63 Barb. 251 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1872
To maintain an action to abate a nuisance, since the remedy is by action and not by writ, the plaintiff must allege that he was the owner of the freehold affected by the nuisance at the time when the several acts complained of were committed; and the action must be against the owners in fee, in cases where it is brought to abate the nuisance. (1 N. Y. 223. 5 Barb. 550. 16 id. 568. 24 id. 404. 29 id. 391. 12 N. Y. 486.) By section 453 of the Code, the writ of nuisance is abolished, and by section 454 it is provided that “ injuries heretofore remediable by writ of nuisance are subjects of action, as other
The plaintiff in this action seeks to recover damages for past injuries, and the complaint also asks for a perpetual injunction restraining the defendants from so using their lime kilns as to annoy him, and prevent the enjoyment of his premises.
It is now well settled that the plaintiff has a right to come into a court of equity and ask for such relief, together with his damages as incidental to his equitable relief.
“Although he had a remedy at law for the trespass, yet as it was of a continuous nature, he had a right to come into a court of equity and to invoke its restraining power to prevent a multiplicity of suits, and can, of course, recover his damages as incidental to this equitable relief.” (Williams v. N. Y. Central R. R. Co., 16 N. Y. 111.) . In Davis v. Lambertson, (56 Barb. 480,) the general term in this district passed upon this question, and the opinion of Justice Foster very ably maintains the right to the double relief in one action, and reaches the conclusion that such an action is one in equity.
It has been insisted by the learned counsel for the defendants, that “ this is not a clear case, upon the proofs, in respect to the nuisance, and therefore it should be tried before a jury, and this complaint, for that reason, should be dismissed.”
FTumerous case are found in the books, where a court' of equity has refused to grant a preliminary injunction in doubtful cases, until a trial had been had before a jury ; and it may be conceded that before the adoption of the Code- that was the general rule. (3 John. Ch. 282. 16 Ves. 338. 6 Paige, 563. 11 Sump. 403. 1 Cooper, 343. 6 Barb. 152. 37 N. Y. 99. 56 Barb. 480.)
But the question presented here is not whether a preliminary injunction should issue, but on the contrary, whether a permanent one shall be granted, in conjunction
In this case the defendants might have had the issues tried by a jury; had they chosen to have the same settled under the rule. They have been voluntarily brought to a hearing before the court, and the findings of the court are to stand in place of a verdict of a jury, (4 Rob. 451; 56 Barb. 485;) and the defendants must be held to have waived a trial by jury, (34 N. Y. 30; 40 id. 504; 40 How. 160;) and in case the court reaches the conclusion that the plaintiff’s rights have been invaded by the acts of the defendants, so that they have been guilty of maintaining, a nuisance, the plaintiff will be entitled to “judgment for damages or for removal of the nuisance, or both.” (Code, 454.)
The important question in this case, upon the proofs, and to be determined by the court, comes to this; have the defendants, by erecting their lime kilns 204 feet from the dwelling-house of the plaintiff, and there operating, them for the purpose of burning stone into lime, by fire made of coal-dust and wood, and allowing the dust, gas and smoke therefrom to come upon, and into, the premises and house of the plaintiff, caused such an interference with the plaintiff’s enjoyment of, and such an injury to, his property, as amounts to a nuisance.
The authorities bearing upon this question are very numerous, and an examination of some of them may not be inopportune. In Bamford v. Lumley, (4 Com. Bench, N. S., 334,) it was held that in the case of a brick kiln, where it was not proved that it was at an improper location, the party was not liable, although the plaintiff’s property was directly injured, and his trees and shrubbery killed and destroyed. But in a later case this rule was very considerably modified. In Tipping v. St. Helen’s Smelting Co., (11 House of Lords Rep. 642,) the lord chancellor held that the rule, as above laid down in Bamford
The chancellor’s conclusion was approved in Brady v. Weeks, (3 Barb. 159,) by Paige, J., in which it was also held that a slaughter-house in a city is, prima facie, a nuisance to persons residing in the neighborhood.
In Hay v. Cohoes Co., (2 N. Y. 161,) Gardiner, J., says: “ The use of land by the proprietors is not therefore an absolute right, but qualified and limited by the higher right of others to the lawful possession of their property. To this possession the law prohibits all direct injury, without regard to its extent, or the motives of the aggressor. A man may prosecute such business as he chooses, upon his premises, but he cannot erect a nuisance to the annoyance of the adjoining proprietor, even for the purpose of lawful trade.”
It was held in Carhart v. Auburn Gas Light Co., (22 Barb. 297,) that the use of land for gas works was not within the usual and ordinary purposes to which real estate is applied, and that whenever the works cause any special injury, they are to be regarded as a private nuisance ; and that an action will lie in favor of any person sustaining special injury.
In Fish v. Dodge, (4 Denio, 311,) Judge Bronson very clearly states the rule, and fortifies his statement with numerous cases; and his language, at page 316, is not inapplicable here. He says: “There are many cases in the books where this doctrine has been applied; and among the number are those where a man erects a smith’s forge, swine-sty, lime kiln, privy or tallow furnace, so near
The defendant’s counsel has cited to the court the case of Doellner v. Tynan, (38 How. Pr. 176,) which was tried at a special term of the superior court, in the city of New York, and the opinion delivered by Monell, J.
