164 P. 1119 | Cal. | 1917
This is an action brought by plaintiff to enjoin the continuance of a nuisance alleged to have been created and maintained by defendants in growing and feeding hogs upon garbage produced and gathered in the city of Los Angeles, from whence it was transported in cars to a railroad switch adjacent to the lots and pens of defendants, which covered an area of about two hundred acres, where they, at all times, kept approximately thirty thousand head of swine upon a daily ration of some *64 three or four hundred thousand pounds of city garbage hauled out and fed to them.
The appeal is by defendants from a judgment in favor of plaintiff granting a permanent injunction as prayed for, the effect of which is to prevent defendants from shipping to said switch and distributing as feed to said hogs at the place in question garbage or similar material of a partially fermented, decayed or decaying character, and from maintaining at said place, or in the vicinity thereof, hog-pens where such material shall be kept and fed in a manner to pollute and befoul the atmosphere with noxious, unwholesome, and offensive odors, in consequence of which plaintiff and his family shall be deprived of the free use and enjoyment of his home, or which shall injuriously affect his property.
The court made findings from which it clearly appears that the effect of the operations, conducted at a place less than a mile distant from the plaintiff's home, was to create vile and noxious odors, offensive to the senses, and which reached and polluted the air in the vicinity of and in plaintiff's residence, at times rendering it unfit for occupation, thus interfering with the enjoyment thereof and causing his family great inconvenience and physical distress.
Appellants insist that there was not sufficient evidence introduced to justify the action of the court as to some of the findings made. This objection is not directed so much to the substance of the findings as to the exaggerated and superlative form of language used by the court in describing the alleged variety of offensive odors and disagreeable conditions created by the acts of defendants which, in a number of ways, as found by the court, interfered with the plaintiff and his family's comfort and health and their right to the enjoyment of his home, so alleged to be impaired and destroyed by the conditions to which he and his family were subjected. Not only was there direct testimony of witnesses in support of the findings, but inferences fairly deducible from facts proved, and the manner in which the defendants conducted the business, tend strongly to establish the material facts found by the court, and upon which the judgment is based. The fact that, as claimed by appellants, such witnesses "compared notes with plaintiff" and in testifying exhibited a partisan feeling, while a subject for consideration by the trial judge, is not one with which this court is concerned. An examination *65 of the record discloses no just ground for the attack made upon the findings.
In their answer defendants, as a separate defense, alleged that a large number of persons, by reason of living and having homes in the vicinity of the place where the hogs were kept and fed, were equally with plaintiff affected by the operations which it was claimed constituted a nuisance, and if found to be a nuisance, then it was of a public nature as defined in section
The ruling of the court in striking from the answer the matter set up as a separate defense is assigned as error, upon which, and the findings quoted, appellants strenuously insist upon a reversal of the judgment. The contention is based upon the claim that not only, as shown by the allegations of the answer made the subject of the motion to strike out, but as shown by the quoted finding of the court, the nuisance was of a public nature as defined by section
Counsel for appellants, in support of his claim for reversal, has cited a number of authorities to the effect that where a considerable number of persons sustain a common injury only as a result of the nuisance the injury is public — illustrations *67
of which are found in cases involving obstructions to highways and navigable streams, or offensive odors and unwholesome smells free from habitations and which affect those only traveling upon highways or in public places. Such cases are not in point and are readily distinguished from those where the disagreeable odors and smells pollute the air in and about the dwellings and places of business of persons to such an extent as to render them uninhabitable, and cause the occupants thereof inconvenience and physical distress. (See Wood on Nuisances, 3d ed., sec. 671; Adams v. City of Modesto,
While conceding some apparent conflict of decisions upon the question, we are of the opinion that the correct rule to be applied is stated in the Zumwalt case, supra, and upon the authority thereof the judgment is affirmed.
Sloss, J., and Shaw, J., concurred.