Mayor of Jersey City v. Jersey City Water Supply Co.

105 A. 494, 90 N.J. Eq. 14, 5 Stock. 14, 1918 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 14
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedNovember 7, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 105 A. 494 (Mayor of Jersey City v. Jersey City Water Supply 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
Mayor of Jersey City v. Jersey City Water Supply Co., 105 A. 494, 90 N.J. Eq. 14, 5 Stock. 14, 1918 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 14 (N.J. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Stevens, V. C.

This is an application to file a bill of review.

On August 1st, 1905, Jersey City filed its bill against Patrick H. Elynn and the Jersey City Water Supply Company praying that they might be decreed to convey to it the water works conducted bj' them upon payment of such part of the consideration as might be ascertained to be due. A decree directing a conveyance was made in accordance with the opinion reported in 74 N. J. Eq. 104 (affirmed with a slight modification, 76 N. J. Eq. 607). There was a reference to the late Chancellor Magie, as master, and his findings were approved in 79 N. J. Eq. 212.

Pursuant to the decrees made, the works were transferred and delivered to Jersey City in 1911, and Jersey City paid so much of the contract price as was found to be then due. It has continued to operate and use the works ever since. It now applies for permission to file a bill of review on the ground of newly-discovered evidence. This evidence is that since the trial, bacteriologists have discovered'that- a bacillus known as B. Welchii, if present in water in considerable numbers, is productive of intestinal disorders; that this bacillus has recently been found in the Jersey City water, and that it is probable that being present now, it was present in 1911 when the works were delivered to Jersey City. The relief sought is a money decree for a sum representing the cost of intercepting sewers.

The affidavits filed show that since 1911 conditions have changed for the worse, and that there is greater pollution in the Roekaway river now than there was then. The deterioration in the quality of the water appears to have been due to the gradual increase of population on the watershed and to the fact that the gravelly soil underlying Dover, and perhaps other smaller towns, has become so permeated with polluted matter [16]*16that it is no longer capable of acting as a filter, and that, consequently, the water used by the inhabitants and the contents of cesspools find their way into the river unpurified.

The principal question is whether assuming complainant’s affidavits to state the facts correctly, they show a breach of contract on the part of the contractor. His contract was “to construct a new system of water works for Jersey City and to supply said city therefrom with pure and wholesome water,” * * * the water to be furnished to be “pure and wholesome for drinking and domestic purposes.” In the opinion filed in Jersey City v. Flynn, 74 N. J. Eq. 104, it was said: “Contracts must have a reasonable construction and must be read in the light of the surrounding circumstances. The evidence shows that before the contract in question was executed, the city authorities visited the watershed and actually saw what the conditions were. They knew that the river flowed through a thickly populated region and that some pollution at the points,where the population was thickest was inevitable. I think it is quite plain that the contention of counsel for the city that because it is provided that the supply is to be free from pollution, and because the river is a part of that supply, therefore the river must be free from pollution from its source to the point where it flows into the Boonton reservoir is untenable. In view of the evidence the city would be demanding an impossibility. I think the contract means that tire supply at the time it reaches Jersey City and is delivered into the reservoir or pipes there must be free from pollution. Eor example, if after the water should leave the Boonton reservoir, but partially purified, it should be subjected to the action of a filter plant, established at any point along the route, and be there freed from pollution, I have no doubt tire terms of the contract would be fully complied with.”

■ Further on I say (at p. 138) : “There is one other remark that, in order to avoid misapprehension, I wish to make before considering the evidence.- The company is not bound to provide against that which may arise in the future; in other words, against future conditions. Jersey City will have to provide against them, as occasion may require. For example, if the present population of the watershed does not create a situation [17]*17calling for the installation of a filter plant, the- company is - not obliged to furnish it, merely because when the population increases such a plant may be a necessity.”

These quotations indicate the rule to be applied on this application.

It was strenuously contended on behalf of the contractor that the newly-discovered evidence must be evidence of fact and not of opinion; and that evidence of opinion based on discoveries made since the trial is more objectionable than ordinary opinion evidence. I should be unwilling now to hold that such opinion evidence might not, under some circumstances, be ground for a new trial. I do not think the point calls for decision. The fundamental question is whether the affidavits show that the contractor has failed to perform his contract. The tests, chemical and'bacteriological, in use when the works were delivered indicated that the water was pure and wholesome, after subjection to the treatment approved by the late Chancellor Magie. But if it stood these tests then, and the test of actual user beside, it was pure and wholesome within the meaning of the contract. It is absurd to suppose that the parties contracted for such water only as would stand the tests that might- be applied by future generations, in the light of future discoveries. The contract was to be completely performed at a time designated. It was the standards of the time and not the standards of the future that were to determine whether full performance hád been made. The contract was not to furnish water free from every mineral and other impurity, but only from such impurities as were then regarded as detrimental to health. Water absolutely pure is to be had only in the laboratory. If the court found, as it did, that the water was pure and wholesome, according to the tests then known, and if it adjudged performance on that basis, and if the contractor delivered the works on that basis, there is no ground for asserting that he did not discharge his contract obligations.

There is nothing in the proof to indicate that the water was not pure and wholesome according to the then opinion. The case was tried by able counsel with the greatest care and elaboration. It is not pretended that any witness speaking only with [18]*18reference to the then scientific knowledge on the subject could have testified in such a way as to have changed the result. It is not impossible that bacteriologists will, in the future, as counsel suggest, discover, in addition to the B. Welcldi, other germs or impurities that communicate disease — impurities that may have to be eliminated before, in the estimation of the scientific opinion of coming times, the water is entirely fit to drink; but is the contract to remain open until the last discoveiy is made ?

There is another objection io the relief sought which seems to me to be fatal. It is a well-known rule that, in the language of Chief-Justice Depue, in Colton v. Depew, 60 N. J. Eq. 454 “the statutes of limitation do not apply to courts of equity, for the reason that the words of the statute apply only to }3articular legal remedies, but proceedings in equity lo enforce a legal right are within the spirit and meaning of the statutes and have always been so considered.”

Now, what is the right sought in this case. Plainfy, a legal right.

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Bluebook (online)
105 A. 494, 90 N.J. Eq. 14, 5 Stock. 14, 1918 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 14, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-jersey-city-v-jersey-city-water-supply-co-njch-1918.