McGuire v. Bloomingdale

33 Misc. 337, 68 N.Y.S. 477
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1900
StatusPublished

This text of 33 Misc. 337 (McGuire v. Bloomingdale) 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
McGuire v. Bloomingdale, 33 Misc. 337, 68 N.Y.S. 477 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1900).

Opinion

Andrews, G. P., J.

This action was commenced on April 25, 1894, in the Court of Common Pleas by the late Joseph McGuire. The complaint alleged that the plaintiff was the owner of the premises Ho. 160 East Sixtieth street, and that the defendants were co-partners doing business on their premises, located at Third avenue and Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth streets; that the defendants had placed ■on their premises an extensive electrical plant with boilers, engines and dynamos for the production of electric light, and also pneumatic "blowers; that the said blowers, engines and machinery caused so much vibration and noise in the premises of the plaintiff as to render them unfit for habitation; and that the defendants were in the frequent habit of loading and unloading wagons on the sidewalk in front of the premises of the plaintiff, thereby creating a nuisance. The relief asked for was that the defendants should be enjoined from running the pneumatic blowers and electric light engines and machinery so as to cause vibration and noise on the premises of the plaintiff, and from loading and unloading wagons on the sidewalk in front of the plaintiff’s premises. Application was made by the plaintiff for a preliminary injunction. Voluminous affidavits were submitted on both sides, and full argument was had, but the application for an injunction was denied. In October, 1894, the original plaintiff died, and his executors were subsequently substituted as [338]*338plaintiffs. The action was noticed for trial by both sides, and was frequently on the day calendar of the Court of Common Pleas and of the Supreme Court, but was not brought to trial for a long time. In April, 1899, a motion was made for leave to serve an amended and supplemental complaint, which motion was granted so far as it asked leave for the plaintiff to set up the substitution of the present plaintiffs, and otherwise was denied. A second motion was afterwards made for leave to serve an amended complaint which should allege the pecuniary damages sustained by the plaintiffs. This motion was denied on the ground of laches in making the application. A trial was finally had in April, 1900, but no evidence was offered to sustain the allegations of the complaint in regard to the noise and vibration caused by the defendants’ electrical plant. The defendants are the proprietors of a large department store, in which about 2,000 people are employed. Their premises cover the entire westerly side of Third avenue between Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth streets, and extend 195 feet westwardly from Third avenue on Fifty-ninth street, and to a point 125 feet easterly from Lexington avenue. The premises on Third avenue, Fifty-ninth and Sixtieth streets consist of a building six stories high. The front of the premises immediately adjoining the plaintiffs’ premises are Nos. 162 and 164 East Sixtieth street, which still retain the outward appearance of four-story private brownstone dwellings. The plaintiffs’ premises are a four-story building 20 feet in width on a lot 100 feet deep. The building, which is over thirty years old, was purchased by the plaintiffs’ testator in 1890, at which time it was a private house fifty feet deep. It was altered by him by the addition of an ex-__ tension in the rear of thirty-five feet, and was then changed from a private dwelling to an apartment-house. Prior to such alteration the defendants had purchased the buildings Nos. 162 and 164 East Sixtieth street, and were using them for commercial purposes. Shortly after plaintiffs’ testator had completed such extension the defendants extended the buildings Nos. 162 and 164 East Sixtieth street to the-rear line of their lot, the rear wall of No. 162 East Sixtieth street extending fifteen feet deeper than plaintiffs’ premises and being about three feet higher. A short time after this extension had been built, plaintiffs’ testator placed four large iron shutters on his building, which shut off the light and air from the four windows of such extension. All the machinery used by the defendants is in the basement and subcellar of their Fifty-ninth [339]*339street building. The pneumatic tube system for the transmission of cash carriers through defendants’ establishment is one which is in common use in department stores, hotels and other large buildings. It is operated by two machines known as “ blowers,” which contain fans with four blades, which, by their revolution, cause an alternate compression of the air and a consequent vacuum, which transmits the cash carriers from what is known as stations, about 196 in number, to a central station. After the air has been used for this purpose it is exhausted from the blowers in two separate pipes, twenty-six inches in diameter, to one large pipe thirty inches in diameter, which runs through the wall of defendants’ building into the bottom of a brick chimney constructed outside of such building in an area adjacent to the rear of Ko. 162 East Sixtieth street. The air is discharged through this brick chimney into a galvanized iron pipe placed on top of the chimney, and issues from the mouth of that pipe into the open -atmosphere at the height of about 125 feet from the ground. The distance between this brick chimney and the nearest point of plaintiffs’ building is ten feet five inches. The “ blowers ” themselves and the various apparatus used in their operation are of the very best kind obtainable, and in every respect first class. The chimney is constructed in an area which is between the defendants’ Fifty-ninth street building and Kos. 162 and 164 East Sixtieth street. It is so built that one side rests against the south end of the westerly wall of Ko. 162, which is alongside of the easterly wall of plaintiffs’ building. These walls for a distance of some feet in the rear are independent, and the testimony is conflicting whether they actually touch one another, or whether there is a small space between them. The plaintiffs claim that the discharge of the air through the brick chimney causes it to vibrate, and that such vibration is communicated to the westerly wall of Ko. 162, and from there to the easterly wall of Ko. 160, causing a vibration of the plaintiffs’ house. It is also claimed by the plaintiffs that the discharge of air through the chimney, and by the galvanized pipe into the open air above, causes a loud noise which greatly disturbs the occupants of plaintiffs’ house. The trial of the action occupied five days, during which sixty-one witnesses were examined. The testimony is of the most conflicting character and it is very difficult to determine from such testimony what the real facts are. Of course the burden is upon the plaintiffs to establish their case by a fair preponderance of testimony, and the question to [340]*340be determined is whether they have done so. A vast amount of testimony was taken in regard to the blowers, their manner of construction and mode of operation; in regard to the chimney and galvanized pipe on top of it, their mode of construction and whether the passage of the air through the chimney and galvanized pipe caused them to vibrate; as to the propinquity of the independent walls between the plaintiffs’ premises and Ho. 162 East Sixtieth street; as to whether the chimney caused the westerly wall of Ho. 162

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 Misc. 337, 68 N.Y.S. 477, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mcguire-v-bloomingdale-nysupct-1900.