46 N.J. Eq. 173 | New York Court of Chancery | 1889
The bill is filed in the name of the State by the Board of Health of Hackensack, as relators, against the Board of Chosen Freeholders of Bergen County, under the authority of the twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth sections of the act to establish boards of health &c., of March 31st, 1887 (P. L. p. 93). If alleges that the relators are the local board of health of the town of Hackensack, in Bergen county, duly appointed and organized by the Hackensack Improvement Commission, which is the local municipal government of the town of Hackensack. It charges the defendant with creating and maintaining in and' about the court-house, jail and other public county buildings a nuisance which is within the limits of the municipality of Hackensack, and which is hazardous to the public health. The bill
Eew, if any, of the inhabitants along the creek obeyed the ordinances of the relators forbidding the use of the creek as a. sewer. A special notice of the alleged nuisance was given to, and request made of, the board of chosen freeholders to desist from such use, and they, after consideration, declined to accede to the demand of the relators, and hence this suit.
The bill, after stating that the use of the creek as a sewer by the inhabitants generally created a nuisance which is hazardous to the public health, continues by charging “ that the use of said sink, water-closets, pipes, privies and privy vaults in and about said court-house, jail, surrogate’s office and county clerk’s office, in connection with said creek and the waters thereof, has greatly contributed and does greatly contribute to the creation, continuance and maintenance of the public nuisance aforesaid, and is of itself and without reference to the use of said creek and its waters at other points in its course through said village greatly hazardous and dangerous to the public health, and is to the injury and common nuisance of all the people of this State, and particularly to such of them as live within the jurisdiction of said Hackensack Improvement Commission, within which jurisdiction the said relator is invested with the powers and authority hereinbefore set forth.”
There is a prayer for abatement and injunction.
The answer calls in question the power and authority of the relators by denying that the Hackensack commission is a municipal body authorized by law to organize a board of health, and hence, it insists, that the relator has no legal existence or authority, and no standing in the court. It also denies that any nuisance has been created or exists as stated in the bill; it admits that the sewage from the county buildings is emptied into the creek substantially as alleged in the bill, but denies that such disposition of it has ever at any time created any nuisance, and alleges that no other practical method exists for disposing of such sewage, and that it is necessary for the defendant to use the creek in the manner it has been doing.
I refer to State v. Hackensack, 16 Vr. 113. And I farther think that the relators were duly appointed a local board of. health for Hackensack, and that they had the right to make the ordinances set out in the bill. But that does not make out complainant’s case, as their counsel freely admitted on the argument. There still remain the serious questions in the cause, namely:
First. Does the use of this creek for sewage purposes by the inmates of, and visitors to, the county buildings, in the language of the bill, “ greatly contribute to the creation and continuance and maintenance of a public nuisance,” and is “such use of itself and without reference to the use of said creek and its water at other points hazardous and dangerous to the public health, and is it a public nuisance ? ” And, if so, then
Second. Is it practically impossible for the defendants to otherwise dispose of the sewage in those buildings in such a manner as to lessen the nuisance and do- less injury to the public ? And
Third. If it be so practically impossible, then ought this court to restrain the present mode of disposing of it ?
The relators, at the hearing, undertook, and very properly, as I think, the burden of maintaining by proof the affirmative of these propositions of fact. In this they relied upon and followed the case of The Board of Health of Trenton v. Hutchinson, 12 Stew. Eq. 218, as a precedent. That suit was based upon the statute of March 22d, 1883 (P. L. p. 119). The ninth and tenth sections of that act, though clothed in somewhat different language, amount, in substance, to the provisions of the twenty-eighth and twenty-ninth sections of the act of 1887, and the court of appeals in construing them used this language: “ By the tenth section of this act power is given to certain local boards of health to file a bill in equity as relators in the name of the
An examination of the Trenton case shows that both this court and the court of appeals found, as a matter. of fact, that the effect of the continuous discharge of the American House sewage into Petty’s run was of itself, and without the aid of any other contributions of sewage, sufficient to create a nuisance hazardous to public health. And I do not understand that the statute contemplates or authorizes the interference of this court against the individual infringement of ordinances of the board of health where such infringement is not enough by itself to create a nuisance hazardous to public health, although it may be there are many such infringements which, combined, do result in such a nuisance. And, as before remarked, no such contention was made at the hearing.
