Riedeman v. Mount Morris Electric Light Co.

56 A.D. 23
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedJuly 1, 1900
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 56 A.D. 23 (Riedeman v. Mount Morris Electric Light Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Riedeman v. Mount Morris Electric Light Co., 56 A.D. 23 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1900).

Opinion

Ingraham, J.:

The -plaintiff alleges that he is the owner of the property known as Fo. 534 Greenwich street, in the city of Few York; that the defendant is in possession of certain lands lying adjacent to the plaintiff’s premises, and that the defendant has placed upon the premises occupied by it certain machinery for the purpose of generating electricity to be supplied to the general public for lighting and other purposes, and has so negligently constructed and operated the said machinery as'to discharge upon the premises of the plaintiff great quantities of soot, cinders, ashes and noisome gases, unpleasant odors, excessive heat, steam and the water condensing from steam, and makes and produces in the operation of its machinery loud, disagreeable and incessant noises and great jar and vibration, which are transmitted into and through the property of the plaintiff, thereby causing a great nuisance and disturbing the rest and quiet of the inmates of the plaintiff’s property and injuriously affecting their health and -their quiet and peaceable enjoyment and use [25]*25of the premises; and asks for judgment enjoining the defendant from committing and continuing said nuisance and to recover the sum of $2,500 damages.

The court found that the operation of the defendant’s machinery causes great vibration, which is transmitted through the earth to the plaintiff’s premises, causing physical disturbance thereof, together with loud, disagreeable and annoying sounds; that the defendant also causes and'suffers large quantities of' dry and moist soot and cinders to issue from the chimney or smokestack and that the same enters the plaintiff’s dwelling house; that the plaintiff, by reason of such vibrations, smoke, soot and cinders, has sustained damage in the sum of $794.46; “ that defendant is financially responsible, and serious inconvenience would result to the public and to its private patrons and great loss and damage would be sustained by defendant "if the operation of its said plant should be perpetually en joined, and also if the operation of said plant in such a manner as to constitute a nuisance to plaintiff should be forthwith enjoined without affording it an opportunity to abate the nuisance if possible, otherwise than by stopping the operation of its said plant.” The court, therefore, directs judgment for an injunction perpetually enjoining the defendant from so operating its machinery as to cause or produce a jarring, shaking or vibration of the plaintiff’s dwelling house of such a character as to occasion material or substantial physical discomfort, disturbance or annoyance to the tenants or occupants thereof, or so as to constitute a nuisance, or so as to materially depreciate the value of the said building for use or occupation as a dwelling or tenement, or so as to seriously interfere with the plaintiff’s use or enjoyment of his said premises; also perpetually enjoining and restraining the defendant from so operating or running its said electric lighting plant during the night time as to cause or create any loud, excessive, disagreeable, annoying or injurious sounds; and also enjoins the defendant from so running or operating its said machinery so as to discharge or force into the public sewer such an excessive volume or quantity of steam as to cause heat, stench and offensive odors to come up through the closet in the plaintiff’s dwelling house, or so as to allow or permit undue or unnecessary or unreasonable quantities of smoke, soot or cinders, moist or dry, to [26]*26issue from-its said plant or works, in such quantities as to seriously •or materially interfere with the comfortable use and enjoyment of the tenants or occupants of 'plaintiffs premises. Such injunction is not to become operative and take effect until the 15th day of September, 1900, and there is a provision granting leave to apply to the ■court to postpone the period at which such injunction is to become effective, and awarding'the plaintiff a money damage for the injury sustained by him from the 6th day of October, 1889, tó the date of the trial, and judgment was entered in accordance with this decision.

The premises occupied by the defendant are on the southeast corner of Greenwich street and Vandarn street, with a frontage of seventy-five feet on Greenwich street. There was located in the building upon these premises-the machinery necessary for the generation of electricity used for the purpose of electric lighting and power. The plaintiff’s premises were on the west side of Greenwich street from sixty to eighty feet north of the defendant’s premises. There was evidence tending to show that a constant vibration was -caused to the plaintiff’s premises, which was just perceptible. There was also a perceptible noise from the defendant’s power house which could be heard about a block away. This noise was caused by the rush of the belts connecting the defendant’s machinery with the ■engine. In front of the plaintiff’s premises on Greenwich street -there was erected and in operation an elevated railroad, which ■caused noise and vibration to the plaintiff’s building when the trains passed; and this railroad runs constantly day and night. There was ■also evidence that steam and soot came from the chimney of the defendant’s power house ; but there is no evidence that such steam ■or soot went into or upon the plaintiff’s property. On the contrary, witnesses who were called by the plaintiff testified to the effect that such smoke and soot did not come from defendant’s property into the apartments of the plaintiff; that on a clear day it could not be noticed, but only on a dark day, when the steam or smoke came down to the street. -It did appear that there was dust. and cinders- from the elevated trains as they passed. This evidence as to ■the vibration to the plaintiff’s property was contradicted by witnesses called by the defendant. They testified that the vibration Upon the plaintiff’s premises was plainly visible when the trains on the elevated passed, but that there was no vibration otherwise., It [27]*27was further proved that the neighborhood in which these premises-•are located was devoted almost exclusively to manufacturing and warehouse purposes, with a few stables and a few old-fashioned ■dwellings turned into tenement houses, and that this change to business and manufacturing purposes has come within the past ten years. Various kinds of manufacturing concerns are located in the neigh- . borhood — manufacturers of candy, beer bottlers, pickle manufacturers, storage warehouses and stables. It was also proved that the plaintiff’s machinery for the generation of electricity was of the best known kind; that no noise or vibration was made that was not -essential; and that the greatest care was used to prevent steam, cinders or soot from escaping from the chimney to the adjoining 'premises.

The proof that the operation of the defendant’s machinery caused substantial damages was not satisfactory. The plaintiff’s sole claim to damages rests ujion his proof of loss of rents, which he now claims was caused by the operation of the defendant’s business, while it appears in evidence that an elevated railroad exists in front ■of the plaintiff’s property and that he made a claim against the railroad company for injuries sustained by the maintenance and operation of its road, and obtained a substantial sum of money upon the settlement of that claim.

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Bluebook (online)
56 A.D. 23, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/riedeman-v-mount-morris-electric-light-co-nyappdiv-1900.