Weeks-Thorn Paper Co. v. Glenside Woolen Mills

64 Misc. 205, 118 N.Y.S. 1027
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 15, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 64 Misc. 205 (Weeks-Thorn Paper Co. v. Glenside Woolen Mills) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Weeks-Thorn Paper Co. v. Glenside Woolen Mills, 64 Misc. 205, 118 N.Y.S. 1027 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1909).

Opinion

Andrews, J.

The court may take judicial notice that Skaneateles lake has some thirteen square miles of surface. That its water is pure may he assumed from the fact appearing in evidence that the city of Syracuse uses it for domestic purposes. Its outlet is Skaneateles creek, flowing northerly through a narrow gorge past the villages of Jordan and Elbridge to the Erie canal, of which it is a feeder, and thence to the Seneca river. The plaintiff operates a paper mill situated on this creek, using the water both for power and for mixing with the material from which paper is made. Its mill is situated some miles below the lake. Uext up the stream, and a half a mile away, is the defendant’s mill. It manufactures black woolen cloth, and also uses the water both for power and for other purposes. Still farther up the stream are the mill of the Waterbury Felt Company, manufacturing the felt used on paper machines, four paper mills and a septic tank for the conversion of the sewage of the village of Skaneateles.

In paper making, water comparatively pure'is needed for mixing with the wood pulp. If it contains coloring matter, it will stain the pulp and so render the manufacture of white paper impossible. If it contains greasy or sticky particles, these p articles will adhere to the wires on which the pulp is spread, so causing the paper either to be of an uneven thickness, or to contain holes; or else the particles will stick to the paper, so injuring its quality.

It is clear that the Waterbury Felt Company’s mill and the paper mills above it, possibly also the septic tank of the [207]*207village, have caused considerable pollution of the stream. That such is the fact appears clearly from the photographs in evidence and from the testimony of various witnesses. It is equally clear that the defendant’s mill has added largely to this pollution. It has discharged into the stream its waste products, consisting of dirt and soap resulting from the washing of woolen rags out of which its cloth is made, and also quantities of black aniline dye and woolen fibre. Shortly before the trial, it endeavored to turn its waste away from the stream into a marsh, but did it in such a manner as not greatly to change the result.

I have no difficulty in finding that the use made of the stream by the defendant is unreasonable and unlawful. It is true that the fact that others are likewise polluting it may have a bearing upon the question as to whether the acts of the defendant are or are not reasonable, as may the number of men employed by it, the benefits to the community arising from its operation, the necessity of doing what it has done, and various matters of that kind. But no amount of pollution by others will justify an unreasonable use of the stream by defendant. No benefit to its employees or to the public at large will justify it in depriving the plaintiff of its property. The mere fact that it may require some expense to properly dispose of its refuse is no answer to the plaintiff's claim.

Neither do I have any difficulty in finding that the use made of the stream by the defendant has damaged the plaintiff.

The serious questions involved in the ease are: First, what right, if any, the plaintiff has in the stream; and, Second, whether it has lost the right to eomplain of the use made of it by the defendant because of the alleged continuance of that use for over twenty years.

Precisely what rights the plaintiff has in this stream depends on the effect of various proceedings taken by the State of New York and by the city of Syracuse.

In the year 1843, the State appropriated the waters of Skaneateles lake and its outlet for the use of the Erie canal. But this appropriation was effectual only as against those [208]*208owners whose lands and water rights were, by the plan presented to the canal board, taken and appropriated, and who were specially designated and known and described in the report, the plan and the map before the hoard when the resolution was adopted. These owners did not include the plaintiff or its predecessors in title. Therefore, so far as it was concerned, its rights in the water of Skaneateles creek as it flowed past its mill were never affected. Waller v. State of New York, 144 N. Y. 579.

Chapter 291 of the Laws of 1889 empowered the city of Syracuse to construct a system of waterworks to furnish the city with water from Skaneateles lake, and to acquire therefor lands, waters, easements and property necessary for that purpose owned by any individual or corporation.

This act was amended by chapter 314 of the Laws of 1890, which provided that the city should -acquire or extinguish all water-power rights upon the outlet of said lake to be affected. It also provided that the rights of the city thereby conferred should be subject to the superior claims of the State to the water, and the city was authorized to take water from the lake not required for the Erie canal.

The plaintiff’s predecessor in title, the Hartlot Paper Company, was then the owner of the property now operated by it. It, with others, was made a defendant in condemnation proceedings brought by the city.

On January 28, 1893, a judgment of condemnation was rendered decreeing, among other things, that upon making compensation therefor the city of Syracuse was entitled to condemn and acquire or extinguish all the rights, title and interest which the defendants in that proceeding and each of them respectively had of, in and to the waters of Skaneateles lake and its watershed, and to any and all use and enjoyment thereof, by reason of their ownership of, or interest in, the premises severally described in the petition, and as appurtenant or incident to said premises, for the purpose of supplying said city and its inhabitants with water, excepting only such and so much water from said lake as might be permitted or caused to flow from said lake into the outlet thereof, from time to time, by the State of ¡New York, its [209]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 Misc. 205, 118 N.Y.S. 1027, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/weeks-thorn-paper-co-v-glenside-woolen-mills-nysupct-1909.