71 N.J. Eq. 161 | New York Court of Chancery | 1906
(after stating facts).
There are three distinct elements charged by the complainants as constituting the nuisance complained of. They complain of noise, of odor and of danger.
The evidence with respect to noise is so slight and the noises complained of were so casual and ordinary in their nature that I shall entirety dismiss this charge from consideration.
With respect to the charge of the emanation of disagreeable odors, I find the situation to> be this: Mr. and Mrs. O’Hara, and their daughter, each testify that at various times they smelled the odor of gasoline coming from the direction of' the garage. Opposed to this testimony there is that of Patterson, whose store is immediately next to- the garage; of Mrs. Albrecht, her domestic servant and a boarder and lodger in her house, which house, as has been before stated, is immediately next upon the other side of the garage; of Mrs. Childs and her daughter, who reside- immediately next to Mrs. Albrecht, and of a Mr. Smith, who lives across the boulevard from the garage.
The complainants seek to minimize the weight to be given to the testimony of Patterson, Mrs. Albrecht, her servant and her lodger, and Mrs. Childs and her daughter, by charging that the latter are, of course, directly interested, Mrs. Childs being the owner of the land in question and Mrs. Albrecht being interested because she is a tenant of Mrs. Childs, as also is Mr. Patterson; that the domestic servant testified that she did not know the odor of gasoline, and that the boarder in Mrs. Albrecht’s house lived in a room too high above the surface of the ground to readily detect the odor, if it existed. It must be kept in mind, however, that Mrs. Albrecht, her servant and her lodger, each testified that they were frequently in the yard of her house,
Conceding that the criticism of the complainants in this respect is substantial, it is equally applicable to the complainants’ own evidence, which consists solely of the testimony of Mr. and Mrs. O’Hara, the complainants, and their daughter. If this odor was as prevalent as they would have us believe, it seems very strange that they have not produced any of the other occupants of their own house to testify to the existence of the odor, and that they have not produced any impartial witness thereto. If these complainants seriously intended to rest their right to the writ of injunction upon the proof of the presence in the atmosphere surrounding their house of odors emanating from the garage, they surely would have produced witnesses, unaffected by interest or bias, whose testimony would have been practically impregnable. If these odors are of the character they describe, they could have produced overwhelming evidence thereof by causing their premises to be visited by persons whose testimony would have carried conviction.
I find, therefore, as a fact, that the complainants have not produced sufficient evidence of the existence of odors emanating from the garage to entitle them, upon this preliminary application, to the relief prayed for.
This leaves for consideration that which I consider to be the serious question in this case. Briefly stated, that is whether, in a thickly built-up portion of a large city-—particularly where there are numerous frame buildings—-parties may store and use so dangerous a substance as gasoline in such large quantities that an explosion thereof would cause serious injury to the adjacent property and be a serious menace to the lives of those in that vicinity.
The expert testimony adduced is fortunately not conflicting, and may, in fact, be said to be accordant. This testimony.shows that what is commonly termed “gasoline” is the fourth distillate of crude petroleum. This fourth, distillate consists of what is termed “Naphtha,” which, in turn, is subdivided into “Naphtha,
If gasoline is brought in contact with flame, when the gasoline is unconfined within narrow limits, it will ignite without exploding. But if the gasoline is confined, and has been vaporized by coming in contact with the air, a gas or vapor is formed, which, when ignited, explodes with all of the incidents connected with the most disastrous character of explosion. One of the witnesses gave an instance of the explosion of a barrel of gasoline on the basement floor of a five-story building which completely wrecked the building, blowing off its roof and killing five persons. Gasoline vaporizes .almost instantly upon coming in contact with oxygen. So that, in common use, as soon as gasoline is exposed to the air some of it, at least, always goes off in the form of vapor, which vapor, being heavier than the air, tends to sink. The gravest source of danger with respect to handling gasoline is that since this vapor sinks it is not readily perceptible to one standing upright in a room, because it is along the lower levels and close to the floor, and if it is not agitated by the atmosphere so as to dissipate and blow away out of the room, is likely to be ignited by coming in contact with flame, the ignition causing an explosion, which, as before stated, is of sufficient force to cause great damage. This vapor, unless dispelled by a current of air and dissipated, is likely to travel considerable distance through a building, and will almost inevitably ignite and explode upon coming in contact with any flame.
It will be seen, therefore, that by burying in the earth the receptacle containing -the gasoline but little progress has been made toward safety in tire use of gasoline in any building. So soon as the gasoline is introduced inside of the building and is uncovered to the air vaporization immediately takes place, and this vapor is the ever-present source of danger.
