65 Me. 426 | Me. | 1876
This is an action on the case under E. S. 1857, c. 123, § 8, to recover three-fourths of the value of a porgy oil factory, alleged to have been burnt and destroyed by a mob, on 29th April, 1868. A verdict was rendered in favor of the plaintiffs, and the case. comes before us upon exceptions to the rulings of the presiding justice.
I. The defendants’ counsel offered to show that strong and offensive odors arose from the plaintiffs’ factory, and that it was a
It may be conceded that the factory is a nuisance within the provisions of B. S. 1857, c. 17, § 1, and that the noxious exhalations, offensive smells and stench arising from its operations approximate to the unbearable. But the manufacture is not, in and of itself, unlawful. It is not prohibited. It is sanctioned, if carried on in a place which has been duly assigned for such manufacture. The statute does not require the destruction of the buildings or of the machinery used in its operations, but that the business should not be carried on at a place, where from its location it would ■ be a nuisance. The statute, giving the power of abatement after conviction upon due process, does not in addition confer upon an irresponsible public the right to enforce the penalties it establishes] without process of law. A lawful business may so be carried on as to become a nuisance. Undoubtedly in certain cases and under certain limitations, nuisances may be abated by those specially aggrieved thereby. But when the subject matter of complaint is lawful per se, and the nuisance consists not in the business itself, but in the unsuitable place in which it is carried on, its abatement must be by the judgment of the court, and by the officers of the law carrying into effect such judgment, and not by the blind fury of a tumultuous mob. Only so much must be abated as constitutes the nuisance. If it consists in the use of a building, such use must be prohibited and punished. If the location is what constitutes the nuisance, it must be removed. A smith’s forge, in Bradley v. Gill, Lutw., [29.]; a tobacco mill in Jones v. Powell, Hut., 136; a manufactory for spirits of sulphur, in White’s case, 1 Burr., 333; a distillery, in Smith v. McConathy, 11 Miss., 517; a slaughter house in Brady v. Weeks, 3 Barb., 157; a livery stable, in Coker v. Birge, 10 Geo., 336; a melting house in Peck v. Elder, 3 Sandf., 126; a gaming house or grog shop, in State v. Paul, 5 R. I., 185; a powder magazine, in Cheatham, v. Shearon, 1 Swan, 213; a blacksmith shop, in Norcross v. Thoms, 51 Maine, 503; a tallow factory in Allen v. State, 31 Texas, 230; a tannery, in Rex v. Pappineau, 1 Strange, 686; have been declared nuisances, because of their unsuitable
These views are sustained by an almost unbroken series of decisions. In Rex v. Pappineau, 1 Strange, 686, the defendant was indicted for a nuisance by reason of his tannery, and fined £100. A writ of error was brought, and one of the reasons given for its reversal was, “that the judgment was erroneous for want of an adjudication that the nuisance be abated.” “But,” says LordBaymond, “regularly the judgment ought to be, to abate so much of the thing as makes it a nuisance. . . If a dye-house or any stinking trade were indicted, you shall not pull down the house where the trade was carried on.” In the same case, Beynolds, J., says : “Boasting of coffee was formerly thought a nuisance and yet nobody ever imagined the house in which it was roasted should be pulled down.” Then referring to the tannery, he adds, “I should think it would have been going too far, if they had adjudged the whole erection to be abated for a particular abuse of it in dipping some stinking skins.” In Barclay v. Com., 25 Penn., 503, the nuisance for which the defendant was indicted, was the maintenance and continuance of a barn near to and above a spring reserved for the inhabitants of Bedford, for supplying their general pump with water; and the indictment charged, that by storing hay and feeding cattle, the water of the spring was rendered impure, corrupted and unfit for use. Upon the question whether the sheriff should abate the nuisance by removing the barn, Woodward, J., says: “The offense lay in the use made of the barn and yard in close proximity to the spring, and the nuisance would be effectually abated by discontinuing such use. When an erection or structure itself constitutes the nuisance, as when it is put up in a public street, its demolition or removal is necessary to the abatement of the nuisance; but when the offense consists in a wrongful use of a building harmless itself, the remedy is to stop such use, not to tear down or remove the building itself.” In
. . So in the case before us the nuisance was not caused by the erection itself, but by the persons who resorted there for the purposes of prostitution.” In Moody v. Supervisors of Niagara County, 46 Barb., 659, an action was brought for the destruction of a bawdy house which was likewise the resort of thieves, robbers and murderers, and it appeared that immediately before its destruction one of the police was murdered by the people congregated there. It was there held that the fact that a house is kept' as a house of public prostitution renders it a common nuisance— but that a house cannot be lawfully destroyed by a mob because for the time being it is devoted to a purpose which the law characterizes as a common public nuisance; when it is the unlawful use of a building that constitutes a nuisance the remedy is, to stop such use, not to tear down and demolish the building. In Gray v. Ayres, 7 Dana, 375, it was held that what constitutes the nuisance should be abated, but not by the destruction of the house, the use of which and the practices therein, constituted the nuisance?
When it is the use of the building which constitutes the nuisance, the abatement consists in putting a stop to such use. The law allows its officers, in execution of its sentence only to do what is necessary to abate the nuisance and nothing more ; a fortiori, it will not sanction destruction without limit by individuals. It would be absurd to hold that a manufactory lawful in itself, but producing “offensive smells” is at the mercy of every passer by, whose olfactory nerves are disagreeably affected by its necessary processes.
