186 N.Y. 45 | NY | 1906
This action is brought against forty defendants in the city of Gloversville. Some of them are corporations, some are sued simply as individuals, and others are sued as members of copartnerships. Most of them are engaged in business as tanners and colorers of skins and manufacturers of leather.
The material allegations of the complaint may fairly be summarized as follows: The defendants, for a period of six years, have been carrying on business on the premises of each, which premises are situate on or near Cayadutta creek and the headwaters thereof, which creek, but for the wrongful acts of the defendants hereinafter stated, and of the city of *48 Gloversville and others, is and has been a large stream of pure and wholesome water of equable flow ordinarily contained within its banks, flowing through the town and city of Johnstown into the Mohawk river. In the city of Johnstown there has been maintained from time immemorial a canal upwards of half a mile in length, leading the great bulk of the waters of Cayadutta creek westerly to certain large mills, there to be used for power. The plaintiff, for the last ten years, has owned, and now owns, a lot of land and dwelling house on this canal, occupied for residential purposes and the maintenance of a meat market. The defendants for the last six years have discharged, and do now discharge, each from his own place of business into Cayadutta creek, large quantities of filthy matter and tannery and factory refuse and harmful and polluting substances, solid and liquid, thereby polluting the waters and bed and banks of the creek, rendering them offensive to the senses and occasioning deposit in the canal and upon the lands of the plaintiff thereon, rendering them less useful for domestic purposes. By reason of this pollution of the canal disagreeable and noxious odors have arisen, continually pervading the plaintiff's dwelling house and meat market, destroying the comfort of the plaintiff and his tenants in the use of his property and diminishing the value thereof and rendering the premises unhealthful. Each defendant maintains permanent drains and sluices for carrying such refuse and polluting and harmful substances into Cayadutta creek, and intends to continue such discharge thereof and to increase the same unless restrained from so doing. "The damages suffered by the plaintiff from the pollution of the stream by any one defendant, if there were no other sources of pollution, would be nominal; but from the concurring and continuous trespass of all the defendants, the injury which the plaintiff and his lands sustain is great and if the said nuisance is continued will be irreparable and the said lands and tenements will be rendered wholly worthless for domestic or for other purposes."
The complaint concludes with a prayer for an injunction *49 and that the plaintiff recover of the defendants $1,000 for the damages which he has already suffered.
Considered as a bill in equity to restrain the further pollution of the waters of Cayadutta creek by the defendants, I think that the complaint states a cause of action and is not objectionable on the ground of multifariousness. Whether it would be good if the plaintiff sought only to recover damages at law, it is not necessary now to decide.
The principles of equity jurisprudence applicable to the determination of this appeal have never been more clearly stated by any tribunal in the United States or more thoroughly or ably discussed than in the opinion of the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine in the case of Lockwood Co. v. Lawrence (
Another leading case in which the same rule was applied isDraper v. Brown (
To the same effect is the decision in Woodruff v. N.B.G.M.Co. (8 Sawy. Cir. Ct. 628), which was a bill against a number of hydraulic mining companies in California, severally owning mines at various points on the Yuba river and its affluents and working them independently of each other. The relief sought was an injunction to restrain the defendants from discharging the mining debris arising from the operation of their several mines into the streams, it appearing that the debris became mingled therein into an indistinguishable mass and was deposited upon the lands of the complaint so as to constitute a great public and private nuisance. There was a demurrer to the bill on the ground of misjoinder and multifariousness and it was contended in particular that inasmuch as each defendant was pursuing its own business severally without any joint intent or joint action the cause of action was distinct and several as against each and that neither the defendants nor the several causes of action could be joined in the same suit. *51 In overruling the demurrer SAWYER, C.J., declared that after a very careful examination and analysis of the numerous authorities cited in support of the proposition stated he was entirely satisfied that under the principles of equity jurisprudence as established in England and in the United States there was no misjoinder of defendants and that the bill was not multifarious. Among other things he said: "The nuisance is created by the joint action of the debris from the various mines, which is combined, and afterwards flows on together, long before it reaches the lands injured and threatened, and after such combination creates the nuisance complained of. There is, therefore, a co-operation in fact, if not in intent, of these several defendants in the production of the nuisance. The injury is the joint effect of acts, originally several, but combined before the debris is precipitated upon the lands below and the injury is effected, and in contemplation of equity it constitutes a single cause of action. There is a common interest in the right claimed to discharge debris into the streams. The defendants each and all claim a common though not a joint right. The final injury is a single one — a single result of the combined operation of this debris — and all the defendants co-operate in fact in producing it. No damages are sought. Only equitable relief is demanded by restraining future action — a future contribution by each to the nuisance."
