Morris Canal & Banking Co. v. Diamond Mills Paper Co.

64 A. 746, 71 N.J. Eq. 481, 1 Buchanan 481, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 34
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedSeptember 1, 1906
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 64 A. 746 (Morris Canal & Banking Co. v. Diamond Mills Paper 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
Morris Canal & Banking Co. v. Diamond Mills Paper Co., 64 A. 746, 71 N.J. Eq. 481, 1 Buchanan 481, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 34 (N.J. Ct. App. 1906).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The ease made by the bill has a double aspect.

In the first place, it charges the defendant with emptying into the canal certain solid matter, which there accumulates and is required to be occasionally removed by the canal company in order to properly facilitate the operation of its canal.

In the second place, it charges the defendant with discharging into the canal certain waters holding lime in solution, which lime water is of no injury whatever to the canal company, but which it finds convenient to discharge into a small stream called Third river, through which the lime water finds its way into the millpond of the complainants Oakes, who are manufacturers of woolen goods for men’s wear, and use the waters of their millpond for making dyes, and when the water becomes impregnated with lime above a certain degree it becomes unfit for dyeing purposes.

Oakes & Company complained to the canal company for discharging this lime water into their millpond, and the canal company, by way of defending themselves against this complaint, filed this bill against the paper company. Then, after answer filed, and on the day set for hearing, Oakes & Company applied for leave to be made complainants with the canal company, taking the pleadings precisely as they stood. An order was thereupon made admitting them, against the strong protest of the counsel for the paper company.

I must say that I think it a matter' of regret that Oakes & Company did not, in the first instance, file their bill against the canal company, against which, it is not improper at this point to say, they seem to have a perfect case.

Taking up now the case made by the pleadings and proofs we find the following facts:

The Morris canal, as originally constructed, had an unbroken level from a point near Lincoln Park, in Morris county, to Bloomfield, in Essex county, known as the “seventeen-mile level.”

At Bloomfield it descended a vertical height of sixty feet by an inclined plane known as “No. 11 east.”

The mechanism of the plane is this: An inclined railway [484]*484upon which runs a large ear or cradle, which runs down into the water at each end and takes on a canal boat, which it carries up or down, as the case may be, from one level of the canal to the other.

The motive power is a water wheel known as the “Scotch motor,” being a hollow vertical shaft with hollow arms and openings on one side, from which the escaping water causes the shaft tc revolve, which drives a drum, around which is wound a wire cable, which in turn is attached to the car or cradle, and in performing its work passes around a large horizontal wheel lying in a pit at the foot of the plane (also at the head). This pit is sufficiently depressed below the level of the bottom of the canal to receive the car or cradle at a sufficient depth to allow the boat to be floated on and off of it.

This depression in the bottom of the canal was, in the evidence, called the “wheel pit.”

In the year 1858 the canal company, finding that it was able to divert from the Passaic river above Little Falls, without being-prevented by the water power company of Paterson, more water than it really needed for operating its canal from that point to tidewater, conceived the idea of selling water power at its Bloomfield plane, and in that year granted in perpetuity to one Tihangst the right to use what was called the “feed water” of the canal; for an annual rental.

The grant contemplated the use of the water in two sections of over twenty feet vertical fall each.

This grant was acted upon by the assignees of TTnangst almost immediately, and about forty years ago a paper mill was established on the lower section, and a paper mill has been there maintained and used ever since, with some slight interruptions, which I will refer to farther on.

By the terms of the grant, all the water used must be returned into the canal at the foot of the plane, and in point of fact, that has been done by the several successions of paper mills which for all these years have occupied the location of the defendant’s paper mill.

The defendant came into possession and title in the year 1894.

A previous occupant had failed financially in 1888-1890, and [485]*485the mill had lain idle for a considerable period of time. A successful occupant took it about 1890.

When the defendant took possession it immediately expended many thousands of dollars in repairs and additions to the mill necessary for the manufacture of its peculiar product—white tissue paper.

This was done openly and under circumstances which must have brought it to the knowledge of the canal company and its officers. That company was entirely familiar, by many years’ experience of a succession of paper mills, with the effect of its operation on the operation of the canal. And if it had any objections to the operation of a paper mill at that point it seems to me it should then have made them, and having stood by while these large expenditures were being made, it is now estopped from asserting that any injury has been done or is being done to it by the defendant’s operation.

But to dispose of this part of the ease at once I will say that at the earnest request of all parties on April 5th, 1906, I visited the mill plant in their presence and was pointed out the whole operation of paper making from beginning to end, and saw with my own eyes the results. And some of my observations at the time were taken down by the stenographer.

In the course of the manufacture the raw material, composed of the. clippings of white linen or other white material, was ground into a fine pulp and in a milky condition was passed over a fine moving wire screen, the object of which is to allow the liquid to escape and the fine fibre to be carried on, dried and made into paper. But the mesh of the screen cannot be made so fine as to allow the water to escape without carrying with it a small quantity of white fibre which is discharged with the water at the foot of the plane. To a casual observer the fibre-laden water appears like lime water. Beside this fibre there is .absolutely nothing emptied into the canal by- the defendant which can possibly interfere with its operation.

When the canal is substantially idle and the water drawn out, as it is every winter and has' been for the whole season for a considerable period of late years, and no boats are moving and the large circular wheel in the wheel pit is not revolving to stir up [486]*486the fine and exceedingly light fibrous and fluffy matter, it settles in considerable quantities and turns to a dark gray color.

And here it may be proper to remark that there are several different channels in which the water passes from -the upper level to the lower level of the canal.

One is the tailrace of the Scotch motor which carries the boats up and down, and when few, if any, boats are moving, little or no water comes in that way.

Another is the old original byrace which carries the actual overflow of water from the upper to the lower level.

And the third is the tailrace of the turbine wheel which in part drives the machinery of the paper mill. Besides these there is the water actually used in the washers and also beaters, which grind the rags into pulp, and the water which drains off through the wire screens, as before remarked.

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Related

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Bluebook (online)
64 A. 746, 71 N.J. Eq. 481, 1 Buchanan 481, 1906 N.J. Ch. LEXIS 34, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/morris-canal-banking-co-v-diamond-mills-paper-co-njch-1906.