The defendants, Martin and Mary Plasko, own a twenty-eight acre farm in Trumbull, a portion of which they used to raise corn. To reduce damage to their ripening corn caused by marauding birds, from time to time they used a mechanical noisemaking device known as a “corn cannon” which emitted a noise like a gunshot or explosion. They operated it from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. and the device sounded at about five-minute intervals. The plaintiff lives in a residence located about 600 feet from the defendants’ land, in one of the densely populated areas which border the farm on three sides. The plaintiff complained to the police about the noise of the corn cannon during
From the judgment of the Circuit Court, the defendants appealed to the Appellate Division of the Court of Common 'Pleas. That appellate court found error in part. The court ordered that the ease be remanded, with directions to dissolve the permanent injunction be'cause the trial court had not applied the proper “weighing test” to determine whether there was an unreasonable use which could be enjoined as a nuisance and had not considered alternatives to an absolute injunction. From that judgment, upon certification granted, the plaintiff has appealed to this court. The plaintiff contends that the Appellate Division erred (1) in denying the plaintiff’s motions to dismiss the defendants’ appeal and to strike from the record the defendants’ brief, and (2) in ruling that the permanent injunction be dissolved.
I
We first consider the plaintiff’s claim that the Court of Common Pleas Appellate Division erred in denying Ms motion to dismiss the defendants’
The plaintiff moved to strike the defendants’ brief because it was not timely filed. A motion to strike is appropriately made to remove from the record any scurrilous matter which appears in a brief.
Ravitch
v.
Stollman Poultry Farms, Inc.,
II
The plaintiff claims that the Appellate Division erred in its ruling as to the permanent injunction. The appellate court concluded that the trial court (1) had not applied the proper test to determine whether the defendants’ use of their land was unreasonable and (2) had not considered alternatives to full injunctive relief, such as the prohibition of only the unreasonable features of the defendants’ activity.
The law imposes upon every property owner a duty “to make a reasonable use of his own property so as to occasion no unnecessary damage or annoyance to his neighbor.”
Nailor
v.
C. W. Blakeslee & Sons, Inc.,
The appellate court was of the opinion that the trial court ought to have considered alternatives to full injunction, to minimize the objectionable features of the defendants’ activities while permitting them to continue their operation. The “doctrine of comparative evaluation” will be applied to determine whether an injunction should issue: “[T]he court, in a proper case, may consider and balance the injury complained of with that which will result from interference by injunction.”
Sisters of St. Joseph Corporation
v.
Atlas Sand, G. & S. Co.,
The trial and the appellate courts agreed that, if the existence of an enjoinable nuisance was properly found by the trial court, it was not necessary to consider the validity of General Statutes § 26-47a
3
and a provision and amendment of the zoning regulations
4
of the town of Trumbull, both of which
The trial court’s conclusion that an enjoinahle nuisance existed was arrived at according to law. As to the judgment of the Appellate Division, there is error, the judgment is set aside and the case is remanded to the Appellate Division with direction to affirm the judgment of the Circuit Court.
In this opinion the other judges concurred.
Notes
The defendants’ appeal was governed by certain of the rules for the Appellate Division of the Court of Common Pleas which are no longer in effect. For those rules, the date of repeal is noted parenthetically, as is any counterpart currently in effect, governing appeals to the Appellate Session.
“[Practice Book] Sec. 696. lack of diligence in prosecuting or defending appeal If a party shall fail to prosecute an appeal
“[General Statutes] See. 26-47a. use of noise-making devices to repel marauding birds and wildlife. Any provision of any general statute or municipal ordinance, which ordinance is adopted after June 21, 1967, to the contrary notwithstanding, any owner of land used for agricultural purposes may apply to the commissioner of environmental protection for a permit to use noise-making devices, of types approved by said commissioner, to scare or repel marauding birds or other wildlife to prevent the damage and destruction of crops and other property during such hours and such seasons of the year as are determined necessary by said commissioner, provided no permit shall be issued by said commissioner for the use of any such device except in respect to any one parcel of land of the applicant not less than five acres in area or for use within five hundred feet of any place of human habitation, except the dwelling of the applicant for such permit, unless written consent of all occupants, eighteen years of age or over, of places of human habitation within said five hundred feet is presented to said commissioner. No such device shall be used by any person before obtaining such permit. Said commissioner shall promulgate regulations concerning the type and use of such devices to insure public safety.”
At the time this action was brought in the trial court, the ordinance and the validity of an amendment thereto were the subject of an appeal pending in the Court of Common Pleas.
