90 N.J. Eq. 425 | New York Court of Chancery | 1919
The defendant is charged with discharging factory refuse into the Rahway river, and with depositing such refuse on. the river bank above the point from where the city of Rahway takes its water supply, in violation of the statute of March 17th, 1899 (Comp. Stat. p. 5811), as amended by chapter 229 of the laws of 1918. P. L. 1918 p. 836. That act provides that—
“No excremental matter, domestic, factory, workshop, mill, or slaughter-house refuse, creamery or cheese factory waste, garbage, dye stuffs, coal tar, sawdust, tank bark or refuse from gashouses or other polluting matter”
shall be discharged into any river, stream, &e., or placed or suffered' to remain upon the banks thereof, above the point from which any municipality obtains its supply of water for domestic use, and provides the remedy of injunction.
The defendant manufactures chemical products at its plant located at the confluence of two streams, called for convenience north and south branches, which empty into the Railway river five miles and more above the Rahway intake. When the company began operating in 1915 all the liquid waste of the factory was emptied directly into the south branch, and this continued for two years until the department of health interposed upon the complaint of Rahway. The defendant then took measures to clarify the refuse by eliminating the more objectionable prop
Despite this earnest endeavor the lagoons are not watertight, and some of the waste content still leaks into the streams polluting them, not to any great extent, it is true, and may be not noticeable, or even chemically discoverable, at Rahway, as the defendant contends. A part of the easterly wall of the first lagoon is made up of a pervious railroad embankment through
That the refuse, the wash of chemical compounds, is deleterious to health and objectionable because of odor, taste and discoloration is proved by the facts that all fish life in the immediate vicinity of the factory was destroyed during the first years of operation, when the flow of the waste into the streams was unrestrained, and that at that time it could be smelled and tasted in the drinking water of Rahway. Its color is orange to dark brown.
It is not a good plea that the pollution is not now perceptible at Rahway because of mitigation in quantity and quality of the effluent; nor that the more obnoxious of the polluting matter is nitrobenzol which to taste and smell is likened unto oil of bitter almonds, and sometimes used as its substitute bj bakers ■and confectioners in their wares, or that it is benzalclehyde; nor that to take a poisonous dose one would have to drink more of the polluted water than would be required to drown in ; and it is a feeble and irrelevant argument that the inhabitants of Rahway would suffer no inconvenience if their filtration plant were of an up-to-date type and properly managed. These extenuating circumstances advanced by the defendant would be, perhaps, admissible if the cause were for the suppression of a common law nuisance, but as this suit is in aid of the police power of the state they are wholly beside the issue. The aim and policy of the legislature, as evinced by the statute, is to secure to populated communities wholesome drinking water, and, in vindicating the sovereign right of the state to the purity of its streams, it last year adopted measures more emphatic than before by placing its ban upon specific contaminations and things in gen
“sewage, drainage, domestic or factory refuse, excremental or other polluting matter of any kind whatsoever which, either by itself or in connection with other matter, will corrupt or impair, or tend to corrupt or impair, the quality of the water of any river, brook, &e., * * * or which will render, or tend to render, such water injurious to health.”
This involved in the trial of every offence, not only the fact that the proscribed foreign substances were being discharged into the streams, hut also the determination by the courts that they corrupted or impaired or tended to corrupt or impair the quality of the water, or rendered or tended to render it -injurious to health. State Board of Health v. Diamond Mills Paper Co., 63 N. J. Eq. 111; affirmed, 64 N. J. Eq. 793. In the amendment of 1918 the legislature itself determined that factory refuse and the other mentioned wastes and castoffs are contaminating, and peremptorily forbade their discharge into streams and their deposit upon the banks thereof.
