Village of Larchmont v. Larchmont Park, Inc.

185 A.D. 330, 173 N.Y.S. 32, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7505
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedDecember 13, 1918
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 185 A.D. 330 (Village of Larchmont v. Larchmont Park, Inc.) 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
Village of Larchmont v. Larchmont Park, Inc., 185 A.D. 330, 173 N.Y.S. 32, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7505 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1918).

Opinion

Thomas, J.:

The appellant, Larchmont Park, Inc., owns Larchmont Park, except certain lots conveyed by its predecessor in title. The other defendants have hens by mortgage upon portions of the park property. It has been contrived to receive in a tank in the park the sewage from the houses therein, to be pumped to a sewage system owned and controlled by the plaintiff, within the limits of which the park is. The Larchmont Park Company, herein cahed appellant,” for a period operated the pump to clear the sewage, but a time came when the plaintiff justly insisted that through inadequacy of the pump and inefficient operation of it the sewage was not discharged properly, and after orders by the board of health for correction of the delinquencies had not been obeyed, the board of health operated the plant, and in this action plaintiff has judgment not only for the recovery of the expense thereof, but also that the appellant without limit of time shall operate the pumping station in a manner prescribed, and that in default thereof the plaintiff and its board of health may operate it in similar manner, the expense thereof to be determined by the court and recovery thereof be had .of appellant, and that judgment for expenses of operation, in the past, in the future, and costs of this action, shall, execution having been returned unsatisfied, be a “ first lien on all the land in Larchmont Park * * * which stood in the name of ” appellant as owner at the time notice of pendency of this action was [332]*332filed in the office of the Clerk of the County of Westchester,” with leave to either party to apply for further relief. It is the appellant’s fundamental contention that it is obliged neither by privity of contract nor by its relation to the pumping station or the sewers coming to it, to clear the sewage, but rather that it is the duty of the plaintiff to provide sewage facilities for the territory; that plaintiff had prepared and caused to be approved a plan for a system of sewers that includes the locality in question, and that the streets of the park, where the sewer pipes are, have been dedicated to, and accepted by, the plaintiff, and. that the duty of discharging the sewage follows the control- of the streets. The appellant also criticises both in power and propriety the plan adopted by the court to abate the nuisance, and the liens it entails upon appellant’s land. If the facts invite the use of the authority exercised by the court, it is supplied by statute. (Public Health Law [Consol. Laws, chap. 45; Laws of 1909, chap. 49], §§ 21, 31, as amd. by Laws of 1913, chap. 559; Id. § 32.) If the system of sewers adopted by the plaintiff go into effect as to appellant’s land, the judgment should become inoperative thereafter; and the judgment permits either party to make application for further relief. However, pending such execution of the new. sewer system or extension of its present system, the question arises upon whom falls the duty of operating the existing pumping station? The pumping" station i is on appellant’s land, in which plaintiff or its board of health by virtue of property interest has no right of entry, although there is for appellant’s default the right of operation for the protection of public health/ The plant must be operated properly, or the sewage overflows and passes into Pine brook, whereby the effluent may be washed upon the banks of the stream, to the injury of public health. It is neither rational nor tolerable that the central place where by arrangement sewage gathers, should be abandoned, and the material accumulate and overflow. The question, then, is who is responsible for the pumping station as an instrumentality. McVickar in his lifetime owned land, and in 1904 caused to be filed in the office of the register of Westchester county a map entitled “ Larchmont Park, at Larchmont, N. Y., property of Edward McVickar,” etc., and in 1906 McVickar caused to be [333]*333filed in the same office another Map of Larchmont Park, Larchmont, N. Y.,” etc. Such maps showed lots, blocks and streets. McVickar sold some of the lots and, as the court found, in accordance with ' said maps.” About 1904, McVickar caused to be built the pumping station, and several sewers pursuant to a “ map of sewer system of Larchmont Park.” Under the date of March 21, 1904, McVickar made an agreement with the plaintiff. Its object was to obtain the right to lay a sewer in Boston Post Road and also across Larchmont Avenue into Addison Avenue to connect with an existing sewer in said Addison Avenue for the purpose of discharging sewage by pumping from said tract of land.” The plaintiff owned the streets named, but it was necessary for McVickar, in aid of his property, to construct sewers in the Boston Post road and across Larchmont avenue, and he undertook all the expense of doing the work in accordance with the plans and specifications approved by the Board of Health of the State * * * substantially in accordance with the plans exhibited to and approved by the Trustees of the ” plaintiff on October 5th, 1903,” and in accordance with the direction of the plaintiff’s engineer. The agreement involved the pumping of the sewage from the sewer to be laid in the Boston Post road into and from the pumping works, which it was stipulated should be without charge and cost ” to the plaintiff as long as the same shall be in use and operation,” and it was further stipulated that the sewers to be laid in such streets should be the property of the plaintiff, who agreed not to make the usual charge for sewer connection with the sewer along the northerly side of the Boston Post road. Hence, it appears that McVickar established the pumping station, and the sewers that connected with it, and specifically agreed to clear the sewage coming from the Boston Post road. After McVickar’s death in 1910, 'his sole legatee conveyed the park, except the lots sold by McVickar, to the appellant, who assumed the mortgages owned by the other defendants herein. The appellant after such conveyance owned the pumping station and the land on which it was, and operated the pump for the discharge of the sewage conveyed to it by McVickar, and for the sewer district which it laid out for the service of the lots which it sold on which houses were built, [334]*334so that at present some seventy-five houses are related to the sewer system, which was built or utilized by the appellant, but none of them is owned by appellant. The lots sold by appellant are related to maps of several portions of the park filed in the register’s office by the appellant. Before beginning the construction of new sewers, the appellant sought but did not receive from plaintiff approval of the plan concerning which appellant had correspondence with the State Department of Health. Appellant’s representative at that time testified concerning an interview with plaintiff’s trustees: “ They told me they would not have anything to do with it, to go ahead and do what I liked,” but appellant was later informed by letter under date of September 11, 1911, that all work of construction upon private property should be in accordance with the requirements of the village engineer, whereupon appellant’s agent employed and paid Van Etten, who was the village engineer, and who thenceforth, as appellant’s evidence shows, had charge of the construction, while the engineer testifies that he never inspected as the plaintiff’s engineer. Inasmuch as the plaintiff demanded that the construction meet the requirements of its engineer, it would be a consistent assertion of authority to superintend the construction.

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Bluebook (online)
185 A.D. 330, 173 N.Y.S. 32, 1918 N.Y. App. Div. LEXIS 7505, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/village-of-larchmont-v-larchmont-park-inc-nyappdiv-1918.