Even if this was a case in which those specially aggrieved by by the plaintiffs factory would have the right to abate the alleged nuisance, yet as it does not appear by whom its destruction was caused, it cannot appear that it was caused by those who were so situated in reference to it that they wonld have the right of interference, if there was such right.
The decisions, to which the learned counsel for the defendants in his able and elaborate argument has called our attention, will not be found upon examination adverse to the conclusions to which
II. It is provided by c. 17, § 17, that a stationary engine is not to be used without license and by § 19, that “any such engine erected without a license shall be deemed a common nuisance without any other proof than its use.”
But the engine is not per se a nuisance. It may become one,, when it endangers “the safety of the neighborhood.” The remedy of the party aggrieved is by indictment, not by the summary distraction of the engine. By § 20, the municipal officers of the town in which it is erected have the same authority to abate and
The plaintiffs’ engine may be a nuisance in the particular locality of its use, but its destruction is not necessary to its abatement. It may be unlawful. So too are riots and mobs. But mobs cannot set up their own criminal acts as affording an exemption from the consequences of their wrong doings.
It is not denied that the steam engine was so affixed to the realty as to be regarded as part of theysame. Richardson v. Copeland, 6 Gray, 536. If annexed to and part of the factory, the damage or destruction of the same being established, the plaintiffs are entitled to the indemnity given by the statute.
III. The counsel for the defendant requested the court to instruct the jury “that it was the duty of the plaintiffs to furnish to the municipal officers of the town, on request, such evidence as they had discovered, to the end that they might know the offenders and have an opportunity to bring their action against them.”
There is no evidence tending to show that any request was made by the officers of the defendant town for information, and if not, there could not have been a refusal to give it. Besides if made it would have been of no avail inasmuch as the offenders were disguised and unknown.
But upon this request, were the facts as therein and thereby assumed, still the defendants have no valid ground of complaint. The instruction given was “that it was the duty of the plaintiffs to satisfy them (the jury) that they used all reasonable diligence to discover the offenders. It was not a question of success or want of success in doing so; but if the plaintiffs used due diligence in discovering and procuring evidence to show who the guilty parties were, in good faith, and for the purpose of convicting them, and communicated such evidence and facts, as they discovered or were known, to the officer whose duty it was to prosecute, and were ready to follow his suggestions and did so act, that
The instruction given required the use “of all reasonable diligence” to discover the offenders, and the verdict of the jury has affirmed the fact of its exercise.
IY. The defendants offered to show that the plaintiffs’ factory was “a public nuisance, and a nuisance to the people residing in the vicinity, but all evidence to show the factory a nuisance was excluded.”
It is urged that this evidence should have been received as tending to show contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiffs. In Moody v. Supervisors of Niagara County, 46 Barb., 659, evidence was offered that the house destroyed was one of ill fame and that its destruction was caused by excitement arising from the murder of one of the police in it, but the court excluded the evidence because it would constitute no defense. In Ely v. Supervisors of Niagara County, 36 N. Y., 297, a house of ill fame was destroyed by a mob and the point was taken and the evidence offered to show the character of the house was excluded and the exclusion was sustained. “She,” (the plaintiff) observes Scrugham, J., “was not to assume that the officers would or could not perform their duty effectually, and, therefore, having no reason to fear the injury or distraction of her property by a riot or mob, she was not careless or negligent in not anticipating that such would be the result of the evil use to which she applied the property. . . The conduct of the plaintiff was not such a cause as would naturally produce or aid in producing the destruction of her property; and its influence in that direction is too remote and uncertain to prevent its being considered such carelessness or negligence as would bar her recovery. All that her conduct can strictly be claimed to have produced was local public indignation; and this lawfully manifested, would not have occasioned or in any manner aided in the destruction of her property.” Much more then, cannot the plaintiffs be regarded as guilty of contributory negligence when engaged in a lawful business, if those engaged in an infamous violation of law are not so regarded. To hold that these plaintiffs are guilty of contributory negligence because they were engaged in a manufacture
The evidence offered was not admissible ■ to show contributory negligence on the part of the plaintiffs.
The defendant’s counsel requested the court to instruct the jury that “if plaintiffs were maintaining their factory with their stationary steam, engine without license therefor, they were without legal right so to do; and if they were entitled to recover at all, the measure of damages is three-fourths of the actual value of the property, and not three-fourths of what it might be worth for such use, at that place if they had a right to use it.”
This instruction was not given, but the jury were instructed -“that if they found for the plaintiffs, the measure of damages was three-fourths of the actual value of the property at the time it was destroyed.” The indemnity given by the státute c. 123, § 8, is three-fourths of the value of such injury to his property as the -plaintiff may have sustained. Here the injury arose from the destruction of property. The persons by whom the property was destroyed would be responsible for its actual value. They are « wrong doers and the possibility of an indictment of the owner is neither excuse nor palliation for them. Abatement by destruction of the plaintiffs’ factory and engine would not have been ordered by the judgment of the court; its use might have been prohibited ,and a fine imposed, but purification by fire is not one of the statutory penalties. The abatement could only be legally made by the judgment of the court upon an indictment in which the parties interested would have a right to appear and defend. The possibility of an indictment is not a contingency, as affecting value, of which a mob could avail itself in reduction of damages. -Neither can the defendants, whom the statute has made responsible for the action of such mob. Exceptions overruled.