either of the counties of Erie, Kings, Queens, Rockland or Westchester for cemetery purposes, or set apart any ground for cemetery purposes in either of such counties, unless the consent of the board of supervisors thereof be first obtained, which board may grant such consent upon such conditions, regulations and restrictions as, in its judgment, the public health or the public good may require. The defendant corporation took its charter under these restrictions, with the constitutional resérvation to the Legislature of the power to alter or repeal the same (Const, art. 8, § 1), and to regulate the powers of boards of supervisors (Const, art. 3, § 27). Section 42 of the Membership Corporations Law (as amd. by Laws of 1896, chap. 193) further provides that “ notice of application to any such board for such consent shall be published once a week for six weeks in two newspapers of the county having the largest circulation therein, stating the time when the application will be made, a brief description of the lands proposed to be
The defendant corporation seems to have reached this same conclusion, for on the 18th day of January, 1902, it began the publication of a second notice that it would ask for the consent to use the lands involved in this controversy for cemetery purposes; this notice named the 4th day of March, 1902, as the time for making the application. In the meantime the Legislature, in the exercise of its constitutional right to alter, from time to time, the corporate powers which it has granted (State Const, art. 8, § 1), had been at work, and pn the twenty-eighth day of February, enacted chapter 73 of the Laws of 1902, the act taking effect immediately, in which it was provided : “ It shall not be lawful for any rural cemetery corporation to hereafter acquire or take by deed, devise or otherwise, any land in any county within the State of- Hew York having a population of between one hundred and seventy-five thousand and two hundred thousand, according to the Federal census of nineteen hundred, or set apart any ground for cemetery purposes therein, where there has already been set apart in any such county five hundred acres of land for rural cemetery purposes, and the consent of the board of supervisors of any such county shall not be granted where there has already been granted five hundred acres of land, or upwards, within such county to rural cemetery corporations.” It is conceded that there were over 900 acres of land dedicated to cemetery purposes in Westchester county at the time this last con
As the defendant corporation has .never acquired any legal right to set apart lands for a cemetery and it appears that the property rights of the plaintiffs would be materially injured, while the evidence supports in some measure at least the conclusion that the cemetery would be a private nuisance, we are of opinion that the judgment appealed from should' be reversed.
Bartlett and Jerks, JJ., concurred ; Hirsohberg and Hooker, JJ., dissented.
■Judgment reversed and new trial granted, costs to abide the final award of costs.