In the decisions of the English courts we also find precedents for the maintenance of such a suit in equity as that before us. In Thorpe v. Brumfitt (L.R. [8 Ch. App.] 650) Thorpe, the lessee of an inn, brought an action against Morrell, Brumfitt and other tenants of Morrell for an injunction to restrain the defendants from blocking up or obstructing a right of way leading to the inn. The obstruction complained was caused by allowing carts and wagons to remain stationary in the passage in course of loading and unloading so as to obstruct access to the yard of the inn. The master of the rolls made a decree declaring that the plaintiffs and the defendants had an equal and reciprocal right to the *52 use of the roadway, but that none of the persons interested were entitled to place or to leave any stationary obstruction in such roadway except at such times as the use thereof was not required for any of the other persons interested therein, and he granted an injunction in accordance with this declaration. The decree and injunction were affirmed in the Court of Appeal and Lord Justice JAMES in his opinion sustained the proposition that the acts of several persons may constitute a nuisance which the court will restrain when the damage occasioned by the acts of any one if taken alone would be inappreciable. He said: "Then it was said that the plaintiff alleges an obstruction caused by several persons acting independently of each other, and does not show what share each had in causing it. It is probably impossible for a person in the plaintiff's position to shew this. Nor do I think it necessary that he should shew it. The amount of obstruction caused by any one of them might not, if it stood alone, be sufficient to give any ground of complaint, though the amount caused by them all may be a serious injury. Suppose one person leaves a wheelbarrow standing on a way that may cause no appreciable inconvenience, but if a hundred do so that may cause a serious inconvenience which a person entitled to the use of the way has a right to prevent, and it is no defense to any one person among the hundred to say that what he does causes of itself no damage to the complainant."
The case last cited goes directly to the question presented here by the express allegation in the complaint that the damages suffered by the plaintiff from the pollution of the stream by any one defendant, if there were no other source of pollution, would be merely nominal. It is argued on behalf of the appellants that the expression of Lord Justice JAMES on this question is merely a dictum; but even if that be true, it seems to me that it is a dictum which embodies a correct statement of the law. It was followed by CHITTY, J., in Lambton v. Mellish (L.R. [3 Ch. Div. 1894] 163), where the head note correctly states the decision as follows: "The acts of two or more persons may, taken together, constitute such *53 a nuisance that the Court will restrain all from doing the acts constituting the nuisance although the annoyance occasioned by the act of any one of them if taken alone would not amount to a nuisance." The nuisance there under consideration was due to the combination of musical sounds produced by two organs used in connection with certain merry-go-rounds. "If the acts of two persons," said CHITTY, J., "each being aware of what the other is doing, amount in the aggregate to what is an actionable wrong, each is amenable to the remedy against the aggregate cause of complaint." Although neither of these English cases is the decision of a court of last resort it is to be noted that the principle which they enunciate as to the liability in equity of several persons contributing to a nuisance where the conduct of one alone would not suffice to constitute an actionable wrong was adopted as correct by the Supreme Judicial Court of Maine in the case of Lockwood Co. v. Lawrence, already cited, where it is said in the opinion: "In the case at bar, it may be that the act of any one respondent alone might not be sufficient cause for any well-grounded action on the part of the complainants; but when the individual acts of the several respondents, through the combined results of these individual acts, produce appreciable and serious injury, it is a single result, not traceable perhaps to any particular one of these respondents, but a result for which they may be liable in equity as contributing to the common nuisance."
I have examined all the cases cited in behalf of the appellants and I find none which is an authority against the right of the plaintiff to maintain the present action except the case ofKeyes v. Little York Gold Washing Water Co. (
A different view was taken by the same tribunal in November, 1880, when the personnel of the court had so changed that only one judge remained in it who had participated in the previous decision. This was in the case of Hillman v. Newington
(
An examination of the Hillman case shows that the court there held, not only that an equitable action was maintainable by a lower riparian owner against a number of upper riparian owners to restrain the wrongful diversion of water, but that damages were also recoverable against such defendants in one suit. Only nominal damages ($1.00) were awarded by the judgment, however, and a later decision in California (Miller v. Highland DitchCo., supra) has modified the Hillman case to this extent, so as to hold that while several tort-feasors, not acting in concert or by unity of design, are not liable to a joint action fordamages, although the consequences of their several torts have united to produce an injury to the plaintiff, they are liable to be enjoined by decree from the continuance of their tortious acts. The latest California case in which this proposition is asserted appears to be Montecito Valley Co. v. Santa Barbara
(
Chipman v. Palmer (
The case of Sellick v. Hall (
The case of Little Schuylkill Navigation Co. v. Richards' *57 Administrator (57 Pa. St. 142) was not a suit in equity but an action at law to recover damages for throwing dirt into a stream, which was carried down and deposited upon the lands of the plaintiff. It was held that the defendants were only severally liable at law for their acts, and that damages could not be recovered against them as joint tort-feasors.
Sloggy v. Dilworth (
None of the other cases cited in the brief for the appellants bears sufficient resemblance to the case at bar to require discussion.
I think that the judgment of the Appellate Division should be affirmed, with costs, and that the first question should be answered in the affirmative and the second question in the negative, with leave to defendants to withdraw demurrer and serve answer within twenty days on payment of costs.
CULLEN, Ch. J., GRAY, EDWARD T. BARTLETT, VANN and WERNER, JJ., concur; CHASE, J., not sitting.
Judgment affirmed. *58