272 S.W. 375 | Ky. Ct. App. | 1925
Reversing.
This is an appeal from the judgment of the Jefferson circuit court enjoining appellants herein from conducting an undertaking establishment at. Third and Ormsby streets in the city of Louisville. The chancellor who tried this case has admirably summarized the essential *308 facts from the thousand pages and more of testimony taken in the case. We here insert that summary:
"Defendant, L.D. Pearson and Son, now conducts and for many years has conducted an undertaking business at Third and Chestnut streets in the city of Louisville. The Pearsons, father and sons, in succession, have been undertakers in Louisville since the year 1848. They have always enjoyed an excellent reputation for integrity and competency in their calling. In January of this year (1924) defendant, Pearson Realty Company, contracted to purchase the residence of the late Edward H. Ferguson, and in May of this year, received a conveyance of that property. It is in this building that L.D. Pearson and Son propose to conduct their business in the future.
"Their place of business will include a garage for their hearses and cars, an embalming room, a room where caskets are exposed for sale, as well as suitable mourning attire for both sexes, a 'chapel' or commodious room in which funeral services may be conducted, an office and perhaps other rooms. The upper floors of the building are to be used by the Pearson family (twelve in number) as a place of residence. In case of a funeral from this establishment, it is proposed that the hearse and other hired cars shall come in through an alley in the rear, shall drive up to a side entrance, beneath porchcochere, where the coffin will be removed from the building and put into the hearse and where mourners will enter the following cars, and all shall then proceed past the front of the building to Third street where such private cars as may be in use shall join the cortege, before proceeding to the cemetery.
"Plaintiffs are residents of the immediate neighborhood. Plaintiffs, Kate S. Avery and F.A. Reese, own and occupy dwelings immediately adjoining the property just acquired by the Pearsons, on the one side and the other, which dwellings have many windows overlooking the Pearson property, the walls of which are fourteen or sixteen feet distant. These dwellings are situated in one of the choicest residential districts of Louisville, of which the Ferguson residence (now the property of defendant) has been, perhaps, the chief ornament. Plaintiffs promptly resented the intrusion of the *309 Pearson business. Having failed to dissuade the Pearsons from proceeding with their plan, these plaintiffs (thirty-one in number, to whom others have since been added) on March 5, 1924, before conveyance of the Ferguson residence had been made to defendants, filed their petition for an injunction against the use of this property in the manner proposed, upon the ground that it would endanger their health, would be offensive to sight and smell and hearing and the finer sensibilities, would depress the value of their property and would constitute a nuisance.
"I think the evidence fully supports plaintiffs' claim that their neighborhood is a residential district' and entitled to such protection as that character may, in proper case, authorize. Sporadic, neighborhood groceries or drugstores cannot deprive it of that character, nor can the two or three other and slight approaches of commerce, shown by the record.
"The evidence does not, I think, support the claim that proximity of a well-conducted undertaking establishment will increase the hazard of contagion. Practically all of the evidence is the other way. It does, however, show that many persons would suffer from that apprehension, however erroneous.
"The evidence does not fully satisfy my mind that there is no risk that odors from disinfectants used in embalming will reach the neighboring houses. I think it does show, however, that that risk is not very great.
"Nor do I think it clear that the tranquility of those dwelling in the next houses will not be disturbed now and then by sounds incidental to funeral services. But I think it must be admitted, with reference both to the sounds and smells complained of here, that it is only by an association of ideas that they can be said to be seriously offensive. Of course a bad odor may be over-offensive and I suppose that actual, physical illness might result from the shock to the olfactory organs from the nauseating odors of a rendering plant, for example. But an occasional whiff of a disinfectant would hardly excite comment, if it were not a reminder of what was taking place next door. And the sounds which *310 can reasonably be expected to come from a funeral exercise would hardly be noticed in this noisy world, were it not for the depressing ideas associated with those sounds.
"That the presence of this establishment would depress the value of neighboring property admits of no doubt at all. Even defendants' witnesses (or some of them) admit their strong disinclination to live next or near to such an establishment. It is true that the members of the families of undertakers seem not to share this feeling. It is their custom, apparently, to dwell in the upper stories of buildings devoted to the family business. And defendants have introduced several other witnesses, and among them several women, who dwell near the present establishment of defendants, at Third and Chestnut streets, and who find no inconvenience, whether of body or of mind, from the association. Indeed, one of them expressed a strong partiality for such a neighbor and had even requested that some of the windows be left open in order that she might better hear the singing of funeral hymns.
