Appeal, No. 185 | Pa. Super. Ct. | Apr 19, 1915
Opinion by
This appeal is taken by the plaintiffs from a decree made by the court below in dismissing a bill in equity
The learned judge correctly held that the only question presented for decision was “Is the ordinance of the city of Philadelphia adopted June 24, 1912, valid or not? If this, is valid, the bill must be dismissed, because the maintenance of a piggery at the place where that of the plaintiff is located is plainly in contravention of it. If, however, the ordinance is without legal effect, the defendants should be restrained from efforts to enforce it.”
In the opinion filed dismissing the bill the review of the statutory authority to enact the ordinance is so full and clear that it is not necessary to repeat it. The main contention of the appellants is that the ordinance is unreasonable and discriminating against them and their property, in that it fixes an arbitrary line or street beyond which it declares it unlawful for them to conduct their business, which is located immediately on the north of Maiden Lane, while it declares it to be lawful and permits others to keep pigs and pigpens immediately to the south of that street.
The ordinance defines by. careful description five separate districts within which hogs or swine may lawfully be kept in accordance with its provisions, and by sec. 2, it is made unlawful and declared “to be a nuisance to keep hogs or swine in any part of the city except in a sanitary manner and so as not to be prejudicial to the health of the community.”
The record concedes that the plaintiff’s business of raising hogs is conducted under proper sanitary, precautions, and the question is narrowed further; can the city by ordinance prohibit the keeping of hogs in a
The court aptly said: “Where town and country meet, they blend insensibly, and it is difficult to say where one leaves off, and the other begins. The line between them, however, must be drawn somewhere. In so doing the cases of particular persons cannot always be provided for, councils are not expected to do more than recognize general conditions.”
It cannot be open to controversy that the keeping and raising of hogs under the most careful sanitation of pen and animal is likely to be offensive, and has a tendency to endanger the health and destroy the comfort of the residents in that vicinity. This is recognized by all authorities, and the keeping of hogs in the thickly built-up part of a city is held be ta a nuisance per se, and as such is indictable and subject to abatement: Com. v. Van Sickle, Brightly’s Reports, 69; Com. v. Hutz, Brightly’s Reports, 72; 2 Wood on Nuisances, sec. 586; Com. v. Alden, 143 Mass. 113" court="Mass." date_filed="1886-11-26" href="https://app.midpage.ai/document/commonwealth-v-alden-6422218?utm_source=webapp" opinion_id="6422218">143 Mass. 113; State v. Parpar, 37 Maine, 361.
If the city councils have the right to prohibit the keeping of hogs in the built-up parts of the city, either as being a nuisance per se, or as a business strongly tending to produce a nuisance, the fact that the ordinance prescribes limits in which hogs may be kept, and forbidding them to be kept in other parts of the city, would not render it invalid.
The Consolidation Act of February 2, 1854, P. L. 44, authorizes councils “in enacting new ordinances to make such distinctions in the built-up and rural parts of the new city as they may deem required by circumstances.”
The right to distinguish between the various sections of a municipality has been held to be within the power of councils, and not to be in violation of any constitu
It must be kept in mind that there are some trades so necessarily offensive that merely carrying them on within the limits of a populous city is in itself a nuisance: Com. v. VanSickle, 4 Clark, 81. If it is conceded that councils had authority to district the city, and segregate the pigsty farms in particular localities as defined by streets, the same authority could be reasonably asserted in the interest of the public health, in making new districts or rearranging old ones as demanded by the natural course of the development of the city, and require that the offensive and dangerous pigsties should be moved farther away from the built-up locality. To hold that the thing which was harmless in itself when in the open country could not become harmful and subject to municipal regulation, if the march of development would be in that direction, would be to hold that the dead line of the advancing city’s growth would be marked by the earlier location of the pigsty. They cannot exist together. When the dividing line between the expanding city and the rural properties is reached it becomes an important question for councils to decide
In Brady v. Weeks, 3 Barbour R. (N. Y.) 157, a slaughterhouse had been erected in the open fields, adjacent to a growing city, but not at that time near to any dwelling house, but afterwards, in the progressive increase of the city, dwellings were erected near to the slaughterhouse, and they were rendered unfit for comfortable habitation. It was held a nuisance, for which the owners of the houses might have remedy against the proprietors.
It is no defense to an action or prosecution for a private or public nuisance, that the work or business giving rise thereto was first established in a secluded locality, or was not a nuisance in its origin, but that the injury or offense complained of is the result of the subsequent voluntary location in the neighborhood by the person or persons injured, though with a knowledge of the existence of the alleged nuisance: 21 A. & E. Enc. of L. 691.
Formerly the contrary doctrine obtained on the ground that the complainants were in fault in coming to the nuisance. This doctrine is now very properly exploded, as it is manifest that an observance of it would interfere greatly with the growth of towns and cities: 2 Bouv. L. Dict., Nuisance and cases cited; State ex rel. v. Lederer, 52 N. J. Eq. 675.
All question of the powers of the board of health was eliminated in the argument and the only question considered is the validity of the ordinance.
Courts of equity will not, as a general rule, interfere by injunction to restrain the enforcement of ordinances enacted by. proper authority upon the ground that such ordinances are alleged to be illegal, or for the purpose of determining the validity of the ordinance when the party has a complete and adequate remedy at law: 2 Wood on Nuisances, sec. 796a.