Hess v. Kenney

61 A. 464, 69 N.J. Eq. 138, 3 Robb. 138, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 100
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 10, 1905
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 61 A. 464 (Hess v. Kenney) 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
Hess v. Kenney, 61 A. 464, 69 N.J. Eq. 138, 3 Robb. 138, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 100 (N.J. Ct. App. 1905).

Opinion

Pitney, V. 0.

The complainant, Mrs. Hess, is the owner of a house and lot, twenty-five feet front by one hundred feet deep, on the southeasterly side, or, as treated throughout the evidence, the easterly side3 of Palisade avenue, in the town of Union, in Hudson county.

It was conveyed to her and her husband by Frederick C. Hansen, by deed dated June 12th, 1895, and by the death of [139]*139her husband the title has become vested in her. It has been occupied by her ever since the conveyance.

The description of the deed, by its precise terms, does not include any part of Palisade avenue, but by the well-settled rule of law in this state it includes all the land in front of it to the centre of the street, unless there is something in the deed itself to show a contrary intention, and I find nothing in this deed to prevent the application of that rule.

At the time of its purchase there was on it a small dwelling-house, the northerly side of which was situate about twelve inches south of the northerly line of the lot.

It contained, in the basement, an ordinary sink and stationary wash-tubs, and, on the upper floors, a bath-tub and stationary wash-basins, from all of which the water was discharged into the end of a six-inch tile pipe, which passed through the north wall of the foundation of the house about twelve feet from its front, which was about ten feet from the street line and about eighteen feet from the curb line.

That six-inch tile pipe, after passing through the foundation of the house, turned abruptly toward the street, but passed on to Hie adjoining land of Mr. Hansen, complainant’s grantor, and continued on his land, on a course nearly parallel with the northerly line of complainant’s lot, until it passed the curb line, when it turned to the left and crossed the northerly line of her lot projected, diagonally, and emptied into the public sewer, in the middle of Palisade avenue, about three feet southerly from the point where her northerly line projected reached the centre of the street.

The result is, as shown by a map produced by complainant, as well as by one produced by defendant, that the six-inch sewer connection or conduit from complainant’s house, when she purchased it, was located at its commencement on complainant’s land, passed immediately on to Mr. Hansen’s lot adjoining on the north, continued on that for a distance of about thirty-five feet, then passed on to the complainant’s land, and continued thereon for a distance of about seven feet, until it reached the public sewer.

Complainant’s lot was numbered 128 on a dedicatory plot of [140]*140land. The lot next north of it was numbered 129 and was owned by complainant’s grantor, Mr. Hansen.

Fo mention is made in complainant’s deed of this drain or sewer connection, but the conveyance contains the usual clause— “ways, waters, profits, privileges and advantages, with the appurtenances,” &c.

Lot 129 is vacant; but at the date of the conveyance to the complainant there, was standing upon it a small one-story office building, twelve feet front and about fifteen feet deep, close to the street and on the northerly side of the lot, so that it was about twelve feet distant from complainant’s house.

The deed contains no reservations on the part of the grantor, Hansen. At some time, whether prior or subsequent to complainant’s conveyance does not appear, the defendants, Kenney and Morris, became the owners of lot 130, facing on Palisade avenue, being the lot next but one to complainant’s on the north, upon which is and has for several 3rears been erected a two-family dwelling-house. This house at one time had a sewage connection with the public sewer in Columbia street, which crosses Palisade avenue at right angles twenty-five feet north of lot Fo. 130, owned by. defendants.

This sewer connection became unserviceable, and the defendants, with a view of making a connection with what ma3r be properly termed complainant’s sewer conduit, purchased of Mr. Hansen lot 129, from which the small office building had been removed.

Defendants then proceeded to lay a four-inch tile drain from their house on lot 130 across lot 129, and connected the same with the ■ complainant’s sewer at the point where it left complainant’s house.

This fact was disputed at the hearing, and it was asserted by the defendants, and evidence was adduced to support that assertion, that a connection had been previously made by Mr. Hansen from the rear of the small office building to the complainant’s sewer at the point just mentioned, but the counter-evidence of the complainant clearly disproved this assertion, and the very map produced by the defendants showed a sewer pipe running directly from their building diagonally across the inter[141]*141vening lot to complainant’s sewer, and so located as to disprove the notion that it ever was used in connection with the small office building before referred to.

(At the hearing, I gave my reasons orally for finding this question of fact in favor of the complainant.)

Complainant then called in her sons, grown men, and they, or one of them, with the assistance of workmen, working from the inside, dug a hole through the foundation of her house, disconnected defendants’ pipe, which was of four-inch diameter, from her pipe, effectually stopped the end of it, repaired the hole which defendants had made in her pipe and replaced the mason work of her foundation which had been removed.

Defendants then made a second aperture in complainant’s pipe a few feet farther towards the street from the first aperture, and entirely on their own land, and inserted the end of their pipe therein. Complainant thereon promptly filed her bill for relief, setting up the facts and praying an injunction against the defendants continuing the connection they have made, and continuing to drain sewage from their house into the complainant’s sewer.

One other matter of fact should be stated. Complainant alleges, and the weight of the evidence sustains her allegation, that since these disturbances of her sewer conduit the water from her appliances does not run off so freely as it did before. This result I attribute, not to an overworking of the sewer, which, in my judgment, is ample in size, if it has proper declivity, to carry the sewage from many houses, but to the circumstance that the connection was improperly made by making an aperture in the side of the pipe and inserting the end of the connecting pipe, thereby creating an obstruction. The connection should have been made by inserting in the main line a Y branch piece, which produces no obstruction.

The question presented by these facts is, to what remedy, if any, is the complainant entitled.

There can be no doubt, under the authorities (several of which are collected in Toothe v. Bryce, 50 N. J. Eq. (5 Dick.) 589, and especially Nicholas v. Chamberlain, Cro. Jac. 121 (1606), and Pyer v. Carter, 1 Hurlst. & N. 916 (1857); Thayer v. Payne, [142]*1422 Cush. 327), that the conveyance by Hansen, who was then the owner of lot 129, to complainant of her lot, carried with it, as an appurtenant, the right to use the. tile drain in question for the conveyance of sewage from her house to the main sewer in the centre of the street.

The question argued at the hearing was whether that use was exclusive.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
61 A. 464, 69 N.J. Eq. 138, 3 Robb. 138, 1905 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 100, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hess-v-kenney-njch-1905.