Opinion
08-08-1907
SAVAGE v. PORT READING R. CO.
William H. Osborne and Edward S. Savage, for complainant. Ephraim Cutter, for defendant.
Bill by Edward S. Savage against the Port Reading Railroad Company. Complainant moves for a preliminary injunction. Writ denied.
William H. Osborne and Edward S. Savage, for complainant. Ephraim Cutter, for defendant.
HOWELL, V. C. This is a motion for preliminary injunction to compel the Port Beading Railroad Company, the sole defendant, to remove a bulkhead and other obstructions erected by it across the mouth of Thorp's creek, a small natural water course which empties into Staten Island Sound, and also to compel the company to likewise remove a dam which it has built across the same creek a short distance above its mouth and to fill up a ditch through which the waters of the creek have been diverted from a point above the dam to Staten Island Sound. The controversy centers about the ownership of a piece of land containing about three acres, which lies between Thorp's creek and Staten Island Sound and at their point of junction. The land in question is bounded on the north by Thorp's creek and on the south by Staten Island Sound. At the east it extends to the junction of the creek with the sound, and at the west it is bounded by Winant's meadow. A diagram is annexed to the bill showing the general situation.
The complainant claims to own an undivided half interest in this land by virtue of a deed made to him on January 6, 1906, by Albert Bruns and wife. He states that his title to this half interest is deduced from a deed made by William H. Rutan to Israel Oakley in 1846, but which was not entered for record in the clerk's office of the proper county until March 27, 1902. But he does not give any of the intervening conveyances, nor in any manner show how Bruns derived title from Oakley. The defendant claims that it purchased the whole of the tract of land in question on September 30, 1890, from Lewis N. Meyer, who on that day conveyed the same to Gordon Chambers, an employé of the railroad company, who, on December 9, 1890, conveyed the same to the railroad company. In these deeds from Meyer and Chambers the lands are described as "all that certain lot of salt meadow situate at Sunken Marsh, in the said township, bounded by Thorp's creek on the north, the sound on the east, and the meadow of James J. Winant on the south, containing 1 1/2 acres, more or less." The defendant further claims that by these deeds it took title to the whole of the said premises, and that it had no notice of the deed from Rutan to Oakley; the same not having been recorded at the time of the railroad company's purchase. The complainant asserts that, inasmuch as the deed to the railroad company described the land as containing 1 1/2 acres, it must be inferred that the grantor meant to convey, and the railroad company meant to purchase, an undivided one-half interest in the 3 acres in which he claims to have the other undivided half interest.
It does not appear that the complainant or his predecessors in title were ever in possession of any portion of the disputed territory, or that there was anything on the land at the time of the railroad company's purchase to indicate either possession or ownership of any character which would amount to notice to the railroad company of the outstanding unrecorded deed. On the contrary, the railroad company claims that it took possession of the land immediately on its purchase in 1890, that it built its terminal adjacent thereto in 1892, and that in 1896 it constructed across the mouth of Thorp's creek a bulkhead, built of piling, on which it laid a platform, and that on the platform were constructed several offices and storehouses, all of which are used by the railroad company, which operates the Port Beading line in connection with the conduct of its business at its Port Beading terminal. The bill admits that the defendant has held possession of the whole tract since 1892. The relief sought is not merely prohibitive and preventive. The complainant seeks to compel the defendant to forthwith remove its bulkhead and office buildings, so as to leave the mouth of the creek unobstructed. The application is, therefore, for a mandatory injunction to coerce the defendant into active and affirmative measures looking to the breaking up of the obstructions complained of and the freeing of the mouth of the creek, so that it may be navigated by boats of a size suitable to its capacity.
The law and practice touching the issue of mandatory injunctions in our state is thoroughly well settled. In Lord v. Carbon Iron Manufacturing Company, 38 N. J. Eq. 458, Vice Chancellor Van Fleet said: "Injunctions of this nature are rarely granted before final hearing, or before the parties have had a full opportunity to present all the facts of the case in such manner as will enable the court to see and judge what the truth is. They are always granted cautiously, and are strictly confined to cases where the remedy is plainly inadequate." This language was quoted with approval by theCourt of Errors and Appeals in the case of Bailey v. Schnitzius, 45 N. J. Eq. 184, 10 Atl. 680. To this may be further added the requirements that the invasion of the right must be a material and substantial one, or, in other words, that the damage shall be irreparable, and that the right of the complainant must be clear and unmistakable on the law and the facts and there must exist an urgent and paramount necessity for the issue of the writ in order to prevent extreme or other serious damage which would ensue from withholding it. Longwood Valley R. R. Co. v. Baker, 27 N. J. Eq. 166; Hodge v. Giese, 43 N. J. Eq. 342. As an example the case of Broome v. N. Y. & N. J. Telephone Co., 42 N. J. Eq. 141, 7 Atl. 851, may be cited. It was there held that the writ would issue where there was a deliberate, unlawful, and inexcusable invasion by one man of another's land for the purpose of continuing a trespass, for the trespasser's gain or profit, and there had been neither acquiescence nor delay in applying to this court for relief. There the injury was material, the complainant's right clear, and there was an urgent necessity to prevent that degree of irreparable damage which otherwise would have ensued. Chancellor McGill has collected the cases on the subject in National Docks Ry. v. P. R. R. Co., 54 N. J. Eq. 10, 33 Atl. 219.
Such being the law and practice of this court with regard to the issue of mandatory injunctions, we are led to inquire, as the first prerequisite, whether the complainant's right is clear. That an injunction will not issue unless the right is clear and unmistakable is a fundamental rule, which applies to the issue of prohibitory injunctions, and a fortiori to injunctions mandatory in their character. The submitted affidavits do not set out a title in either party which would support an action of ejectment. But, inasmuch as the defendant is in actual possession of the premises, so far as its possession can be had by anybody, and that possession has continued since 1890, and the complainant and his predecessors in title do not appear ever to have been in possession of any part of the property, I can hardly say that the complainant's title under his deed is clear and unmistakable. In fact, it appears to me from the very meager facts before me to be extremely doubtful. At any rate, it is of such a character as that in my mind it is insufficient on which to found a mandatory injunction. Dobleman v. Gately & Hurley Co., 64 N. J. Eq. 223, 53 Atl. 812.
But, supposing the question of title to have been disposed of in favor of the complainant, is it necessary for his protection in the enjoyment of his inheritance that the mandatory writ should go immediately against the defendant to compel it to remove forthwith what he terms "the obstructions" placed by the defendant in the way of navigating the creek? It must be remembered that the complainant did not get his supposed title until January, 1906; that the defendant, the railroad company, had then been in possession of the land for nearly 16 years; that nearly all the constructions and obstructions complained of were erected about 15 years ago; that none of the predecessors in title of the complainant ever took any proceedings during the whole of this period looking to the opening of the mouth of the creek; that the erections are in daily use by the company, which operates the Port Reading line in the conduct of its business; that the bulkhead cost originally $10,000, and that it would cost at least $4,000 to remove it; that its removal would hamper the operating company in the handling of about 7,000 tons of coal a day; that the land is of such a character as that it cannot be used for farming or commercial purposes, it being described as sunken meadow; and that the complainant is out of possession. When all these things are considered, it must be quite apparent that there is no immediate necessity for an injunction to protect the complainant's rights.
If, therefore, the complainant's right is in doubt, and he can show no immediate necessity for the interposition of the court, he fails in two material points; and the writ must be denied at this time.