104 So. 429 | Ala. | 1925
This is a bill in equity by Jacob D. Bloch and others against John R. Higgins and Harry Courtney, individually and as partners under the name of Higgins Courtney. The bill seeks a permanent injunction against respondents, preventing them from erecting or maintaining or continuing the business of undertakers and funeral directors at a certain place described in the complaint, on the ground it is or will be a continuing nuisance to each of them and others, and to their homes, on account of its *211 close proximity to their residences, and on account of the manner in which such business is intended to be carried on at this place by the respondents.
The respondents demurred to the bill of complaint, which demurrers were by decree of the court overruled, and respondents prosecute this appeal from that decree, and it is the error assigned.
The erection or continuance of a private nuisance may be enjoined and abated by a court of equity at the instance of the party or parties aggrieved when the injuries or inconveniences or damages in their nature are permanent or continuous or constantly recurring. City of Selma v. Jones,
The appellants insist their demurrers raising these propositions on the bill of complaint should have been sustained — (1) the undertaking business is not a nuisance per se; (2) that the sensitive nature of complainants was not sufficient ground for an injunction, that consideration should be given to the effect of the undertaking business upon persons of ordinary sensibilities; and (3) the bill does not allege the business was being conducted or managed or would be conducted or managed in such manner as would constitute it a nuisance.
The business of funeral directors and undertakers is lawful in its nature and necessary for the welfare of society. Some of the objects of this business are to embalm, care for, and dispose of dead human bodies as averred in the complaint. There is established by statute a state board of embalming, with authority to issue license to a person to practice the science of embalming and the care and disposition of the dead when the requirements of the statutes are complied with by the applicant. Sections 688-695, Code 1923.
It is true the business of funeral directors and undertakers is lawful and not a nuisance per se, but it may become a nuisance if it hurts, inconveniences, or damages another or injures his person or his property. Sections 9271 and 9276, Code 1923, and authorities supra. The inconvenience caused by it must not be fanciful or such as would affect only a person of a fastidious taste. It should be such as would affect an ordinary, reasonable man. Inconvenience, as here used, includes to disturb and to discomfort, as defined by Mr. Webster. Sections 9271 and 9276, Code 1923; City of Selma v. Jones,
A business, lawful in its nature, and not a nuisance per se in one locality, may become or be a nuisance per se when erected and maintained in certain other localities. The particular location of the business and its management and the time of its erection may determine whether it is or not a nuisance per se. English v. P. E. L. M. Co.,
This cause is here on demurrer to the bill of complaint, and the facts averred therein must be treated as true by us. City of Selma v. Jones,
On November 1, 1924, the respondents purchased the Leinkauf lot and brick residence thereon, located on the north side of Government street and on the corner of Government and Scotts streets, in the city of Mobile. This lot and brick dwelling thereon has been used prior to its sale to respondents for many decades as a place of residence. It is clear and evident from the averments of the bill that respondents intend to and are preparing to convert this dwelling into an undertaking establishment "for the purpose of carrying on the general business of undertakers and funeral directors, the same as is generally carried on in the city of Mobile, and have declared their fixed purpose of carrying out their said intentions at once." Section 6 of the bill of complaint alleges the manner in which the business of undertakers "is generally carried on in the city of Mobile," which section 6 appears in full in the report of this case. Complainants notified respondents that this business so to be conducted would constitute a nuisance in that locality and would be a hurt, inconvenience, and damage to complainants and to their property, and they would resist placing and carrying on this business there; and they aver that respondents have since "begun and are carrying on work upon the property to convert the improvements thereon from a place of residence to an undertaker's establishment as aforesaid, for the purposes hereinbefore set forth."
This lot joins the residence lot of complainant Bloch, and is about 3 feet from his residence. The brick building on the lot to be used for this business is less than 10 feet from his residence on the adjoining lot. Bloch and his family have occupied this residence as their home continuously for over a score of years. The residences of the other complaints are on lots across Government street from the Leinkauf lot and residence. They are now using these residences on their respective lots as homes, and have occupied them as such continuously — one for 15, another *212 for 20 and the other for 30 years. It appears from the bill that part of Government street, west of Clairborne street, is and has been for more than half a century the principal residence street of the city, and that part thereof, including the respective residences of complainants and the Leinkauf residence of respondents, was more than 50 years ago built up as an exclusive residence district, and it is now so occupied, and it is in the heart of the most popular part of the city.
The home is a place for comfort and repose, where one can eat and sleep and spend the leisure hours with his family free, from business cares and anxieties. A citizen has a right to be protected in his home and in his right to the enjoyment of it. Death is an enemy of human life. "The last enemy that shall be destroyed is death." 1 Cor. xv:26. To see its effect is depressing to the ordinary, reasonable person. To see almost daily the hearse carrying in and taking dead bodies from this Leinkauf residence, to know the bodies were there being embalmed, disinfected from disease, probably contagious in its nature, to hear the singing of funeral hymns and psalms in the chapel of this residence, and to see the relatives and friends of the dead and hear their mourning, would have a depressing effect on the mind of a normal person, would continually remind complainants of mortality, would deprive them and their respective homes of the comfort, repose, and pleasure to which they as owners are each entitled, and it would have a tendency to weaken their physical resistance and render them more susceptible, probably, to disease from the dead bodies therein if they were infected with contagious diseases. Densmore v. Evergreen Camp,
As was well said in Saier v. Joy,
"The question here is not the restraining of defendants' business [undertaker] but the restraint of its intrusion into a long-established and strictly residential district."
And this court, in Harris v. Randolph Lumber Co.,
"And in this regard the allegation of the complaint that the mill of the defendant was erected in a then already residential district would be a material if not decisive consideration."
The respondents intend and propose, and are now carrying on the work, to establish and maintain the business of undertakers and funeral directors in Mobile, as is generally carried on in that city, and as is particularly described in the complaint, in a place exclusively used as a residential district. They are intruders by that business in that residential district. For more than 50 years, where respondents are locating their business, it has been and is now used for homes, and it is in the very heart of the most popular residence part of the city. It is in close proximity to, only a few feet from, the residences owned and occupied as homes for years by the complainants.
In Beisel v. Crosby,
"Where an undertaker purchases and uses for a funeral home in a city a dwelling house situated within a few feet of private dwellings in an exclusive residential district, in disregard to timely protests by residents thereof, and thus encroaches on the repose, the comfort, and the freedom of their homes, depreciates the value of their property, depresses their spirits, and weakens their power to resist disease, injunction is their proper remedy, but the allowance of the writ depends upon the facts and the circumstances."
We find and are cited to no fixed, arbitrary rule controlling or governing cases of this kind, and each cause must rest and be determined on the facts and circumstances alleged and proved.
Under the facts averred in this cause, which are admitted under demurrer, we must and do hold the business proposed to be established by respondents at this place, in close proximity to the homes of complainants, which is in an exclusive, popular, and long-established residential district, and the manner in which the business is to be maintained and carried on there, will make it a nuisance. It will injure the value of the property of complainants as homes. It will inconvenience, disturb, and discomfort complainants, or any ordinary, reasonable man, in using and occupying their respective residences as homes. These injuries and inconveniences will be in their nature continuous or constantly recurring. Hence injunction is a proper remedy for complainants to seek. Authorities supra.
The trial court did not err in overruling the demurrers of respondents to the bill of complaint.
The decree is free from error, and it is affirmed.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SAYRE and GARDNER, JJ., concur. *213