In reviewing the mass of testimony given at the hearing, I therefore inquired whether what has been and is being done in and about the county buildings of itself creates a nuisance' hazardous to public health. In so doing I have tried to apply the following test, which seems to me to be sufficiently severe as against the defendants: Take the conditions of the court-house buildings, the amount of land occupied by them, the amount of sewage thence emptied into the creek, the breadth and depth of the creek opposite the buildings at high and low tide, their distance from the Hackensack river; if there were any number, say twenty, such establishments as close together as the conditions would permit, would they all combined create such a nuisance ?
But right here we meet the difficulty inherent in the very nature of the case, of defining just what degree of injurious ■influence must be reached in order to warrant the court in pronouncing a situation of this nature to be a nuisance. It seems clear enough that it must be a public as distinguished from a mer& private nuisance; that it must affect a considerable number of persons; and it would seem to follow with equal certainty
Let us turn now to the case in hand and the evidence.' It is common knowledge that one of the most efficient modes of neutralizing and disposing of sewage is to dilute it highly with water; in other words, to discharge it into a river or other mass of water. One of the offices of this element seems to be that of a universal cleanser. Nature’s baths are brooks and streams. They are the natural sewers of the country. Man and animals wash in them, the rains carry into them the filth from the adjoining country, and their flow carries it to the sea. The flow of the tide twice a day brings into the bays and inlets a clean supply of water and the ebb carries it back to the sea laden with more or less of the filth brought down by the rivers. The dilution goes on higher and still higher, until, in the ocean, all trace of filth is lost. This is nature’s process. The sewage of a large portion of Hackensack is carried in sewers built and maintained by the
By a cross-section measurement of the creek opposite the county buildings it appears that at high tide it is over fifty feet wide, with an average depth of at least three and a half feet. This makes the cross-section area at least one hundred and seventy-five square feet, which, multiplied by one hundred and seventy feet —the length of the frontage on the river of the county lot — produces about thirty thousand cubic feet, or two hundred and twenty-five thousand gallons of water contained in the prism of the river opposite those buildings, and which comes up from and returns to the river twice a day, receiving and carrying away the filth in question. To this mass of water is added, of course, the large amount which flows past the county buildings into the upper reaches of the creek and in due course returns again to the river.
Now, suppose there were another such establishment as the •county buildings, occupying the same amount of frontage on the opposite side of the creek, would the amount of sewage delivered by the two into that quantity of water, changed twice a day by the tides, produce a nuisance dangerous to public health ? It seems to me that that is the precise question of fact before me, and that the burden was on the relators to prove the affirmative of it.
Counsel for complainant distinctly assumed such burden at the hearing. If now we come to the actual proofs of injury adduced by the relators, they will be found to refer almost entirely to the general condition of the creek in its whole length and the num
Upon the whole case I feel constrained to say that I think therelators have failed to support the burden of proof thrown upon them by'the law, and that their case fails.
This renders it unnecessary to determine the other questions-above stated, whether there is any other practicable mode of disposing of the sewage in question without creating a greater nuisance, and, if there is not, then, whether the defendants are-driven to the alternative placed before the defendant in the Trenton case, viz., to remove from the town. It is proper, however,, for me to say, that evidence was given which proved the physical possibility of constructing a sewer from the court-house through Church street, a distance of about five hundred feet; to-Bridge street, to connect there with the public sewer in that street. But it was not shown by what right and under what authority the defendants could lay down such sewer over that stretch, and none appeared. No other mode of disposal was-suggested except removing the filth in closed vessels.
And as to the last point I desire simply to say, without deciding anything, that I do not understand that the board of chosen freeholders of a county, bound as they are by law to-maintain a court-house, jail and place for the county records in-some convenient and central place in the county, around which-population naturally gathers, can be placed upon the same footing as an hotel-keeper or ordinary tradesman without whose-presence the community can manage to exist.
The bill must be dismissed, but, under the circumstances of the case, without costs.