Kroecker v. Camden Coke Co.

88 A. 955, 82 N.J. Eq. 373, 12 Buchanan 373, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 24
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 31, 1913
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 88 A. 955 (Kroecker v. Camden Coke Co.) 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
Kroecker v. Camden Coke Co., 88 A. 955, 82 N.J. Eq. 373, 12 Buchanan 373, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 24 (N.J. Ct. App. 1913).

Opinion

Walker, Chancellor.

This is a bill filed by George P. Nroecker and George W. Tucker, of the city of Camden, as complainants, on behalf of themselves and numerous other residents and property owners of said city, among whom are those whose affidavits are annexed to the [375]*375bill, to enjoin the defendant, the Camden Coke Company, from operating its works in said city in such a manner as to produce smoke, cinders, gases, soot, dirt, tar, odors and vapors offensive and injurious to the health and comfort of the complainants and their families, and to the depreciation of their real estate.

The complainant George P. Kroeeker, before and at the time of the committing of the grievances in the bill mentioned was, and still is, the owner and occupier of a hotel and saloon with a dwelling-house attached, on the easterly side of Front street, in the city of Camden, where he carried on the business of a hotel and saloon keeper. He was also the owner of several other dwelling-houses in the same immediate neighborhood. The complainant George W. Tucker, and the other complainants, were also then owners or occupiers of houses and lands in the same immediate neighborhood. The defendant, the Camden Coke Company, was incorporated for the purpose of carrying on the business of the manufacturing and selling of coke, made from bituminous coal, by the Otto-Hoffman coke oven process, or otherwise, and the sale of all other by-products thereof, such as tar, ammonia and gas, and then carried on the business at a manufactory in a more or less densely peopled section of. the citjr, situate on the westerly side of Front street, directly opposite the premises of the complainant George P. Kroeeker, on a tract of land owned by the defendant, abutting on Front street, bounded by the DelaAvare river, Walnut street, Front street and the property of the Atlantic City Railroad Company, comprising an area of upwards of a city block.

The main issues raised by the pleadings are:

Whether or not before, and at the time of the filing of the bill, the defendant caused to issue and proceed from its manufacturing plant offensive, noxious, unwholesome smoke, cinders, gases, soot, dirt, tar, odors and vapors, which spread and diffused themselves into, over and upon the complainants’ premises, houses, places of business and lands, and impregnated and corrupted the air in and about the same, and settled and were deposited in and upon the said premises, respectively; and caused such loud noises to issue and proceed therefrom as to destroy their sleep.

[376]*376The plant of the defendant company is 'used for the making of foundry and domestic coke, and gas for the supply of Camden and thirty-three other muncipalities named in the answer, scattered over a considerable portion of this state extending as far south as Woodbury, and as far north as Plainfield and Baritan, and also in manufacturing and selling the by-products mentioned.

The plant at first consisted of one hundred, but afterwards was increased to one hundred and fifty, Otto-Hoffman bj^-product coke ovens, ■ the roofs of which are on a level with the second stories of the surrounding houses, together with the necessary apparatus for charging the ovens with coal, and discharging them, consisting of three machines commonly called "pushers,” and three machines commonly called “larries” for carrying the coal; also in conjunction with these ovens there is a coal storage bin, called a Berquist coal bunker, of a capacity of fifteen hundred tons, with the necessary coal handling apparatus for delivering the coal into the bunker' either from the boats which bring it, or from the ground, as the case may be; and the bunker is provided with a crusher for crushing the lumps of coal and eoke.

The coal when brought to the plant is unloaded from tire boats by means of what is known as the clam-automatic bucket, having a capacity of a ton and a half, which drops into the boat, taires the coal up automatically, and hoists it up and delivers it into the bunker or on to a coal storage pile near the river, and is operated by steam power; and in the same manner the coal is loaded from the storage pile into the bunker and unloaded into the larries when required for the ovens; and likewise in the same manner the coke is loaded into the bunker and discharged therefrom on lie coke storage pile bordering on Front street.

The method of operating the ovens is as follows:

The coal is taken from the coal bunker into a larry, being a mechanical carrier, and is transported over the tops of the ovens to the ovens which it is desired to charge. Each of these ovens is fitted with six caps or charging holes, and there are six corresponding outlets in the larry; the larry being brought over the oven to be charged, the caps are removed and the coal is dis[377]*377charged into the oven by means of the operator on the larry raising a lever opening all six shoots at one time. The average charge of these ovens is about seven and three-tenths tons of coal. As soon as the coal is charged into the oven a mechanical leveling machine is operated from the side to level the coal in the oven.

During the time these caps are removed and the oven is being charged and leveled, some of the resulting gas, of necessity, is dissipated in the air.

The coal, when once placed in these ovens, is kept there for at least twenty-four hours, and during all that time no gas can escape into the atmosphere. The process of charging and leveling an oven consumes, on an average, about live minutes, but it is not done in each oven of tener than once in twenty-four hours.

In the manufacture of such gas at this plant there is used, on an average, about nine hundred tons of bituminous coal each day, and the plant is in continuous operation, day and night, every day in the year.

Upon the plant there is stored considerable bituminous coal in greater or less quantities, but at no time exceeding more than fourteen days’ supply, which would be about twelve thousand six hunderd tons.

This coke plant was started in operation in the year of 1903 and has been in continuous operation ever since.

The courts of this state have frequently exercised their restraining power against persons so using their property as- unreasonably to interfere with the property and personal-rights of others, so that the principles of law and equity which must govern this ease have been fully considered and are well settled.

In the case of Cleveland v. Citizens Gas Light Co., 20 N. J. Eq. (5 C. E. Gr.) 201, a suit for injunction to restrain the defendants from erecting or carrying on their gas works, Chancellor Zabriskie (on p. 205) declared the principle to be that:

“Any business, however lawful, which causes annoyances that materially interfere with the ordinary comfort, physically, of human existence, is a nuisance that should be restrained; and smoke, noise, and bad odors, even when not injurious to health, may render a dwelling so uncomfortable as to drive from it [378]*378any one not compelled by poverty to remain. Unpleasant odors, from the very constitution of our nature, render us uncomfortable, and when continued or repeated, make life uncomfortable. To live comfortably is the chief and most reasonable object of men in acquiring property as the means of attaining it; and any interference with our neighbor in the comfortable enjoyment of life is a wrong which the law' will redress.

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Bluebook (online)
88 A. 955, 82 N.J. Eq. 373, 12 Buchanan 373, 1913 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 24, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kroecker-v-camden-coke-co-njch-1913.