When gasoline has been' placed in the tank of an automobile and the automobile is stored in a building, a slight leak from the tank would immediately cause vapor to form, having the
It cannot, of course, be said that gasoline cannot be handled so as not to cause an explosion, because it is shown to be the scientific fact that if the vapor is blown out of the building by a current of air, then there would be nothing present to explode; and it is also, of course, true that if no flame is ever brought in contact with the vapor its presence would be harmless. But this is too narrow a margin of safety upon which to predicate a finding that the danger is not actually imminent. It seems certain that the presence of some llame in this building at some time must be presupposed, and it also seems certain that in the habitual handling of this fluid, which immediately gives off vapor when ’ brought in contact with air, there will gather from time to time in this building this dangerous vapor, which will not always be promptly ejected by currents of air.
It will be borne in mind that, even with the seven machines now 'being stored in the building, an explosion which set fire to the building would inevitably cause an explosion of those seven tanks, provided they contained gasoline, which they almost inevitably would; and it is to be supposed that this garage will at some time in the future, if not in the very near future, secure more automobiles on storage, probably up to its limit of twenty or twenty-five.
The real question, therefore, seems to be whether the storage and use of so dangerous a substance in the midst of such surroundings is a nuisance. The initial inquiry, of course, is what one may do upon his own land without restraint at the instance of his neighbors. The house of lords, in the case of Fletcher v. Rylands, L. R. 3 H. L. 330; 1 Eng. Rul. Gas. 236, laid down the rule that one who brought anything upon .his own land which would be harmful to his neighbors if it escaped would be liable in the event of escape, even though no negligence were proven. This doctrine, in that case, was applied to' the bursting of a reservoir holding water.
When the doctrine required consideration in this state, Chief-Justice Beasley, in Marshall v. Welwood, 38 N. J. Law (9 Vr.) 339 (1876), with his customary acumen, indicated the fallacy of the reasoning adopted in the cited case. He pointed out that the gathering of water in a reservoir upon one’s own land or premises was not per se a nuisance, and that therefore the landowner should not be held liable for the escape of the water unless it was due to his negligence. He held, similarly, that tire operation of a steam boiler upon one’s own land was not per se a nuisance.
The maintenance in its vigor of the doctrine of Fletcher v. Rylands, supra, would have practically stopped all progress. In the case of Brown v. Collins, 53 N. H. 442; 16 Am. Rep. 372, cited in 1 Eng. Rul. Gas. 274, the court shows that everything that a man can bring on his land is capable of escaping in some form and of doing damage after its escape.
It is necessary, therefore, for the courts to so administer the law as to meet the changing conditions of the times and to adapt it to existing conditions. Since the rights of every dweller in a community are relative and must be determined with respect to the interests of the entire body, the courts necessarily, in each ease, weigh the opposing interests and endeavor to arrive at a rule which will not conflict with the interests of the larger number, while it preserves, to the extent that it is reasonable, those of the minority.
With respect to the employment of such agencies as steam and the like, the courts hold that they are absolutely necessary to the progress of the community, and each member must suffer the incidental damage and liability to danger which arises from their non-negligent use. They are not nuisances if properly maintained and operated.
But it will be readily perceived that there is a class of things to which this reasoning does not apply—things inherently dangerous, liable to explosion without negligence of the owneiv, and
Gunpowder and nitroglycerine are examples of this class, and to a much greater extent are products of petroleum, tire vapors from which are insidious, treacherous and almost uncontrollable as respects danger of explosion.
The earlier cases dealing with gunpowder and nitroglycerine held that they were nuisances per se. See cases cited in note, 38 L. B. A. 308; Bradford Glycerine Co. v. St. Mary’s Woolen Manufacturing Co., supra.
The court of errors and appeals, in the case of McAndrews v. Collerd, 42 N. J. Law (13 Vr.) 189 (1880) (at p. 192), said: “The keeping of gunpowder, nitroglycerine or other ex-plosivo substances, in large quantities, in the vicinity of a dwelling-house or place of business, is a nuisance per se, and may be abated as such by action at law or injunction in equity.”
But in Simon v. Henry, 62 N. J. Law (33 Vr.) 486 (Supreme Court, 1896), the supreme court refused to apply this doctrine to a case where damage was done in the course of blasting in the construction of a public sewer through a highway. This latter case follows the decision of Booth v. R. W. & O. R. Co., 140 N. Y. 267. In that case the court held that the temporary use of explosives in order to adapt one’s own premises to a lawful use, where the mode adopted was tire only practicable one, and the work was prosecuted with due care and without negligence, was not a nuisance. But it was very careful to point out that there was a manifest distinction between acts and uses which are permanent and continuous and temporary acts which are resorted to in the course of adapting premises to' some lawful use. And it cites those cases theretofore decided in the courts of New York holding that the keeping of gunpowder in large quantities near inhabited dwellings is a nuisance.
The distinction between a permanent and a temporary use is again alluded to in Garvey v. Long Island Railway Co., 159 N. Y. 324; 32 Lawy. Ed. 920.