The defendant is violating the law in both of these aspects. As has been pointed out, there is drainage of the refuse into the streams, at least into one of them, and it is of no moment that it has not been or cannot be traced to spigots in Rahway. The pollution aimed at by the statute is at the point of discharge into the stream. State Board of Health v. Diamond Paper Mills Co., supra; State v. Wheeler, 44 N. J. Law 88. The vast body of liquid waste stored on the banks — the lagoons cover an area of approximately five acres and the average depth of the liquid conient is two and one-half feet — is a standing menace. Overflows after heavy downpours of rain, break in the dyke from wash or lateral pressure, wastage through the fissures in the lagoons, and its ultimate escape into the new bed of the south branch, are ever-threatening dangers. And these do not comprise all the reasons for apprehension. There is constant seepage at various places in the dyke, as T personally observed, that flows, generously, through the moat into the sumps, and in prolonged and heavy rains the contrivances for catching the
The defendant makes no point of it that the effluent stored on the land near the banks was not “placed or suffered to remain upon the banks’’ of the streams, within the meaning of the statute. The attorney-general moots the proposition in his brief. I entertain no doubt tha,t the legislature did not use “banks” in the literal sense and according to the strict definition of the lexicon, and I assume that defendants’ counsel considered the question not open to argument.
“The bank is the outermost part of the bed in which the river naturally flows. In the words of the Digest, That is considered to be bank which contains the river when fullest.’
“The bank may he thus rightly defined as that line or ridge of earth which contains the river holding the natural direction of its course.” Houck R. 3, 5.
“The banks of the stream, are the elevations of land which confine the waters to their natural channel when they rise to the highest point at which they are still confined to a definite course and channel.” Farnham W. R. 1462.
“The banks of a. river are those elevations of land which confine the waters when they rise out of the bed; and the bed is that soil so usually covered by water as to be distinguishable from the banks, by the character of the soil, or vegetation, or both, produced by the common presence and action of flowing water. But neither the line of ordinary high-water mark, nor of ordinary low-water mark, nor of a middle stage of water, can be assumed as the line dividing the bed from the banks.” Howard et al. v. Ingersoll, 13 How. 381, 427; Sun Dial Ranch v. May Land Co., 61 Ore. 205.
The legislative scheme to purify the streams of the state contemplates the exclusion of two avenues of corruption — that 6f direct discharge of polluting matter into the water, which necessarily includes depositing on the bank from which it is bound to fall or flow into the stream, and that of depositing it so near the banks as to constitute a threat or menace of ultimately reaching the water, contaminating it. Now, to give to the word “banks,” as used in the statute, a construction other than its popular signification — the immediate drainage region of lands contiguous to streams — would render the design of the second feature of the act wholly abortive. It would be playing with words and trifling with legislative mandate to hold that discharges of polluting matter on the bank anywhere below the brink would be violative of the statute, while a deposit on the bank an inch away from the brink would not be. When Chancellor Walker had State v. Town of Phillipsburg, 83 N. J. Eq. 422, under consideration, he seems to have had no doubt that, garbage dumps on lands immediately adjacent to the bank of the Delaware' river, the refuse of which, in normal times, by reason of the natural slope of the ground, found its ways into the waters of the river, and in case of freshets was washed directly into the waters of the river, violated the provisions of the act. The decision turned upon another ground, but it is significant that in that liotly-contested case, the point was passed siib silentio.
At the second hearing there was testimony of human excremental deposits at a number of places on the banks of the two streams. This offence was not alleged and from aught that ap
I will advise a decree enjoining the defendant from discharging its factory refuse into the north and south branches of the Rahway river (by whatever names they may be known) and from placing or suffering its factory waste to remain on the banks of these streams. The injunction upon the discharge of waste into the streams will go into effect at once and the injunction against storage will be effective on October 1st, 1919. The defendant has assiduously and in good faith sought to abate the pollution, and, as it has prospects of neutralizing the waste, it ought to be given reasonable opportunity to develop the treatment. The injunction may stipulate that the escape of waste by seepage will not, in the meanwhile, lie considered a violation of the injunction, provided reasonable care is taken to prevent overflow and to keep- the dyke, moat,- sumps and pumps in repair and working condition, and provided the defendant forthwith takes measures to prevent seepage through the railroad embankment into Elemmer’s ditch by extending the moat northerly to the end of the old or first lagoon.
The complainant is entitled to costs.