"But this is a stoic or philosophic mood not genial to the average person, and I think there is no manner of doubt that the sale and rental of property in this neighborhood will be materially deminished, if this business is conducted as proposed.
"I think it is equally clear that the proximity of such an establishment will have a depressing effect upon the spirit of the average person. Epictetus or Marcus Aurelius would doubtless have conquered such a weakness, but such stoic self-control cannot be expected from ordinary persons. The consolations held out by St. Paul in his First Epistle to the Corinthians, though repeated at every grave, have not reconciled man to the idea of death. He has an unconquerable repugnance to it, and to everything connected with it. Doubtless there are persons whose susceptibility to this influence is either dull by nature or has been made so by constant familiarity with the gruesome aspects of mortality. But the average person is not so constituted or so inured. It is not a sentiment of sadness, such as is connected with the death of one dear to him. In those circumstances, this feeling of repugnance seems to grow less. It is an instinctive drawing back, a horrified *311 shrinking, physical and spiritual, from a thing which his nature abhors.
"The testimony of medical men in this case as to the effect of the constant excitement of this sentiment upon physical health is somewhat conflicting. I think the preponderance of evidence is to the effect that certain injurious physical consequence do follow upon such mental depression."
From this summary of the facts it is apparent that the main complaint of the appellees herein is based on the mental annoyance or depression they will incur by reason of the proximity of the appellant's undertaking establishment. The risk of contagion is nil. The risk of odors of disinfectants is exceedingly small, and the sounds which may reasonably be expected to come from these funeral exercises are not, aside from their mental associations, of a kind to cause discomfort to those who may hear them. Under such circumstances, will equity grant an injunction?
It must be admitted that the business of an undertaker is a lawful and necessary business. It must be further admitted that even a lawful business if conducted in an inappropriate manner may be enjoined. But there is an entire absence of testimony here that the appellants have in the past or are even threatening in the future to conduct their business in an inappropriate manner. It is also true that a lawful business may be enjoined as a nuisance when located in an inappropriate place, as for instance a rendering plant in a thickly populated and residential neighborhood. But in such state of case, the injury or annoyance which warrants relief is of a real and substantial character and such as impairs the ordinary enjoyment, physically, of the property within its sphere. If the injury complained of, however, be merely a sentimental one, though it be accompanied by a depreciation in the market value of the property occupied, there is no nuisance in the legal sense. Thus, in the case of Boyd v. Board of Council of the City of Frankfort,
An examination of the authorities bearing on the particular question of the location of an undertaking establishment in a residential neighborhood confirms us in the belief that we have struck the right balance by the position we have taken. It is true that a great deal of language will be found in these opinions indicating a tendency to extend the rule we rely upon to cover a sentimental annoyance, but it is plain that the very courts which use such language have not been entirely satisfied *313
with the results to which it logically points, and they have been at great pains to rest their decisions on a more substantial basis. Thus in Rowland v. Miller,
In the case of Goodrich v. Starrett,
The case of Densmore v. Evergreen Camp,
The case of Osborne v. City of Shreveport,
The case of Saier v. Joy,
The resume of these cases indicate clearly that the courts were not satisfied, although they used in their opinions some language looking that way, to rest an injunction against an undertaking parlor solely on the grounds of depreciation in property value accompanied by mental depression due to the association of ideas, and that they all insisted on some other element being present in the case, such as a zoning ordinance or the imminent probability of odors, noise and communicable diseases coming from the property. In the case at bar there is an entire absence of these elements on which these other courts found necessary to base their opinions. *315
Per contra to the cases above cited, we find those of Wescott v. Middleton,
Therefore, as there is no evidence that the appellants have or will conduct their business in such a manner as to cause a substantial and material interference with the adjacent owners' enjoyment of their property and the only complaint the latter really have is the depreciation of the value of their property occasioned or accompanied by a sentimental repugnance to the business of appellants, the lower court erred in granting the injunction it did.
Wherefore, the judgment is reversed with directions to dismiss the petition.