32 A.2d 416 | Pa. | 1943
Lead Opinion
This bill was filed by residents of Centre Avenue and North Fourth Street, in the City of Reading, to restrain defendants from erecting and operating a cash-and-carry store, or super-market, and parking lot for patrons of the store, at the corner of Fourth and Greenwich Streets in that city.
Greenwich Street runs east and west; Third and Fourth Streets run north and south, intersecting Greenwich Street at right angles. Centre Avenue, a main thoroughfare, crosses Fourth Street diagonally immediately north of the intersection at Greenwich Street. Windsor Street parallels Greenwich Street one block to the north. The area so described was found by the chancellor to be exclusively residential. There are no zoning restrictions or building restrictions covering the site of the proposed super-market.
The defendant, Isabel Shillam, owner of the premises in question, has entered into a lease with the defendant, The Great Atlantic Pacific Tea Company, and has agreed with the defendants, Albert C. Burger and Eastern Land Construction Company, to erect a large one-story market house, with an adjacent hard-surfaced parking lot for patrons. The parking lot is to be constructed *375 at the rear of the store building and will accommodate fifty automobiles. Its entrance will be on Fourth Street, and an exit will be provided onto Greenwich Street.
On the south side of Greenwich Street, which forms the southern boundary of the described area, and facing the site of the proposed market, is a garage, a tinsmith's shop, and a storage yard used by large trucks for parking. On Fourth Street, south of Greenwich, there are thirty private garages, a public garage, and some apartments. As stated by the chancellor: "It may be justly said that the . . . property is near the southern edge of a fine residential district."
Concluding that the establishment contemplated by defendants would constitute a nuisance in that locality, the chancellor entered a decree nisi granting an injunction. Defendants' exceptions were dismissed by the court en banc. The chancellor, SCHAEFFER, P. J., wrote the majority opinion. SHANAMAN, J., concurred, but held that the district was "predominantly" residential. A dissenting opinion was filed by MAYS, J., upon the grounds that the district was not predominantly residential, and that in any event the proposed establishment was not a nuisance per se, and would be enjoinable only if so conducted as to constitute a nuisance in fact. From the final decree defendants have taken this appeal.
The question involved is: Will the construction of a supermarket, grocery and provision store, with a parking lot for its patrons in a predominantly residential district, constitute a nuisance as a matter of law, regardless of the manner of operation, where the proposed use does not violate building restrictions or zoning laws?
The chancellor has found this locality to be exclusively residential, and the majority of the court en banc has held that it is, at least, predominantly residential. A careful review of the record indicates that the conclusion of the majority that the district is predominantly residential is supported by sufficient competent evidence, *376
and this court, therefore, will not disturb it: Ladner et al.
v. Siegel et al.,
Conceding, therefore, that the district is predominantly residential, it does not necessarily follow that the introduction of this commercial enterprise should be enjoined. The use contemplated is lawful. There is no zoning ordinance which interdicts it, nor is it barred by restrictive covenants in the deed to the premises. In Pennsylvania Co., etc., et al.
v. Sun Co.,
Because certain types of business, by the necessary incidents of their normal operation, deleteriously affect the health and comfort of the community, their establishment in residential districts has been held to constitute a nuisance as a matter of law. Public garages (Ladner v. Siegel, supra; Phillips et al.
v. Donaldson,
Obviously, a community grocery store in a residential district is not such a nuisance per se. It has been held that such stores do not detract from the residential character of the vicinity. See Calvary Church v. Jones, supra, at page 80;Burke v. Hollinger, supra. Because, however, the establishment here proposed is a supermarket, designed to attract patrons from other communities and having as an adjunct a parking lot for *378 customers, the court below has placed it in the category of those enterprises which are nuisances as a matter of law when carried on in a residential area. No decision of an appellate court in this Commonwealth has been cited in support of this proposition, and it must be rejected.
The fact that the proposed store will attract numbers of persons to the community in automobiles, with the noises and odors peculiar to the operation of these vehicles, does not, in itself, entitle plaintiffs to an injunction. In Sheets et al.
