74 N.J. Eq. 647 | New York Court of Chancery | 1908
During the hearing and upon the argument the defendant’s counsel laid much stress upon the manner in which the complainant had set out the measure and extent of its rights in the stream, holding that it had limited them by claiming merely that it was entitled to have the waters of the stream flow through and past its premises unimpaired in quantity and in quality except by the reasonable and lawful use of the same by the upper
In Acquackanonk Water Co. v. Watson, 29 N. J. Eq. (2 Stew.) 366 (1878), an attempt was made by a private water company to take water from a stream which supplied the defendant’s bleachery, as a source of water-supply for the city of Passaic, it undertaking to furnish to the complainant another source of supply from another stream. The court (Honorable Amzi Dodd,
An appreciable discharge, into a natural water course, of any noisome substance is within the prohibition of the law. In the case at bar the pollution consisted of placing in the stream large quantities of waste cotton fibre, the particles of which varied in length from onc-thirty-second to three-eighths of an inch and at times the deposit was in such quantities as to be actually visible to the eye in the discoloration of the water of the canal and river and in the deposit of quantities of the same material on the ground forming the banks and beds of these waterways. And at other times it was deposited in such large quantities as to be visible in the tail-race and in the stream in floating flocks or lumps, and at other times it was deposited in large quantities upon the screens and other apparatus and devices which were placed by the complainant in the canal for the pur
Pending the suit the defendant introduced several devices to prevent the pollution of the stream bj its waste water charged with cotton fibre, and in its answer tenders to the complainant the issue whether these devices are efficient. Their efficiency is denied by the amended bill. The first device that was installed, after trials of apparatus which' was of no advantage whatever, was a machine called a saveall machine. This seems not to have been sufficient in itself to stop the pollution of the stream, and subsequently large settling basins were constructed into which the waste water from the paper mill was conducted, the design being that the waste water should remain in the settling basins for a sufficient length of time to allow the fibrous matter to precipitate. While the complainant vigorously denies the efficiency of this device, it does appear that there has not been so much cause of complaint as there was before they were constructed, and that the efforts of the defendant, aided by those of the complainant, have to an extent stopped the introduction of the cotton fibre into the bleachery of the complainant; but if the law is as it is above stated there seems to be no reason why the complainant should be put to any expense whatever in fending against the polluting material in the stream and canal, or be under an obligation to make any suggestions or give any advice as to proper methods to be adopted. If it is entitled to have the water come to it in an unpolluted condition, it ought not to be compelled to use any precautions to prevent the polluting material from entering
The claim made by the defendant that the complainant’s remedy for the injury is by common law action for damages is effectually disposed of by the Beach Case.
Lastly, the defendant claims that inasmuch as its mill is an ancient mill and was severed from the common ownership by the common proprietor at an earlier date than the conveyance by him
Kingsland might have reserved a right which would have created an easement in favor of the upper proprietor, but it cannot be said that the situation now in the present state of affairs is governed by the law of easements. A man can have no easement in his own lands. The owner of the Kingsland paper mill could not have an easement in the property now owned by the complainant as long as the title was in himself. There is no prescriptive right claimed, nor, indeed, is there any evidence of a prescriptive right before the court.
The case differs from McConnell v. American Bronze Powder Co., 41 N. J. Eq. (14 Stew.) 449; affirmed, 44 N. J. Eq. (17 Stew.) 603. There the nuisance complained of was the raising
I will advise a decree declaring that the complainant has a right to have the water of the river and its subsidiary waterway, the canal, flow to and upon the premises in its natural and unpolluted state and condition, and that as to the pollution by the defendant, it be restrained from further discharging into the waters of the river waste material or foreign substance of any kind calculated to pollute or contaminate the waters thereof.