Doremus v. Mayor of Paterson

69 A. 225, 73 N.J. Eq. 474, 3 Buchanan 474, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 109
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedJanuary 15, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 69 A. 225 (Doremus v. Mayor of Paterson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Court of Chancery primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Doremus v. Mayor of Paterson, 69 A. 225, 73 N.J. Eq. 474, 3 Buchanan 474, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 109 (N.J. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Stevens, V. C.

This is a suit brought by twenty-five complainants against the city of Paterson. Its original object was an injunction to restrain the city from polluting the water of the Passaic river and from interfering with the enjoyment by the complainants of their rights as riparian owners. It was thought by the court of errors and appeals that in view of the delay in instituting the proceedings, and more especially in view of the magnitude of the injury that would result from prohibiting the use of the sewers to the people of Paterson, it would be inequitable to enjoin, if relief could be otherwise afforded. Justice Van Syckel said: “The relators are here asking equity and they must do equity. A substituted remedy by giving them adequate compensation for their injury would be a just disposition of the controversy.” Simmons v. Paterson, 60 N. J. Eq. (15 Dick.) 385. At the close of his opinion, the learned judge thus expressed himself: “If these complainants amend their bill or file a new bill asking for an injunction unless the city will consent to make [477]*477sucli compensation for the diminution in the value of their lands as shall be ascertained to be just, such equitable relief can be given them. A court of equity will, to effectuate justice, settle unliquidated damages.”

The complainants thereupon amended their bill and prayed for an injunction,

“unless and until the said defendant makes such compensation to your orators, respectively, for the diminution in value of their said lands and property rights as shall be ascertained by this honorable court to be just.”

The defendant has raised many objections to this proceeding. The decisions in reference to them will be found reported in 63 N. J. Eq. (18 Dick.) 606; 65 N. J. Eq. (20 Dick.) 711; 69 N. J. Eq. (3 Robb.) 175, 188; 70 N. J. Eq. (4 Robb.) 296. The only one that bears upon the present inquiry is the last. The complainants in their bill stated their damages, “calculated upon the basis of said injuries being permanent.” The defendants answered this statement so vaguely that application was made to strike it out. In passing upon the application, I said: “This statement necessitates a counterstatement by Paterson of whether it intends for an indefinite time in the future to pollute the waters of the Passaic, or whether it intends to stop polluting them within a definite period. If it intends to stop, it should so aver and it should designate a time beyond which the polluting .will cease. Thus only can the complainants’ damages be definitely ascertained, if the injury is to be computed on this basis.” An order was accordingly made striking out that part of the answer for insufficiency. On appeal taken, the order was affirmed. The defendant finally answered as follows:

“This defendant elects, rather than submit to an injunction pursuant to the complainants’ said bill of complaint, to make such compensation to the complainants, respectively, for the alleged diminution in value of their said lands and property rights in the said bill of complaint, more particularly mentioned and set forth, as shall be ascertained by this court to be just, so far as the court shall be held liable to make compensation for such diminution in value and subject to the same right, if any, to jury trial and appeal to the court of errors and appeals that defendants have in other suits in this court, and subject also to all valid or tenable defences cognizable in equity set up in this defendant’^ said original [478]*478answer. * * * Such injury or taking (if any such injury there may be) is to be temporary, and is to continue no longer than five years from the date of the filing hereof.”

It is upon this issue that proof has been taken.

Before I consider the rule of damages to be adopted and the application of the rule to the individual complainants, each of whose damages must be separately assessed, it will be conducive to a proper understanding of the case and of the difficulties involved in its solution if the general situation be explained.

Paterson contains within its corporate limits five thousand three hundred and fifty-seven acres. Of this, two thousand six hundred acres are nowr drained by sewers whose combined length is about seventy miles. These sewers are, except the Market street and the Thirty-third street sewers, chiefly constructed in the built-up, or western part of the city near the Great falls. The .river itself encloses Paterson on the west, north and east. Bending sharply to the north, after flowing over the falls, it then turns south again. The distance, by way of the river, from the falls to Dundee lake, on which all but two of the properties of complainants lie, is about four miles, if the lake is to be considered as beginning at slack water near Thirty-third street. South of the river bank and between the falls and the Straight street sewer are the head and tail races of the society for useful manufactures, and along this stretch of territory, about a mile in length, are most of the factories, both those on the raceways and those along the river bank. The so-called Dundee lake is nothing more than the Passaic river somewhat widened by the construction of the Dundee dam. This dam was rebuilt and raised in the year 1869, and is situate just above the city of Passaic. The greatest width of the lake does not exceed eleven hundred feet, and through a large part of its length of three miles is scarcely wider than the original river, that is, from three to four hundred feet.

The flow of water past Paterson varies enormously. The Cook tables for 1904 and 1905 show that for three days in July, 1904, and for two days in July, 1905, there was no flow at all. What went into the river bed on those days was sewage and diluted factory waste. On the other hand, on one day in [479]*479March, 1904, the flow was nine thousand cubic feet per second, and on four- days in March, 1905, over eight thousand. So great and sudden are the variations that averages would probably mislead. These conditions of flow have, to a certain extent, always existed, but they have, in recent years, been intensified by the withdrawal from the river at and above Little Falls of the water used by Newark, Jersey City, Paterson and other smaller towns. Jersey City is how using nearly forty millions of gallons daily, Newark about thirty-five millions and Paterson about.ten millions. Of course, these figures would not justify the inference that the flow at Paterson was just so much less. The reservoirs that have been built in the upper waters of the tributaries modify the result. In dry weather, however, the abstraction of so much water from the stream does materially lessen the flow at Paterson.

The evidence shows that if sewage is diluted by a large volume of water, it is rendered harmless, except in so far as it may contain typhoid germs, and, possibly, the germs of one or two other diseases. These germs will live in pure water for several weeks, if not months. A single water closet along a stream, if it receives the faces of a typhoid fever patient may dangerously contaminate the stream below and produce an epidemic. In the larger towns typhoid fever is nearly always present, and therefore the danger of pollution in the case of water used for drinking purposes, if taken out.of the stream below the point of infection increases as the city grows. Leaving out of view this species of infection, it is said by Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
69 A. 225, 73 N.J. Eq. 474, 3 Buchanan 474, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 109, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doremus-v-mayor-of-paterson-njch-1908.