State ex rel. State Board of Health v. Mayor of Jersey City

55 N.J. Eq. 116
CourtNew Jersey Court of Chancery
DecidedOctober 15, 1896
StatusPublished

This text of 55 N.J. Eq. 116 (State ex rel. State Board of Health v. Mayor of Jersey City) 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
State ex rel. State Board of Health v. Mayor of Jersey City, 55 N.J. Eq. 116 (N.J. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Pitney, V. C.

The bill is filed under the second section of the act of May 24th, 1894. P. L. of 1894 P- 495; Gen. Stat. pp. 1646, 1647. It alleges the existence of a nuisance within the territorial jurisdiction of Hoboken, which has its origin within the territorial jurisdiction of Jersey City, and alleges and attempts to show that the Morris and Essex Railroad Company and the Delaware, Lackawanna and Western Railroad Company are in part responsible for its existence.

The railway companies have demurred. I shall refer to them as one company.

The location of the nuisance is the extreme southwesterly part of the city of Hoboken, in the low lands at the easterly foot of the Palisade bluff, just to the north of the easterly end of the tunnel of the railway company. No map is annexed to the bill, . but, by consent of parties, a map of the locus was furnished to [118]*118the court as a part of the bill, and both parties relied upon the familiar general knowledge of the court and counsel of the geography and topography of the neighborhood.

The details of the nuisance are set forth as follows: That Jersey City has under the charge of its municipal government, as a part of its drainage system, a sewer called the “ Ravine Road Sewer,” which is the sole outlet for the drainage and sewage of about three hundred acres of that part of Jersey City lying on what is called the Heights and formerly a part of Hudson City, with a population of about thirty thousand. This sewer was constructed in the year 1870 or 1871, and ran down a steep ravine, which was the channel of a brook or stream called the Showhank brook, and, at first, ended and emptied on the low meadow lands in the westerly part of the city of Hobo-ken, which meadow lands are notoriously only slightly above the level of high water in the Hudson river, and about a mile distant therefrom; that this sewer carried not only ordinary sewage, but “also the waters from the drainage area of the brook partly in Jersey City and partly in the town of West Hoboken, which waters are corrupted by the mixing of sewage therewith/

I stop here to notice a criticism made by counsel of the railway company upon this language. He contends that it does not amount to an allegation that the natural waters of the brook are carried in the sewer, but only that the surface waters are carried therein. I cannot agree with him in this. The words “the brook” there used refer to Showhank brook, which has just been mentioned as being the name 'of the brook running through the channel in which the sewer was laid.

Now, it is common knowledge that when a district of country which lies at the headwaters of a small natural brook has been altered by the building of paved streets and sidewalks, and dwellings on each side, the result is, oftentimes, to very much diminish, if not entirely destroy, the natural springs which feed the brook, so that when rain falls, instead of soaking in the ground and forming reservoirs to supply the springs, it runs off immediately and rapidly. Such rain water is, nevertheless, [119]*119brook water, and properly styled the waters of the brook; so that the phrase “the waters from the drainage area of the brook ” means the waters which, if collected naturally, would form the brook.

The bill proceeds to state that, as the town grew, the sewage discharged by this sewer increased and spread over the southwesterly part of Hoboken. The language used is, “ discharged at the foot of the ravine, close to the Hoboken city line, and created a public nuisance in the Hoboken meadows.” I think that that is a sufficient statement that it created a nuisance within the territorial limits of Hoboken.

The bill then proceeds to state that this nuisance became so great that legislation was had in 1875 (P. L. of 1875, p. 621), to provide for the continuation of the Ravine Road sewer in the city of Jersey City and the' city of Hoboken, and commissioners were appointed to extend the ravine sewer and connect it with the sewers then existing in Jersey City; that, in pursuance of that act, the commissioners appointed under it constructed an extension of the Ravine Road sewer from its original terminus southerly across lands in the city of Hoboken to a street in Jersey City called Jersey avenue, then along Jersey avenue (southerly) until it crossed Thirteenth and Fourteenth streets, there connecting with sewers in those streets which had their outlet in the Hudson river. The map shows a sewer connecting with sewers in those streets and their connection with the Hudson river.

The bill alleges that this remedy proved inadequate; that the extension from the end of the ravine sewer at the foot of the bluff was nearly level, and the extension from there to the Hudson river was nearly level, so that in case of a heavy rain the water could not escape through the extension sewer as fast as it came down the steep slope, in the ravine, and the resulting pressure caused the sewer to break and deliver the water and sewage on “the Hoboken meadows and low lands” in great quantity, where it remained stagnant.

Criticism is made upon this language, but I understand it clearly to indicate the meadows and low lands in the city of [120]*120Hoboken lying near the foot of the slope and at the end of the Ravine Road sewer, as it was originally constructed, which point is a short distance north of the embankment of the railway company.

The bill then states that the nuisance thus created has been of a notorious character and has been recognized as a constant and growing injury to the health of the people of Hoboken and Jersey City, and that various attempts have been made to remedy it by legislation; that authority had been given to Jersey City to enlarge and rebuild the sewer and enter upon the streets of Hoboken for that purpose; that in 1890, by an act (P. L. of 1890 p. 85), the three defendants, Harrison, Butts and > Coimolly, were appointed commissioners to rebuild the sewer extension on lands wholly within the territory of Jersey City, and that several supplements have been passed giving them further and increased powers; that certain repairs have been made from time to time on the extension of the sewer by Jersey City and by Hoboken, but have been so unskillfully and inadequately made that the sewer has broken again under the pressure caused by heavy rains, and for several years no serious attempt has been made to abate the nuisance. In the meantime, a large and increasing population has occupied the territory in Jersey City, draining into this sewer, and many lateral sewers have been built by the authorities of Jersey City, connecting with it, and that it is the sole outlet for a population of thirty thousand people.

The bill then alleges that the municipal authorities of Jersey City and Hoboken, whose territories join near the foot of the hill, and thence to the Hudson river, have both failed and refused to take any action for the drainage of the territory affected by this nuisance, and have permitted the streets and adjoining lots to remain low and sunken and undrained, and the natural watercourse and outlet therefrom to be obstructed, so that stagnant pools of water are collected and retained, breeding disease and constituting a nuisance dangerous to health &c.

Now, it seems to me that this sets out a nuisance existing within the territorial limits of the city of Hoboken, and one [121]*121which has a source of origin outside of the limits of Hoboken.

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Bluebook (online)
55 N.J. Eq. 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-board-of-health-v-mayor-of-jersey-city-njch-1896.