Mayor of Paterson v. East Jersey Water Co.

70 A. 472, 74 N.J. Eq. 49, 4 Buchanan 49, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 72
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedMay 14, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 70 A. 472 (Mayor of Paterson v. East Jersey Water 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 Paterson v. East Jersey Water Co., 70 A. 472, 74 N.J. Eq. 49, 4 Buchanan 49, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 72 (N.J. Ct. App. 1908).

Opinion

Emery, V. C.

(after stating the facts as above).

Taking up the first branch of the case, that relating to complainant’s status as riparian owner, the first question, whether complainant’s deeds make it such owner, and the second, whether actual damage must be proved to establish the right of action, a preliminary question as to the necessity of settlement of title at law is proper to be considered. Had the defendant by its answer raised the question of such preliminary settlement of the question of legal title at law, that course might, perhaps, have been directed at the hearing, if the proofs disclosed such dispute in reference to the facts on which the question of the nature of the legal title depended as to either require a settlement by a jury or entitle the defendant to such trial. But, on the whole-proofs as presented, the question of the nature'of complainant’s title as riparian owner, and the impairment of its right by diversion for purposes of sale, arises, I think, as a question of law upon facts not disputed, and upon the construction of the deeds conveying title to complainant and claimed to constitute it a riparian owner. Assuming that the complainant, under its deeds and the undisputed facts, is, as riparian owner, entitled to protection as such against unlawful diversion, the further question,, whether the unlawfulness of the diversion depends upon proof of actual, perceptible damage, if the diversion is made perma-' nently and'for purposes of sale, is a question the solution of which depends, as I think, on decisions of our own courts which control it, and therefore that complainant, as a preliminary condition for equitable relief, should not be required to bring a suit [59]*59at law merely for the purpose of reaffirming in a suit, inter partes, a right already settled as matter of general law. This matter of procedure requiring settlement of title at law was considered by me at length in Oppenheim v. Brand, referred to in Oppenheim v. Loftus, 50 Atl. Rep. 795 (1901).

The third question, that of damage proved, involves the extent and efféct of the diversion on complainant’s lands along the river, and also on the river itself, as a solvent for the sewage of the city, a long and expensive inquiry into the conditions of the river for a period of years, and it was to this point that' the voluminous evidence upon both sides was mainly directed. This thorough investigation of the facts upon both sides was not only contemplated and concurred' in by both parties, but the cause, on all these points involving questions of legal title, has been fully argued and submitted by counsel without any objection or request that the question of legal right be settled at law. Under these circumstances the rule in reference to cases where the objection is not raised by the answer, as laid, down by Vice-Chancellor Reed in Coast Company v. Spring Lake, 56 N. J. Eq. (11 Dick.) 615, 626, 627 (1898); affirmed on appeal, 58 N. J. Eq. (13 Dick.) 586 (1899), should be applied, and in the absence,, of any objection, either at the answer or on the hearing, the primary question of legal title or right should be examined and determined by this court. I proceed, therefore, with the first inquiry, relating to complainant’s standing as riparian owner. Such standing as to any of the lots owned by it is denied, and, as different questions arise in respect to the complainant’s title to each of the three tracts of land, these will be taken up separately..

The tract known as “West Side Park” is located on the north bank of the river about three-eighths of a mile above the Great Falls at Paterson, contains about thirty acres, and has a frontage on the river of about two thousand five hundred and fifty feet. This frontage, however, is not continuous, the park being composed of two tracts of land, separated by a stream called “Old-ham brook,” which flows into the Passaic vabove the falls and between the two tracts. The tract, below the brook and towards the falls, constitutes the main portion of the park, and it is connected with the smaller tract across the brook by a bridge. This [60]*60smaller or upper tract also borders on the river. The location of the park tracts with reference to Oldham brook and the river is important with reference to an arbitrary boundary line of high water, fixed'by the conveyance to the city as one of the boundary lines of its lands. Below these lands, conveyed for a park, the Society for Useful Manufactures had erected a dam, just above the brink of the Great Falls, for the purpose of supplying water for manufacturing purposes. This society appears to have originally owned the whole property at this locality, including the bed of the river, and also the lands above, including the park lands of complainant. This fact, although not formally proved, was stated by counsel and accepted without objection, and, in view of the litigations in this court in which this ownership was shown, may properly be accepted, in the litigation between these parties, as a historical fact of general public interest relating to the rights in the river at this locality. Society, &c., v. Morris Canal Co., 1 N. J. Eq. (1 Sax.) 157; 21 Am. Dec. 41 (1830). The dam extended across the river and flowed the lands above, and the Society for Useful Manufactures, in parting with title to these lands adjoining the river, fixed their boundary line with reference to the height of water at the dam. The West Side Park lands were part of these lands originally belonging to the Society for Useful Manufactures, and were conveyed to the city by a corporation called the Society’s Land Company, which took over lands of the Society for Useful Manufactures. The conveyance to complainant describes the first (or large) tract as running, for its first course, from the corner of Totowa and Preakness avenue along the southwesterly line of Preakness avenue,

“to the high-water mark on the northwesterly side of the Passaic river; thence (2) southwesterly, westerly, and northwesterly along said high-water mark of said river and of Oldham brook their several courses to the southeasterly line of Totowa avenue.”

From this point the description follows the line inland and away from the brook several courses to the beginning, and this part of the description has no bearing on the questions raised. The second tract (across Oldham brook and on the west side of it) is described as follows:

[61]*61“All that tract of land bounded on the east by high-water mark of the Oldham brook; on the north by Totowa avenue; on the west by lands of the estate of Richard Yan Houten, deceased; on the south by high-water mark of the Passaic river.”

From these tracts was made an exception, followed by a definition of what line was intended by high-water mark in the description, and in the following words:

“Excepting, however, from the said tracts, and not conveyed, all parts thereof that are overflowed by the river and brook at the present height of the dam at high-water mark. It is understood and agreed that the term ‘high-water mark’ is the edge of the water in said river and brook when the-Tvater is flowing at a height of six inches over the dam of the Society for Establishing Useful Manufactures above the falls at the present height of the dam.”

The deed also contained a covenant

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Bluebook (online)
70 A. 472, 74 N.J. Eq. 49, 4 Buchanan 49, 1908 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 72, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mayor-of-paterson-v-east-jersey-water-co-njch-1908.