87 N.J. Eq. 500 | New York Court of Chancery | 1917
. This is a bill to restrain a public nuisance causing a private injury.
The complainant owns a store building on the northerly side of Nassau street, Princeton, in which he conducts business. The defendant’s land adjoins on the east, and extends to the corner of Witherspoon street a distance of forty-nine and fifty-two hundredths feet. • Sixteen years ago the defendant erected a five-story banking-ho'use on the northwesterly corner of the streets, fronting on Nassau street twenty-six and eighty-five hundredths feet; and in the summer of 1916 built an addition covering the remaining frontage, which, as to architecture and alignment; conforms to the original structure. The face of the first-story borders on the street line of Nassau'street, while the upper floors
The testimony locates the northerly line of Nassau street on the block in which the lands of the complainant and defendant are situate, with a degree of certainty as to leave little doubt of the defendant’s encroachment upon the public highway to the depth of twenty-two inches. The street line is established, it seems to me, by the defendant’s own definition of its title, the description of which begins at the corner of Nassau street and runs along Witherspoon street seventy-four and seventy-five hundredths feet to a brick building. This entire space is occupied by the banking-house proper, while the columns stand beyond the lot line, and doubtlessly constitute a public nuisance.
The circumstance under which a private suitor may intervene to abate a public nuisance is declared in a long line of cases in this state. “It is well settled that the remedy by indictment is so efficacious that in cases of public nuisances courts of equity will interfere, at the instance of a private individual, only when his private rights are so violated by such a nuisance that he is subjected to substantial, serious- and irreparable damage. He must suffer some private, direct and material damage, beyond that which is suffered by the public at large, and which, but for the interference of equit}', will be an irreparable injury to him. * * * Mere diminution of the value of his property, without irreparable mischief, will not furnish a foundation for equitable relief.” Van Wagenen v. Cooney, 45 N. J. Eq. 24; Anthony Shoe Co. v. West Jersey Railroad Co., 57 N. J. Eq. 607; Humphreys v. Eastlack, 63 N. J. Eq. 136.
The evidence does not show that the complainant’s injury is of such a nature as brings his case within the rule. The com
The complainant may be able to sustain ah action at law for damages occasioned by the unlawful projection of the bank building as an entirety, beyond the building line; and he might have been successful on this- score in restraining the encroachment had he not himself been an offender and had prompt action been taken; but, considering the case in its present aspect and the theory upon which it was tried, it is apparent that the complainant has not shown that he has suffered any sensible or appreciable injury—a burden which he was bound to discharge to the point of demonstration—and obviously none of a nature serious and irreparable.
The case of Ackerman v. True, 175 N. Y. 353, relied upon by the complainant, is in complete harmony with the principle that a court of equity will abate a public nuisance at the suit of a person to whom it lias worked a special -injuryIn that case, the trial court found, as a fact, that the value of the com- * plainant’s property was diminished to the amount of $15,000 by the defendant’s adjacent wall encroaching upon the highway, but refused to abate the nuisance. The court of appeals reversed the decree below and granted injunctive relief, on the ground that the magnitude of the findings evinced-special and substantial damages.
The bill will be dismissed, with costs.