38 Md. 123 | Md. | 1873
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In this ease, an application is made for an injunction to restrain the defendant from erecting a factory for the manufacture of felt-roofing, in the immediate vicinity of certain valuable dwelling-houses, the property of the complainants, and which factory, if allowed to be erected and put into operation, will, it is alleged, become a nuisance, specially injurious to the complainants. ^
It is alleged, that, owing to the dirt, odor, smoke, and appurtenances of such factory, together with the inflammable nature of the material used in the manufacture of felt-roofing, the property of the complainants would be utterly destroyed as dwellings, and that “one of your orators would be deprived of the comforts of his home, and the health of his family would be impaired by the nuisance as aforesaid.” The complainants further allege, “that irreparable and continuing injury to their property and the value thereof, and to their just enjoyment of the same, will result from the erection and carrying on of the said manufacturing business as aforesaid.” These are the only allegations in reference to the nature and effect of the alleged contemplated nuisance. Nothing more specific is to be found in the bill.
The Court below refused the injunction, and from its order this appeal is taken.
There is no question or difficulty in regard to the principle invoked by the complainants in this case. The power to interfere by injunction to restrain a party from so using his own property as to destroy or materially prejudice the rights of his neighbor, and thus to enforce the maxim, “sic uterc tuo uí aUenvm non kedas,” is not only a well established jurisdiction of the Court of Chancery, but is one of great utility, and which is constantly exercised. Indeed, without such jurisdiction, parties would, in many cases, suffer the greatest wrongs, for which actions at law would afford them no adequate redress. It
Now, it is certainly true that the owners or occupiers of dwelling-houses, whether in the city or country, have the right to’ enjoy pure and wholesome air, that is, as pure and wholesome as their local situation can reasonably supply; and any act which materially corrupts or pollutes the air, done without authority or justification, is strictly a nuisance. Aldred’s case, 9 Co. R., 58. If, therefore, a party should erect a manufacturing establishment _ in immediate proximity to the dwellings of his neighbors, and in the operation of which, large volumes of smoke, offensive odors, and noxious vapors are emitted, whereby the comfort of the occupiers of the dwellings is materially interfered with, it would certainly present a case requiring the exercise of the restraining or preventive power of a Court of Chancery. This has been decided in numerous cases, and the principle of the decisions as applicable to a case like the present, is very fully and clearly stated by Lord Romilly, M. R., in the recent case of Grump vs. Lambert, 15 W. R., 417. In that case, the
The principle of the case just referred to, and of the cases upon which it is founded, has been fully recognized and sanctioned by the Court, in the case of Hamilton vs. Whitridge, 11 Md., 128,, though applied in that case to the restraint of an offensive nuisance of a different character from that threatened in the present case.
But, though the law invoked be thus well established, the difficulty in the complainants’ case consists in the defective manner in which the facts of it are disclosed. As we have seen, the allegations of the bill, while very strong as to what is to be the consequence of the establishment of the factory, they are exceedingly general and indefinite as to the facts and circumstances from which the Court alone can determine whether the nuisance will be of the nature and character supposed. 5' It is not enough for the parties complaining simply-to allege that particular consequences will follow the erection of the factory; that may be their opinion or apprehension ; but facts must be stated so that the Court can see and determine whether the allegation is well founded, j There is no allegation in the bill before us as to the precise proximity of
In this case, as the hill fails to disclose all the essential facts to enable the Court to form an opinion as to the propriety of granting the injunction, the order appealed from must be affirmed, and the hill will be dismissed, hut without prejudice to any new application that the complainants m.ay think themselves entitled to make.
Order affirmed, and bill dismissed.