Hosmer v. Republic I. & S. Co.

60 So. 801 | Ala. | 1913

SAYRE, J.

The effect of the complaint is to aver that the death of plaintiff’s intestate, on account of which he sues, Avas caused by an issue of foul, unAvholesome, and noxious air from a pond Avhich defendant corporation constructed in the neighborhood of his residence, where intestate, his minor child, lived Avith him. We are not required to know hoAV plaintiff Avill prove the causation alleged; but, accepting the allegation as true and provable on demurrer, there will be no ques tion but that it shows damage peculiar to intestate, not merely in degree but in kind. The only factor of the case • presented which it is conceived may possibly be effective in denial of the cause of action asserted is that plaintiff’s intestate OAvned no legal interest or estate in the land upon Avhich he lived. To sustain his contention that the complaint is defective in this respect, appellee quotes Blackstone’s definition of nuisance as “anything done to the hurt or annoyance of the lands, tenements, or hereditaments of another.” We have made approving use of that definition in several cases. On this occasion it is necessary to note that the hurt or annoyance of the definition is not necessarily a physical injury to the lands, tenements or, hereditaments, but may be an injury to the owner or possessor thereof in respect of his dealing with, possessing, or enjoying them. — Cooley on Torts (3d Ed.) 1174. At the old *418common, law, a declaration in a suit brought for the physical abatement of a nuisance by the writ of nuisance was required to allege a freehold estate in the premises affected, but that was because the action was a real action. One modern way of abating a nuisance is by an action on the case for damages merely, in which case the declaration need only show that the plaintiff was rightfully in possession of the premises affected.- — 14 Ency. PI. & Pr. 1113. This remedy, however, is not permitted to those who suffer only in common with the public; for otherwise, in the language of Chief Justice Shaw in Quincy Canal v. Newcomb, 7 Mete. (Mass.) 276, 39 Am. Dec. 778, where he was speaking of a public nuisance which had not become a private nuisance by reason of special damage to the plaintiff, that “would lead to such a multiplication of suits as to be itself an intolerable evil.” But that is as far as the best considered cases have gone in the policy of repressing litigation on account of wrongs done and suffered through nuisances, and, we apprehend, it is as far as the courts ought to go or will. This court, in common with all others, has held that the fact that a nuisance may have deleteriously affected the property or personal well-being of others in the neighborhood does not alleviate any material and special injury done to the plaintiff, nor merge it in the public Avrong for which the public may have a remedy in one way or another. — Richards v. Daugherty, 133 Ala. 569, 31 South. 934. It is obvious that to maintain an action for an injury affecting the value of the freehold the plaintiff must have a legal estate. But if noxious vapors and the like cause sickness and death to one who has a lawful habitation in the neighborhood, no sufficient reason is to be found in the accepted definitions of nuisance, nor in that policy of the courts Avhich would discour *419age vexatious litigation, nor in the inherent justice of the situation, as we see it, ,why the person injured, or his personal representative in case of death, should not have reparation in damages for any special injury he may have suffered, although he has no legal estate in the soil. Certainly a child has the right to live under his father’s roof — is a lawful occupant of his father’s home — and in our opinion he should be accorded the same measure of protection against the construction of nuisances in the neighborhood which are so noxious and long-continued as to materially affect his physical well-being. — Ft. Worth & Rio Grande Ry. v. Glenn, 97 Tex. 586, 80 S. W. 992, 65 L. R. A. 818, 104 Am. St. Rep. 894, 1 Ann. Cas. 270. In that case may be found a discussion of most of the causes upon Avhich appellee relies, and, while they have had due consideration by us, we have not felt obliged by duty or expediency to repeat Avhat was there said. We have stated our concurring conclusion, and, in a general way, the reasons upon which Ave proceed. This must suffice.

The court erred in sustaining the demurrer as for any ground assigned, and the judgment will be reversed.

Reversed and remanded.

Doavdell, C. J., and McClellan and Somerville, JJ., concur.
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