Snow v. Williams , 23 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 468 ( 1879 )


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  • Smith, J.:

    An examination of the testimony satisfies us that the findings of the referee, as to the extent to.which the stream is polluted *471and the plaintiff- is damnified and annoyed, by the discharge into it of refuse matter from the defendants’ factory, are not, as the appellants counsel insists, against the weight of evidence, but are warranted by the proof.

    It is clear that such use of the stream, attended with such injurious results, is a nuisance. That the plaintiff is entitled to the interposition of the equitable power of the court, by injunction, to prevent a continuance of the nuisance, is equally clear, unless, as the appellant’s counsel contends, the plaintiff has so acted, by encouraging the erection of the defendant’s factory, by acquiescing in the use which those operating the factory have made of the stream, and by delay in complaining of the injurious effects of such use, as to preclude him from claiming equitable relief.

    A person may so encourage that which he afterward complains of as a nuisance, as to iDreclude him from any claim in equity to an injunction. (Williams v. Earl of Jersey, 1 Cr. & Ph., 97; Bassett v. Salisbury, etc. Co., 47 N. H., 426; Wood v. Sutcliff, 8 Eng. L. & Eq., 217; Heenan v. Dewan, 8 Grant’s Ch., 438.) But neither an actual assent to the erection of the nuisance, nor active participation in its erection will have that effect, unless the party had reason to suppose that the erection would be a nuisance. The doctrine of estoppel, based upon encouragement or acquiescence, rests upon the ground that the party has so acted as that an attempt on his part to stop tlie nuisance or recover damages therefrom would be a positive fraud. If, therefore, the thing was'something winch might or might not become a nuisance, according to the circumstances of its use, he would not be estopped unless he knew the precise method of its use, and was fairly chargeable with notice of its results. (Wood ’on Nuisances, § 798 ; Bankart v. Houghton, 27 Beav., 425.)

    ' It appears that the plaintiff uses his farm for stock and dairy purposes. He herds his cows and other stock, at night, in a pasture, where they have access to the stream, the water of which is the only water they can obtain while in the pasture. On the opposite side of the stream he has a dairy-house and well, about twelve rods from the stream, and the water of such well and stream .is the only water which he has for-the use of his dairy-*472bouse, ancl the family occupying the same. The barn, in which the teams used on the farm are kept, is near the stream, and the water of the stream is principally used for watering the teams. The referee has found that in consequence of the accumulation on and above plaintiff’s farm, of wlicy and refuse matters discharged from the factory, the water in the stream upon plaintiff’s farm has been impregnated and corrupted therewith, and during seasons of warm weather and low water it has emitted noxious and offensive smells, and the water has been rendered unwholesome, impure, offensive, and often unfit for use, for the purposes of the farm, stock and dairy; the teams have sometimes refused to drink it; to some extent the air near to and along said stream has become corrupted, impure and offensive, and the milk from plaintiff’s dairy has sometimes become tainted, by reason whereof, as the referee finds, the occupation and enjoyment of the plaintiff’s farm and property have been rendered disagreeable, uncomfortable, inconvenient and less valuable, and the plaintiff has been annoyed and put to inconvenience, loss and damage. There is no finding and no evidence that when the plaintiff aided and encouraged the erection of the factory, he knew or had reason to suppose that the injurious results above stated would follow. The extent of the case on that point is, that he knew that it was the custom of cheese factories, in that section of country, to dischaage their surplus whey into the streams on which they were situated. It also appears that when the subject of discharging the surplus whey from the proposed factory into Elm creek was talked of in his hearing, he did not object to it. For aught that appears, he and all parties concerned may have expected at that time, that the water of the stream would carry away all the refuse matter proposed to be thrown into it, and no nuisance would be created on the plaintiff’s premises. In these circumstances he is not estopped by anything that occurred before the factory was put in operation. It is highly unreasonable to suppose that he anticipated and consented that his farm should be injured and himself annoyed to the extent found by the referee.

    As to the plaintiff’s subsequent acquiescence and delay, the facts are these : The factory was erected and put in operation by John *473Wiggins in the spring of 1874. During the seasons of 1874 and 1875, from April to November, the plaintiif patronized the factory and knew thatthe surplus whey was discharged into the stream, and he did not object to it. He also knew that the tendency of discharging sour and stale whey into the stream was to render its waters more or less impure. In December, 1875, the defendant bought the factory property of Wiggins and operated it through the season of 1876, using the stream substantially as Wig-ins had done, and was preparing to do the same in the spring of 1877, at the time of the trial of this action. Had Wiggins continued to own the property, it is plain that the acquiescence and delay of the plaintiff after the erection of the factory would not have precluded him from relief by injunction. Mere delay, so long as the parties remain in statu quo, will not deprive a party of equitable relief, unless the lapse of time is so great as to create aright by prescription. (Gale v. Abbott, 8 Jur. [U. S.], 987; Carlisle v. Cooper, 18 N. J. Eq., 241; Gordon v. Cheltenham R. R. Co., 5 Beav. 233.)

    The circumstance that the defendants purchased the title, in the meantime, does not divest the plaintiff of his right to relief. The purchase was not induced by any action or representation on his part. The defendants knew, at the time of the purchase, that the use which their grantor had made of the stream was a nuisance to the plaintiff, and they took the risk of his asserting his equitable rights in respect to it.

    That the plaintiff’s farm will be materially lessened in value, by reason of the nuisance, if it is permitted to continue, is apparent from its nature and extent, as well as from the findings of the referee. The referee has not found that the business of the cheese factory must be abandoned if the defendants are prohibited from discharging the surplus whey and refuse matter into the stream, to the injury of the plaintiff. Such prohibition will only have the effect to diminish the profits of the business and the value of the property.

    ' We think the plaintiff is entitled to an injunction restraining the defendants from discharging the surplus whey and refuse matter of the factory into the stream to his injury. But the judgment allows an injunction broader than that. It prohibits *474the defendants from discharging into the stream any whey or other refuse matter produced at the factory, and also from doing or permitting anything at or about the factory that will tend to render the water of said stream, or the atmosphere along the same, impure or unwholesome. The referee has found that the factory cannot profitably be operated either in its present condition and structure, or by any available change therein, without some portions of the washings and drippings from the factory getting into the stream, and that what would so get into the stream would not corrupt its waters or render them impure. The fact established by the several findings on this point, as we understand them, is that in operating the factory some discharge into the stream is unavoidable, but that which is unavoidable will not injure the plaintiff, and any discharge injurious to the plaintiff can be avoided, but at increased expense to the defendants.

    The judgment should be modified so as to restrain the defendants by injunction from discharging the surplus whey or refuse matter, or other noxious product of their factory into the stream known as Elm creek, so as to occasion damage or annoyance to the plaintiff, as owner or occupant of the farm and premises mentioned in the complaint, and as so modified, affirmed, neither party to have costs of the appeal as against the other.

    Talcott, P. J., and HaediN, J-, concurred.

    Ordered accordingly.

Document Info

Citation Numbers: 23 N.Y. Sup. Ct. 468

Judges: Haedin, Smith, Talcott

Filed Date: 1/15/1879

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/12/2024