124 S.W. 112 | Tex. App. | 1909
William O. Briant recovered judgment for three hundred dollars against John C. Hamm and the Merkel Light Power Company for alleged damages for annoyance, inconvenience and discomfort to the plaintiff and his family, resulting from the operation of a gin and light plant by defendants, and from that judgment defendants have appealed.
In the charge of the court the issue was submitted as to whether or not the operation of the plant constituted a nuisance warranting a recovery by the plaintiff, and neither party has challenged the correctness of that instruction. After thus instructing the jury, the charge contained the following additional instruction, to wit:
"You are further charged that no matter how lawful a business may be it can not be conducted in such a manner as to directly, palpably *615 and substantially injure the comfort and convenience of the premises of another.
"And that where dust, dirt and lint are emitted from the premises of the defendants and carried on the plaintiff's premises to the discomfort and annoyance of plaintiff, it is not necessary for plaintiff to show that defendant's business was carried on recklessly or was not properly managed.
"And where one permits dust, dirt and lint to be emitted from his premises and carried on to the premises or adjoining property of another in such a manner as to seriously annoy and discomfort the occupants of said adjoining property, such action is subject to liability.
"Dirt, dust and lint are not nuisances per se, but when produced in such quantities and distributed in such a manner as to render them specially uncomfortable and inconvenient, and to interfere with the comfort of human existence, then they may become nuisances."
By different assignments, each paragraph of the charge quoted above is assailed as being argumentative, and as giving undue emphasis to plaintiff's contention that dirt, dust and lint escaping from defendants' plant did cause himself and family annoyance and discomfort, and those assignments are sustained. As above noted, the issues to be decided by the jury had already been submitted to the jury in previous paragraphs of the charge, and when that is done in a proper manner we fail to understand the necessity in any case of following such instructions with statements of abstract propositions of law. It may become necessary in some instances to define a legal term, such as "negligence," used in presenting the issues to be decided by a jury, but when the court proceeds further and indulges in a discussion of abstract questions of law, there is always danger of unduly emphasizing the contention made by some party to the suit, as we think was clearly done by the instructions above quoted.
By their tenth assignment complaint is made of the refusal of the court to give to the jury the following special instruction, requested by defendants:
"Gentlemen of the jury, you are instructed that defendants had a right in law to use their property for all purposes proper to the prudent maintenance and operation of said gin and light plant, and defendants will not be liable herein if the use to which they have put their property is a reasonable use for proper purposes."
This requested instruction embodied an incorrect proposition of law, and the court did not err in refusing it. In Burditt v. Swenson,
"The third and sixth assignments raise the point that to entitle appellee to a recovery he must have alleged and proved negligence on the part of appellants in maintaining or operating its plant. But the reverse of the proposition appears to be the law. In other words, if the operation of appellants' plant amounted to a nuisance as to appellee, then no amount of care on the part of appellant in conducting its business would excuse it from liability for the damages. The principle is thoroughly settled in railroad cases, in Daniel v. Ft. Worth
R. G. Ry. Co.,
Appellants have presented other assignments of error, but as the circumstances made the basis thereof will not likely occur upon another trial, it is not necessary to discuss them.
For the errors indicated above, the judgment of the trial court is reversed and the cause remanded for another trial.
Reversed and remanded.