Stamford Extract Manufacturing Co. v. Stamford Rolling Mills Co.

125 A. 623, 101 Conn. 310, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 117
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedJuly 28, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 125 A. 623 (Stamford Extract Manufacturing Co. v. Stamford Rolling Mills Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Stamford Extract Manufacturing Co. v. Stamford Rolling Mills Co., 125 A. 623, 101 Conn. 310, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 117 (Colo. 1924).

Opinion

Curtis, J.

The assignments of error are all in the form, “whether or not the court erred,” etc., and are not in proper form, and have the result of stating the claimed errors in an indefinite way not clearly related to the findings. We have disapproved of such assignments many times. Antel v. Poli, 100 Conn. 64, 68, 123 Atl. 272. However, we exercise our discretion and consider the errors claimed in so far as they seem material, because of the importance of the case.

The plaintiffs and their predecessors in title are the *312 lowest riparian owners on the Noroton River in Stamford. They are also the owners of an artificial storage reservoir or pond, known as Kleinfelter’s Pond, and of a strip of land surrounding the pond. This pond is an enlargement of the river water-course, through which the river still flows. The plaintiffs have a plant for the .manufacture of extract dyes at the mouth of the river, about three quarters of a mile below the pond. The plaintiffs, for more than a half century, have been engaged in the manufacture of logwood extract dyes, and tanning extracts; a portion of the logwood extract is put through a process of oxidization and is then known as hematin. The manufacture of these products is a delicate operation requiring pure water of uniform quality. At the height of operations they have used as much as a half million gallons of river water in twenty-four hours. The Noroton River is still capable of furnishing to the plaintiffs a sufficient volume of water, which could be used in their business as heretofore, were it not for the pollution of the stream by various waste products. The right to receive and use the water of the river has been and is of great value to the plaintiffs. They have continuously used the water from Kleinfelter’s Pond for this and other purposes. The water was drawn from the pond to their plant through pipes over a right of way duly acquired upon a highway along the river. The products manufactured are not affected by bacterial waste from sewage, but the presence of copper, iron or zinc in metallic form, in sufficient amounts, and of any of these metals in solution in very much smaller amounts, changes the color and affects the purity and marketability of the products.

Up to 1914, the water from Kleinfelter’s Pond was used by the plaintiffs for the purpose of extracting dyes without any trouble from its condition. The quantity *313 of water in the pond was ample and its quality especially adapted to the production of dyes. About 1917, the defendant company was organized and acquired a plant about two and one quarter miles above Kleinfelter’s Pond, and greatly enlarged it for the production of war materials, and has ever since carried on the business of making castings of brass and bronze, and is now employing from three to five hundred hands.

A company, the Jelliffe Company, has operated a factory on the Norot on River at New Canaan, several miles above the plaintiffs’ plant, for a great many years, for the manufacture of iron and galvanized iron screens. Near it, metal scraps and iron refuse are left on the bank of the river and find their way in considerable quantities into the river.

About two miles above Kleinfelter’s Pond, the Phillips Chemical Company has operated a factory near the banks of the river, and for many years before 1914, and since, has manufactured milk of magnesia, zinc ointment and other products. The waste from this factory, including at times sodium sulphate and compound of magnesia, iron, zinc and aluminum and certain organic compounds, finds its way into the river.

Aside from these factories, the river was, until about 1914, free from manufacturing plants. During the last ten or twelve years, however, a very considerable change has come over the lands bordering and along that part of the river which is located between one and five miles above the plant of the plaintiffs. Two settlements, both near the river and within the town of Stamford, known as “Glenbrook” and “Springdale,” have increased and are increasing rapidly in population, and neither has a sewerage system. Close to Kleinfelter’s Pond, a number of houses have been built, and some of them drain their sewage directly into the pond. *314 These changes have resulted in a considerable pollution of the waters of the pond and river from sewage and from the throwing of refuse, tin cans and the like into its waters. A number of manufacturing plants have also been established upon or near the banks of the Noroton River. Next below the Jelliffe Company is the plant of the Segal Lock Company, which is located about two hundred feet from a small brook running into the river, and about three hundred feet from the river. Next below, and close to the plant of the defendant, is the British American Manufacturing Company, which is engaged in making rubberized products. This company has two tile waste pipes and three iron pipes and an open ditch connecting with the river. Through these tile pipes there is discharged into the river a benzol solution of rubber, sewage and also an oily waste matter. Below the defendant’s plant and above the Phillips Chemical Company, slightly off the stream, is a plant known as “Saunders.” This plant uses the water of the stream only for cooling purposes and returns it unchanged.

The products of the plaintiffs are not affected by bacterial waste from sewage, but the presence of copper, iron or zinc in metallic form in sufficient amounts, and of any of these metals in solution in very much smaller amounts, changes the color of the products and affects their purity and marketability. The use of water containing metallic copper in varying quantities would be impracticable. The presence of iron has a worse effect than copper and the presence of zinc is equally injurious. e

At the time this action was begun in 1917, the defendant was using water from the river for various purposes and was discharging wash water into the Noroton River without filtration or settling. The de-. fendant was then unlawfully polluting the waters of *315 the river to the injury of the Stamford Extract Manufacturing Company, without knowledge, however, that it was doing this inj ury. Thereafter the defendant, in the effort to remedy this harm, constructed a sewage disposal plant, and also a waste disposal plant designed to remove all harmful elements from the wash water, and care for the oily waste, and then and since, in constructing and perfecting these plants, has spent $150,000. In June, 1918, the defendant also paid the plaintiffs a substantial sum of money to compensate them for the damage it had caused, and thereafter, and by the agreement of the parties, the question of money damages claimed to have been sustained by the plaintiffs, or either of them, was removed from the case. A separate unit in the disposal plant has been installed for the treatment of the acid (pickle) wash water and other wash waters. In this system the water is treated with caustic soda, the acid is neutralized, the metal is precipitated and reclaimed, and the water goes back to the pickle wash tubs in the mill to be used over again.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

City of Waterbury v. Town of Wash., No. X01-Uwy-Cv97-140886 (Feb. 16, 2000)
2000 Conn. Super. Ct. 2094 (Connecticut Superior Court, 2000)
Dimmock v. City of New London
245 A.2d 569 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1968)
Southern New England Ice Co. v. Town of West Hartford
159 A. 470 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1932)
Trasacco v. New York, New Haven & Hartford Railroad
155 A. 493 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1931)
Thompson v. Kraft Cheese Co.
291 P. 204 (California Supreme Court, 1930)
Harvey Realty Co. v. Borough of Wallingford
150 A. 60 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1930)
Donnelly Brick Co. v. City of New Britain
137 A. 745 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1927)
Gruber v. Klein
127 A. 907 (Supreme Court of Connecticut, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 A. 623, 101 Conn. 310, 1924 Conn. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stamford-extract-manufacturing-co-v-stamford-rolling-mills-co-conn-1924.