That was a case in respect to a blacksmith shop in the city, and it was clear, upon the evidence, that the value of the plaintiff’s property was not materially affected by the defendant’s business, and the court came to the conclusion that the street in question had been substantially abandoned to business purposes.
After quoting the general rule, as already stated, the learned judge added, that “ the general doctrine has been applied to a variety of businesses, which were lawful in themselves, but which rendered the residences of others unfit for comfortable habitations, such as a smith’s forge, (Bisby v. Gill, Lutw. 69,) swine-sty, (Alfred’s case, 9 Reps. 59, a,) lime kiln, (Id., per Gray, Ch. J.,) and tallow furnace.”
The same learned judge quotes 4 Robertson, 449, with other cases, approvingly, and adds, at page 181 of his opinion, that, “ From these cases, which have been cited, and many others, which might be, it appears -to be well established that any lawful business or trade may be a, nuisance, if it is conducted in a manner which is injurious to the comfortable enjoyment of another man’s property. It need not be detrimental to health, or endanger life; nor is it necessary that it should directly depreciate the value . of the property. If in the manner and for the purposes such property may be used, its enjoyment is so interfered with as to destroy or greatly impair its comfortable use, it is a nuisance against which the law will protect the injured.”
Judge Willard, in his able work on Equity Jurisprudence, lays down substantially the same rule as many of the preceding cases. He says, at 389: “It is not necessary to constitute a nuisance that the smell created by it is injurious to health. If there be smells offensive to the senses, that is enough, as the neighborhood has a right to fresh and pure air. Hor will the presence of other nuisances justify any one of them.”
There is ample authority to establish the right of a plaintiff to'maintain a suit in which he may both recover damages for a nuisance, and remove it by the aid of the law. (37 Barb. 301. 3 Sandf. 282. 46 Barb. 568, 569. 56 id. 480.)
It appears by the proofs, that the defendants, in the winter of 1870 and 1871, erected the two lime kilns across the road from the plaintiff’s dwelling-house, near the village of Fayettville, and about forty feet from the highway, and distant from the plaintiff’s house 204 feet; and that in the summer of 1871 the defendants commenced and continued to use the same. The plaintiff’s house is sur rounded, to some considerable extent, with fruit and ornamental trees; that his house is one which has been kept up quite fairly, and occupied by himself and his sister, and their father and mother, for quite a number of years; and that the house and lot, consisting of about two and a half acres, are worth in the neighborhood of $4500. The
Numerous witnesses say the smoke is unwholesome 'and injurious to persons inhaling it, and those of the plaintiff’s family whose lungs are weak and sensitive, testify that they experience injurious effects from inhaling it; that it produces pain in the' eyes and head. Some of them testify that the dust from the smoke settles upon the furniture and upon the cream of the milk, to such an extent as to be very annoying and unpleasant.
In the absence of the northwest wind, the smoke was not driven upon the plaintiff’s premises; nor is the air affected to any considerable extent thereby, upon the plaintiff’s premises. I cannot resist the conclusion that within the authorities already cited, by the use of the defendants’ lime kilns, in the manner described by the witnesses, the effects are produced which render the air more or less impure when filled with the smoke and gas escaping upon the plaintiff’s premises and into his dwelling; that the air is rendered unwholesome and disagreeable, and unpleasant to inhale. In other words, the plaintiff’s premises are rendered unfit for a comfortable habitation, and, to persons of sensitive lungs, the smoke and gas, when inhaled, are alike unpleasant and uncomfortable, as well as to some extent detrimental to health.
It appeared that the gas taken into the lungs of work
The plaintiff' is entitled to enjoy his premises free from the presence of the smoke, gas, and dust proceeding from the defendants’ kiln, and the defendants have no right thus to pollute the air and disturb the comfortable habitation of, and the enjoyment of the plaintiff’s premises.
The defendants learned counsel insists that the plaintiff caused the location of the lime kilns at the point where they were erected, but the evidence seems to require a finding that the most that he did, in that respect, was to inform the defendants, that if they were determined to locate in the lot named, the point selected would be most satisfactory.
But such information cannot be held to be an irrevocable license to keep up the nuisance to the annoyance and injury of the plaintiff. (Bingham on Real Property, p. 100. 1 Keyes, 115. 29 N. Y. 634.) The proof shows that the plaintiff notified the defendants as early as the 7th of January, 1871, that if they built the kilns where they are now located, the plaintiff would prosecute the defendants.
The plaintiff' demands, in his prayer, an injunction restraining the defendants “from further running, operating or using said lime kilns.” The language is too broad. The kilns are harmless; it is the use of them, in the manner mentioned, which is to be restrained. Possibly they may be used in such a way as not to interfere with the plaintiff’s rights. (4 Rob. 473. 46 Barb. 666. 56 id. 480, and eases cited.)
Judgment for the plaintiff.
Kardin, Justice.]