Opinion by
The plaintiff (joined later by a number of co-complainants) sued to restrain the defendants’ use of an unimproved piece of land in Philadelphia as a terminal parking place for tractor-trailer truсks. The complaint averred that the use so made of the property constituted a nuisance per se} being an alleged violation of a municipal zoning ordinance, and also a nuisance in fact.
The defеndants Scherzberg, husband and wife, jointly purchased a portion of the property in question
The learned chancellor filed an adjudication in which he held that the use of the property, so made or permitted by the defendants, constituted a nuisance
We may as well at once dispose of the injunctive provision concerning supposed blocking or obstructing of the abutting street. The chancellor’s action in such regard was purely gratuitous. There is not a single finding of fact with respect to the usе made of the street by the defendants. That portion of the decree must, therefore, be vacated as constituting an excessive exercise of the court’s power. The matter of the abutting street is еntirely foreign to the theory of the complaint.
As to whether the business conducted by the Blades company amounted to a nuisance in fact, the chancellor found that “The coupling and uncoupling of tractors and trailers, the noise caused by the warming up of the large tractor motors, their acceleration, charging of tractor batteries, sounds of escaping air from the coupling and uncoupling оf air brakes and their application, the shifting of gears, the switching of trailers, and muffler explosions and vibrations create great and disturbing noises, more disturbing during the hours between 10 P.M. and 6 A.M.” and that “The disturbance, vibration, and noise is regular and continuous throughout the night, except on Saturday and Sunday nights, and in consequence thereof, Complainants and their families are disturbed in their rest and
From the disсussion contained in the adjudication and from the evidence there cited by the chancellor as support for the above-quoted findings, it is manifest that the sole ground of actionable complaint is that the noise made by the tractor-trailers
at night
and the flashing of their lights deprived the complainants of restful sleep and at times of any sleep at all. There are no findings that the operation of the trucking business on thе defendants’ property
in the daytime
materially interfered with the complainants’ ordinary comfort of life or impaired their reasonable enjoyment of their habitations. Nor would the evidence support any such findings. It is оbvious, therefore, that, so far as a nuisance in fact is material, the injunction issued by
The chancellor’s .conclusion of law that the operation of the trucking businéss on the defendants’ property in the area zoned Residential “D” is unlawful and constitutes, a nuisance
per se
conforms to his conclusion, as contained in the discussion, to the effect that “The business now conducted on the Scherzberg land is ■ by no means • similar, to that conducted by Mr. Scherzberg before the ordinance was passed.” But, no specific finding of fact of such import was made. In any event, the conclusion of ultimate fact, as above stated, is not supported either by direct findings or by the evidence. The only findings in such connection are that prior to the year 1940, the Scherzbergs “were using from three to five straight job motor trucks of light tonnage”; that in 1940, Blades “began to use the property as a tractor-trailer transfer or terminal and operated six tractors and trailers”; аnd that since 1940, “the number of tractors and trailers operated by Blades and Blades, Incorporated, has increased.” Aside from the legal insufficiency of such findings to establish a change in the use of the property, they neither correctly nor adequately reflect the undisputed evidence. In 1932, when Scherzberg built the garage, he was operating “six trucks . . . from five to ten ton” each and a “four-wheel trailer”; and, in 1940, he was operating five motor trucks of five to ten tons each and “two tractors and two trailers”. He testified without objection that, the only difference between the business he conducted and what Blades did was “that I did somе local work, which Harry Blades doesn’t do now . . . Otherwise it is the same thing. In fact, the biggest part of my customers ... he took over too” and he started to do business in 1940 with the “same kind of equipment that he has today, tractors аnd trailers”. Indeed, the chancellor himself recognized that “. . . the
Neither the natural growth of a business, existing at /the time of the enactment of a zoning ordinance, nor the adoption thereafter of more modern instrumentalities, suitable and helpful in carrying on the business, works a change of use in legal contemplation. In
Cheswick Borough v. Bechman,
It follows from the foregoing that the operation of the trucking business on the defendants’ property is not a nuisance per se and that it constitutes a nuisance in fact only in so far as it is carried on in the nighttime. The decree will therefore be modified to the extent of limiting the restraint of the injunction against the conduct of the trucking business on the property in question to the hours from 8 P.M. to 7 A.M. and vacating the provision concerning the defendants’ use of the abutting street.
As modified, the decree is affirmed; the parties to bear their own costs.