I am of opinion that the same tendency heretofore alluded to has caused the courts to modify the arbitrary rule which re
In the case of Heeg v. Licht, supra, it is said: “In a city, with buildings immediately contiguous and persons constantly passing, there could be no question that such an erection [a powder magazine] would be unlawful and unauthorized. * * * That the defendant’s establishment was outside of the territorial limits of a city does not relieve the owner from responsibility or alter the case if the dangerous erection was in close contiguity with dwelling-houses or buildings which might be injured or destroyed in case of an explosion. The fact that the magazine was liable to such a contingency, which could not be guarded against or averted by the greatest degree of care and vigilance, evinces its dangerous character, and might in some localities render it a private nuisance. * * * The keeping or manufacturing of gunpowder or of fireworks does not necessarily constitute a nuisance per se. That depends upon the locality, the quantity and the surrounding circumstances, and not entirely upon the degree of care used.”
If this be the rule with respect to gunpowder a fortiori, should it be applied to gasoline? “As an explosive,” it is said, “the danger is ten times greater than that of gunpowder. It ignites as soon as the blaze is applied to it and becomes explosive when the vapor from it mingles with the atmosphere, in which there happens to be a burning lamp or other light.” Standard Oil Co. v. Tierney, 14 L. R. A. 677 (at p. 682).
It must, of course, be understood that I am not resting this decision upon the dangers to surrounding property arising from fire. I am aware of the decisions which hold that increased
If the ease were at common law, it would be ieft to the jury to determine whether this inherently dangerous thing was a nuisance, in view of the locality, the circumstances, the amount kept and the care shown.
It has been held that whether a given state of facts, if found to exist by a jury, constitutes a nuisance, is ordinarily one of law for the court, or, at least, a mixed question of law and fact. Mayor of Frostburg v. Hitchens, 68 Md. 100 or 6 Am. St. Rep. 422.
In equity, upon an application for an injunction to abate a nuisance, I am of opinion that if the facts are Clear it is the duty of the court to determine the question, and there is no occasion to send it to law.
In the case in hand, the facts are practically undisputed.
Vehicles propelled by power within themselves now exist in great numbers, and must undoubtedly be considered as among the useful things at the disposal .of mankind. Legislation respecting their presence and conduct upon the highway is con
The defendants have procured from the city a permit. This pape]’ was not put in evidence, but it was stated by counsel, and is therefore an admission in the case to be dealt with, that it permitted the storage, outside of the building, but upon the premises, of one barrel of gasoline.
The facts are that in this frame building there are already stored automobiles, and it is the intention to store others, which contain tanks capable of holding ten gallons each of gasoline; that the gasoline from the underground tank is pumped into the building and there exposed to the air, and is placed in the tanks of the automobiles.
It is apparent, therefore, that in the usual course of business in this establishment there will always be within it tanks containing gasoline to a very large amount.
If Hie garage were filled to its capacity there would be twenty machines, containing ten. gallons each, or two hundred gallons of gasoline. The permit is only for one’ barrel, or fifty-five gallons, and that must be kept outside of the building.
■ The danger arising from this fluid is created entirely by its use within a building or confined place, and leaking tanks of automobiles would be a very grave source of danger, since, as has been before explained, the vapor would sink to. the floor, where it would be in close proximity to the lamps of the automobiles, which will undoubtedly be lighted when they come into the building at night, or when they are being prepared to go out.
All this takes place in a frame building in a residential neighborhood, in close proximity to other frame buildings, and to dwelling-houses in which a number of people abide. The building is almost directly upon the street, where those passing may well, by careless throwing of matches and the like, cause the apprehended explosion.
I am clearly of opinion that it is the duty of the court to restrain the defendants, with respect to the storage and use of this dangerous material upon their own premises, to such an extent as will have due regard for the interests of the complainant.
Courts of equity constantly, in cases of nuisance, prohibit such parts of what is being done as are found to constitute the nuisance.
The court, upon a preliminary hearing, where the facts are practically undisputed and where a final hearing would be but a repetition of the preliminary hearing, grants relief, even in cases requiring a mandatory injunction. National Docks Railway Co. v. Pennsylvania Railroad Co., 54 N. J. Eq. (9 Dick.) 10 (Chancellor McGill, 1895).
I find that the defendant should be restrained from introducing gasoline into the tanks of the automobiles inside the building and from storing automobiles i with gasoline in their tanks inside of the building. By filling the tanks of the1 automobiles outside the building, and by emptying the tanks before the automobiles are taken into the building, the danger is minimized to the point where, under the necessities of the case, the complainants and others must endure the remaining risk.
The injunction, therefore, will restrain the storage or use of gasoline within the building.
The defendants cannot complain here that the complainants did not promptly act upon, receipt of knowledge. As has been already noted, the building was commenced some time in the middle of October, and by the 5th of November this bill was
I will advise an order in accordance with these conclusions.