This is a statutory action to abate a private nuisance and to recover damages for the injuries thereby occasioned. The gravamen of the complaint is that the defendant has erected a sulphuric acid plant, located in close proximity to plaintiff’s property, which it operates, and that this plant, through its smokestacks and otherwise, emits deleterious acids, fumes, vapors, and substances injurious to-the plaintiff, and which renders her dwelling house, situated upon said property, uninhabitable. The dwelling house had been occupied by the plaintiff and her deceased husband for many years prior to the erection of the sulphuric acid plant in 1901. The question is: Does the erection and operation
“The maintenance of life and' business, especially in crowded cities, necessitates the imparting of a certain degree of impurity to the atmosphere. The law gives protectiou only against substantial injury. To be of legal cognizance the injury must be tangible, or the discomfort perceptible to the senses of ordinary people. Undoubtedly a party has the unlimited and unqualified right to use his property as he pleases, provided he does not SO' use it as to become a nuisance to others. Such rights, duties, and obligations between the respective owners of adjacent lands are necessarily reciprocal. ... It is because a person maintains something*136 that annoys or incommodes another or his business' — something noxious or offensive to another — that such right oí action is given. The question of nuisance, therefore, depends not only upon the character of the business maintained, but its proximity to the dwellings, business, property, or occupancy of others.”
It is urged on behalf of the appellant that the business is lawful and that the plant is not per se a nuisance. This contention is also met by the decision in the Pennoyer Case. It is said (p. 512,
“The business- is lawful; but such interruption and destruction is an invasion of private rights, and to that extent unlawful. It is not so much the manner of doing as the proximity of such a business to the adjacent occupant which causes the annoyance.”
An industry or trade which is not a nuisance per se may be conducted in such a manner or in such a place as to- be a nuisance, as a planing mill in the residence portion of a city. Rogers v. John Week L. Co.
“We are of opinion that a count prima facie sufficiently shows a want of due care which charges the storing of large quantities of gunpowder in a wooden building in a populous*137 place in tbe city of Cullman. Tbe demurrer was properly sustained tO' tbe count wbicb merely charged tbe storing gunpowder and its explosion, without further averment showing that on account of location, quantity, and surrounding circumstances it was dangerous.-’
This complaint does state that tbe sulphuric acid plant is a nuisance by reason of its location in close proximity to the plaintiff’s property on wbicb her dwelling bouse is situated.
Criticism of tbe complaint is made because tbe process of manufacturing tbe acid is not stated; but that is not material, 'for tbe foundation of tbe action is that the location of tbe plant is such as to cause material inconvenience and damage, irrespective of tbe manner in wbicb it is operated. Whether that location is convenient or not, under all tbe circumstances, is a question that may properly be raised by tbe answer. Appellant relies with much confidence on Mountain C. Co. v. U. S.
Whether the court may apply the doctrine of comparative injury to the respective parties in rendering the judgment is not before the court for decision on this appeal. The other grounds for demurrer were not urged upon the attention of the court and are treated as abandoned. We hold that the complaint states a canse of action, and that the demurrer was properly overruled.
By the Court. — The order appealed from is affirmed.