v. Armstrong et al.,
The possibility envisaged by the concurring judge below, that residents will find the parking spaces in front of their homes continuously obstructed, is not a necessary incident of the operation of the store. See Todd v. Sablosky, supra, at page 509. Should this condition materialize in the future, there is no reason why plaintiffs and others could not obtain from the civic authorities the designation of their house-frontages as "no parking" zones, particularly in view of the fact that defendants propose to provide ample parking facilities for their customers at the rear of the store. Even if this protection should be refused, an appropriate remedy is suggested by Chief Justice KEPHART in Breinig et ux. v.Allegheny County et al.,
Furnishing a parking lot for patrons does not of itself stamp the enterprise as a nuisance. It cannot be regarded as a public garage: Todd v. Sablosky, supra; *379 Breinig v. Allegheny County, supra. Plaintiffs have placed much reliance on the former of these cases. There, building restrictions were involved, and the question was whether the operation of a theatre and stores, with a common parking lot, would constitute a nuisance in "a closely settled suburban community". It was held that the stores and theatre were not buildings of such a type that their normal use for the purposes intended would necessarily constitute a nuisance in that locality. As to the parking lot, however, it was decided that its contemplated operation would create a nuisance. This was predicated upon the following considerations (page 512): "The parking lot would be in use not only during business hours by customers of the stores, but also throughout the evening by patrons of the theatre. Large numbers of cars leaving the lotsimultaneously at the end of each performance would producenoise and congestion to disturb the rest of the community." It was the fact that the lot would be in use every evening, and that, late at night, large numbers of cars would leave simultaneously that distinguished the case, in part, fromBreinig v. Allegheny County, supra, where the use of a parking lot was restricted to the patrons of a single store, during business hours, and from Phila. Fairfax Corp. v. McLaughlin etal.,
Here, the store will operate only upon week days, and will close at 6 p. m. daily, except Friday, Saturday, and days preceding holidays, when it will be open until 9 p. m. The latter hour is not late, and there is little likelihood that there will be a mass departure of customers from the lot at any one time. If, in the future, it is conducted in such a way as to become a nuisance in fact, appropriate action will be available to the plaintiffs.
The court should not be impressed by plaintiffs' fears that the store will be operated in a manner likely *380 to endanger their health and interfere with the comfort of their homes, because there is no evidence that such results are inevitable. It is, therefore, unreasonable to assume, as a matter of law, that the business of the lessee cannot be conducted in an orderly and inoffensive manner.
It has been pointed out that the lessee intends to illuminate the premises brightly, inside and out, and the parking lot as well. The chancellor has inferred that this illumination would create an objectionable and sleep-disturbing glare. Certainly, if the actual illumination has this effect, it can be adjusted to satisfy plaintiffs' objections, or, if necessary, enjoined at that time.
In short, there should be nothing in the construction of the store, or in the necessary consequences of its normal operation, to create a nuisance. The court cannot anticipate an improper use of the premises and sanction a restraining order founded upon surmise and speculation as to the future conduct of defendants. In Rhodes et al. v. Dunbar et al.,
It plainly appears, therefore, that the court below erred in granting an injunction at this time against defendants upon the ground that the proposed enterprise *381 would be a nuisance per se if established in this community.
The decree is reversed; the injunction is dissolved, and the bill is dismissed at appellees' cost.
Dissenting Opinion
I cannot agree with the majority in holding that the operation of a retail grocery super-market and adjoining parking lot is not a nuisance in a residential district. This is not to be an ordinary community store for the convenience of the immediate neighborhood. The admitted purpose of a super-market is to attract as many people as possible from other districts, who come by automobile; and, to meet their demands, a large stock of every form of fruit, vegetables, meat, fish and staples is carried. To attract customers, cream tile walls of this building are to be brilliantly lighted at night, and a parking lot is to be provided for the accommodation of fifty automobiles at a time. This large-scale enterprise is to be conducted in an area in the City of Reading which we have twice had occasion to declare residential:Thomas v. Dougherty,
The use of property for business purposes in a residential district constitutes a nuisance where it injuriously affects the health, safety, morals, or property values of those residing in the vicinity: Nesbit v. Riesenman,
It is proposed to operate this store two or three nights a week until nine o'clock. The glare from the lights, and the insects attracted thereby, will be a constant source of annoyance and discomfort to the residents of the vicinity. While it would be possible to operate the store without strong lights, the owners would not wish to do so because of the need for such light and advertising effect. The noise of many people entering and leaving the market would at such an hour constitute an interference with the quiet of the neighborhood. With respect to the noise of crowds we said in Edmunds v. Duff,
The parking lot to be operated in conjunction with the store for the accommodation of the automobiles of customers will constitute another source of damage to property values in the district and disturbance to the residents. A parking lot has many of the characteristics *383
of a gasoline filling station, which, as is firmly established by the cases and admitted by the majority, is a nuisance per se in a residential neighborhood. The presence of exhaust odors, monoxide gas, noise of starting and stopping, dust, glare of headlights at night, rumble and vibration of heavy trucks, and backfire explosions from their engines are some of the reasons for our decisions that such a business injuriously affects the health and comfort of the residents of the vicinity and lowers the market value of their property for residential purposes. The same is true of a parking lot, with reference to which we said in Todd v. Sablosky,
Defendants assert that the super-market will be no more damaging than the theatre and stores which in theSablosky case were held not to violate a restrictive covenant against nuisances. This argument overlooks the fact that there the property upon which the businesses *384
were to be carried on lay in a commercial, not a residential, district (Todd v. McLaughlin,
The other cases cited by the majority do not seem to me to embrace situations comparable to that now before this Court. In determining what constitutes a nuisance in a residential district, each case must be decided on its own facts (Pilling v. Moore,
While courts are reluctant to interfere with the use of a person's property for otherwise legitimate purposes (Huckenstine's Appeal,
For these reasons, I would affirm the decree of the learned court below.
Chief Justice MAXEY and Mr. Justice PATTERSON join in this dissent.