Lees v. Cohoes Motor Car Co.

122 Misc. 373
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 122 Misc. 373 (Lees v. Cohoes Motor Car 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
Lees v. Cohoes Motor Car Co., 122 Misc. 373 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1924).

Opinion

Nichols, J.

The plaintiff, who is a resident and freeholder of the city of Cohoes, brings this action for an injunction and damages [375]*375against the defendant Cohoes Motor Car Company, Inc., and to restrain said defendant from erecting and maintaining a gasoline storage tank in a certain specified location in said city, of a capacity of more than 1,000 gallons, and against the mayor and the board of estimate and apportionment of said city restraining them from permitting the said Cohoes Motor Car Company, Inc., to construct and maintain said tank on said premises.

The complaint does not allege the taxable assessment of. the plaintiff’s property, although the affidavits filed by the defendant Cohoes Motor Car Company allege that the assessment is $1,000.

This is not, therefore, a taxpayer’s action which can now be maintained only under the provisions of article 4 of the General Municipal Law and such an action can only be maintained where the plaintiff is assessed for $1,000 or more; nor can it be maintained as a taxpayer’s action to abate a nuisance under the provisions of section 343-b of the Public Health Law, which provides for actions to abate nuisances by the practice of assignation or prostitution. The complaint seeks injunctive relief against a private nuisance. There is no allegation in the complaint that the defendant is not responsible or that the plaintiff will suffer great and irreparable damage unless the injunction is granted. In the 7th folio of the complaint, the plaintiff, after alleging that the tank is a nuisance and dangerous to lives of persons occupying buildings adjacent to said tank, says that it tends to substantially depreciate the value of real property of this plaintiff and others similarly situated.” In the 6th folio the plaintiff alleges that the tank is located a matter of four hundred feet from plaintiff’s premises, there being no allegation that it is adjacent thereto; while in the 9th folio the plaintiff says: the threatened erection of such gasoline tank * * * has lessened the market and rental value of plaintiff’s property * * * and by reason of said nuisance the plaintiff will be damaged in the sum of $2000.00 as nearly as he can estimate the same.”

This is insufficient of itself for injunctive relief. The Appellate Division in Howley v. Francis Press, 127 App. Div. 646, says: But the papers upon which the injunction was granted do not show any ground for injunctive relief. There is no allegation that the defendant is insolvent and unable to respond in damages, or that the property threatened to be sold does not have an ascertainable value.”

In Brass v. Rathbone, 153 N. Y. 435, 442, the court says: “ The mere allegation of great and irreparable injury apprehended or threatened, which is not supported by facts or circumstances tending to justify it, is clearly insufficient. Therefore, the com[376]*376plaint does not show that the plaintiffs were entitled to relief by injunction,” citing McHenry v. Jewett, 90 N. Y. 58, 62.

Owing to the fact that the plaintiff, to a certain extent, attempts to predicate his action upon the action of the common council of the city of Cohoes; and owing to the further fact that the defendant motor car company has expended large sums of money in installing the tank as, it claims, the result of the action of the common council, I am impelled, even if I am compelled to vacate the temporary restraining order heretofore granted, to discuss the reasons why the plaintiff should not have injunctive relief in this action, even if he applied to and obtained leave of the court to amend his complaint with reference to the necessary allegations for such relief; and why he should not obtain such relief, even assuming his complaint contained the necessary allegations therefor.

On November 15, 1923, the common council of the city of Cohoes amended an existing ordinance of the city so that section 3 thereof reads as follows:

“ § III. Kerosene, gasoline, naphtha and other products of petroleum used for heat, light or power shall not be stored, manufactured or kept on sale within the limits of the city of Cohoes, in any building, container, receptacle or other structure, or in any group of buildings, containers, receptacles, or other structures, in excess of one thousand gallons except in isolated and uninhabited portions or sections of the city where said products may be stored with the written permission of the Board of Estimate and Apportionment only after satisfactory proof is furnished to said Board that the fives and property of persons or corporations will not be endangered.”

The board of estimate and apportionment thereafter, and on the 7th day of December, 1923, granted a permit to the defendant, Cohoes Motor Car Company, Inc., to install a gasoline storage tank of the capacity of 15,000 gallons on certain premises known as the “Y” situate immediately west of the viaduct connecting Division street on the north and Garner street on the south, subject to certain conditions, one of which was that the tank should be buried five feet under ground, protected by a wire fence and that the ground within fifty feet of the tank should be covered with cinders and all grass and weeds removed and thus forever maintained, and that the defendant motor car company should be liable and pay all damages that may occur to the city of Cohoes or to individuals as a result of the maintenance and operation of said tank; that the permit was not to be assigned; and that on these conditions, restrictions and requirements, the permit shall remain in full force and effect forever. This permit and the con- [377]*377• ditions therein were accepted by the defendant motor car company and it proceeded to commence the installation of the tank.

After the commencement of the installation of said gasoline tank, and on December 16, 1923, said tank was destroyed by the felonious discharge of a quantity of dynamite therein, there being no gasoline contained therein. Thereafter, the defendant motor car company purchased a new gasoline tank of the same capacity. The said tank and its installation cost approximately $1,500. In addition thereto, there were many other items of expenses incurred by the defendant motor ear company, some of them perhaps before the permit was granted, although the record is silent on that point, but aggregating many thousands of dollars.

The summons in this action is dated December 29,1923, on which date the complaint was verified; and on the same day the restraining order was granted. On January 15, 1924, the common council adopted a resolution of which the 3d subdivision reads as follows:

§ III. Kerosene, gasoline, naphtha used for heat, light or power shall not be stored, manufactured or kept on sale within the limits of the city of Cohoes, in any building, container or receptacles or other structures, or in any group of buildings, containers or receptacles, or other structures, in excess of One Thousand Gallons, except in isolated or uninhabited portions or sections of the city, and at least One Thousand Feet from dwelling houses where people live and sleep, where such products may be stored with the written permission of the Common Council only after satisfactory proof is furnished to said Common Council that said building or buildings, containers or receptacles or other structures are at least one thousand feet from dwelling houses where people five and sleep and that the lives and property of persons or corporations will not be endangered.”

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
122 Misc. 373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lees-v-cohoes-motor-car-co-nysupct-1924.