48 A. 6 | R.I. | 1901
We are of opinion that the demurrer to the bill should be sustained.
The complainants do not set out the location of their residences with reference to the defendants' estate with sufficient *365
definiteness to show that the annoyances threatened would be appreciable to them. Siskiyou Lumber Co. v. Rostel,
The complainants, through their counsel, admit that a breweryper se is not a nuisance; and they do not allege any threat, or any facts from which a threat can be inferred, on the part of the defendants to conduct and operate the brewery so as to make it harmful to the complainants from the manner of its operation. The allegation, therefore, based upon no fact stated, except that the defendants intend to operate a brewery, that the brewery "will necessarily become a nuisance" must be regarded as mere conjecture. If a brewery per se is not a nuisance, as is admitted, we cannot grant an injunction against building and operating a brewery. If the operation of a brewery in any certain way is a nuisance, we may grant an injunction against such a mode of operation.
The cases cited by the complainants generally support our conclusion, so far as they are in point. Jones v. Powell, Hutton's Reports, 135, was an action on the case for damages caused by a brew-house and privy. The court says: "By which case it appeareth that although sea cole be a necessary fuell to be used, and that brew-houses are necessary, yet the rule in law issic utere tuo, ut alienum non laedas. And chimneys, dye-houses, and tan-vats are also necessary, but so to be used that they be not prejudicial to their neighbors. And in this case the jury found that this new brew-house and privy was maliciously erected to deprive the plaintiff of the benefit of his habitation and office, and that the plaintiff was hereby damnified, as in the declaration is alleged." All the judges concur in judgment for the plaintiff.
In Mulligan v. Elias, 12 Abbott's Pr. R.N.S. 260, the defendant's chemical works were in full operation, and voluminous evidence was before the court upon which it determined that the works as operated constituted a nuisance against which an injunction should be granted.
Moses v. The State,
Coker v. Birge,
In Aldrich v. Howard,
The allegation that the operation of the brewery or the business carried on there will result in the transportation over the tracks of the street railroad company of a largely increased quantity of merchandise would be equally probable if the brewery were to be located anywhere on the line of the road miles away from the homes of the complainants. The company, if licensed to carry freight and passengers, must carry them in such quantity and numbers as increasing business and population may demand. The additional annoyances to *367 persons residing on the line of the road is clearly damnumabsque injuria.
Demurrer sustained.