82 P. 787 | Kan. | 1905
The plaintiff complained that the defendant in operating its brick plant threw smoke, dust and cinders upon her premises, killing trees and causing other injury. She asked to have the business enjoined, and to recover damages. The defendant answered that it had been making brick there for more than twenty-five years — for a long time before the plaintiff acquired her property — from a bed of shale near which the plant is built; that the business was lawfully and carefully managed; and that the annoyance and injury to the plaintiff were not such as warranted an injunction or the award of damages.
Whether the plaintiff had sustained an actionable injury was the principal issue tried, and, after a great mass of conflicting testimony had been heard, the court made a general finding in favor of the defendant. No special findings were made, and hence there is no way of learning the view of the court on the different elements involved in the general finding. The defendant is bound to make a lawful and reasonable
The testimony tended to show that the plant is located in a sparsely settled district; that the shale on the' land is specially adapted to the manufacture of vitrified brick; that it is the only place in the community where the shale is found, and, also, that the chief value of the land is in the shale; and that in the manufacture of brick the defendant was, therefore, only developing the natural resources of its land. Modern methods and appropriate appliances were used by the defendant in the manufacture of the brick, and there was no negligence in the operation of the plant.
There is a sharp conflict in the testimony as to the consequences of the operation of the plant, and, while some inconvenience and discomfort result from the operation, there is testimony which fairly supports the finding that it is not so serious and substantial as to
The objections to the rulings on the admission of. testimony are not material.