Driscoll v. American Hide & Leather Co.

102 Misc. 612
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 15, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 102 Misc. 612 (Driscoll v. American Hide & Leather Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Driscoll v. American Hide & Leather Co., 102 Misc. 612 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1918).

Opinion

Kellogg, J.

These actions are brought to procure injunctions restraining the pollution of the Kayaderosseras creek, in the county of Saratoga, and for damages. The pollution complained of is attributed to the sewage effluent discharged from the sewage disposal plant of the village of Ballston Spa. This sewage discharge consists of about one million gallons a day, consisting of about one-half domestic sewage, and one-half tannery effluent received by the village sewers from the mill of the American Hide and Leather Company. That mill in the course of a year receives about 300,000 hides, which it transforms into leather. Among other trade wastes from the mill are scrapings of flesh, hairs, lime, and tan bark liquor. All of this waste is screened before entering the village sewers, and is chlorinated on its journey to the sewage disposal plant. At this plant the combined tannery and domestic sewage is subjected to bacterial action in septic tanks, and oxidation upon contact beds of broken stone, before its discharge into the river. The plaintiffs are various owners and occupants of farm land along the stream below the point of sewer discharge from the disposal plant. They complain of loss of rental value, and of a large number of cattle and horses through the disease known as anthrax, the disease being attributed to bacteria from the foreign hides which are tanned at the mill of the American Hide and Leather Company.

Ordinarily, the very nature of the effluent from the tannery and the village sewers would be sufficient to establish pollution, and determine its source. Because of the screening and chlorination at the tannery, and the septic and oxidizing treatment at the disposal plant, no such presumption can arise from the mere fact that the discharge is sewage. This is particularly true for the reason that upon this stream above the point of sewage discharge there have been situate for [614]*614many years nine or ten paper mills which have been more or less continuously in operation. These mills have discharged their trade wastes, consisting of wood, wood fibre, and in some instances of sulphurous acid, into this stream.

As illustrating the need of distinguishing between polluting solids to be found in the stream, and the fallacy of the argument that because there is pollution these defendants, from the very nature of their effluent, must have caused it, there may be instanced the case of Whalen v. Union Bag & Paper Co., 208 N. Y. 1. In that case a sulphide mill, representing an investment of more than $1,000,000, was restrained from polluting the Kayaderosseras by discharging its mill effluent into the stream at a point upstream from these defendants. As a result that mill has been shut down ever since the year 1913.

Many lay witnesses were called by the plaintiff to establish the source of pollution to be the effluent of these defendants. They have sought to identify polluting solids, as fleshings, and hairs, and thus to involve the tannery; they have ascribed a tan bark color to the stream, and sensed a smell of decaying organic matter rising from its waters, in furtherance of the claim'that its cause was mill and village sewage. Briefly their testimony is as follows:

Driscoll saw particles floating as big as the end of a finger, kind of a slimy, greasy moss with hair in it.

Slade said the water was black, thick, heavy, full of hair.

Seaman did not identify what he found as fleshings, but in the dirt along the edge of the stream saw little hairs, some white, some dark, some red.

DuBois identified no fleshings, but saw a scum along the bank with hairs in it, some dark, some light. [615]*615He also sensed an odor so strong that he had to close the windows of his house.

Rowley could identify no fleshings, but observed the bed was covered with slime, and when he held a bush in the stream it gathered filaments, some wood fibres, some hair, but since the Union Bag mill closed there was no smell of putrefaction.

Ramsdill saw no fleshings and identified no hairs, but observed slime in the water, and detected an odor like grease, like a tannery, and saw slimy stuff gathered on the bushes.

Ramsdill said when the Union Bag mill was running the water had a yellow milky cast, but now it was black and muddy.

Driscoll on the contrary found the water not quite so dark since that mill shut down.

Jones found small particles, half an inch long, three-quarters of an inch, a quarter of an inch, running through the creek, and a coating on the grass with hairs in it. He noticed an odor from the stream like that of a tannery.

Eddy found the water full of a substance which kept turning over and over, some days an inch in diameter, and some days smaller, with lots of white particles mixed through it. He found hairs or a small substance on the bushes, but noticed that the scum on the meadows had disappeared since the sulphide mill closed down.

All of these witnesses, except Jones, are riparian owners or dwellers upon the creek, and many of them have claims against these defendants.

On the other hand the witnesses Mitchell, Streever, Watkins and Wood found no fleshings or hair in the stream. Streever thought he had found hair, but discovered it to be wood fibre.

The same witnesses and Eddy, Parks and Pearse [616]*616discovered no putrescent odor. Streever sensed a swamp smell at the outlet of the creek.

Many of the witnesses found the water dark because of the darkness of the river bed, but when taken from the stream it was as light as any water. Some of them drank the water. Some found it more palatable than well water.

A large number of fishermen were called who had fished the stream within the last few years, and made large catches of perch, pike and bass. Some had been caught directly opposite the discharging pipes of the sewage plant. The testimony was given as establishing the presence of free oxygen in the stream, a condition hostile to putrefaction and contradictory thereof.

This is substantially a summary of all the lay testimony upon the subject. Much of it relates to a period when the tannery effluent was unscreened and unchlorinated, and the presence of fleshings and hairs in the stream was thus rendered possible. It does not illumine the present situation, and while it may have some bearing upon the question of damages it has little if any upon the issuance of an injunction.

On behalf of the plaintiffs, Professor Anthony and a chemist named Ant took samples of the sewage effluent.

Ant found sample C, raw sewage, high in organic matter. It was of a dark reddish brown nature, had a putrid odor, and there were pieces of material which would look a good deal like fleshings. The oxygen was high and the bacterial count somewhat low.

He found sample D, treated effluent, somewhat improved in suspended solids, and the material was turned from a reddish brown color to a very black.

He found the creek water above the plant normal, and two miles below somewhat high in organic matter with an increase of fifty per cent of chlorine.

[617]*617At this time the tannery effluent was treated with hypochlorite of lime. This had an oxidizing or burning effect upon ‘the solids. It released oxygen which was hostile to the anaerobic bacteria.

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Bluebook (online)
102 Misc. 612, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/driscoll-v-american-hide-leather-co-nysupct-1918.