104 Mo. App. 713 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1904
The plaintiffs were the owners of a tract of land abutting against the right of way of the Hannibal & St. Joseph Eailroad on the north and on which there was an inclosed cultivated field in which plaintiff had planted and growing a crop of com. On the south side of the said railway and opposite to the land of plaintiff the defendant — a manufacturing com
“ Plaintiffs further say that the defendant ever since April, 1902, until the present time, has kept and maintained a large number of fires and furnaces burning in its said brick kilns and drying houses, and that said fires and furnaces have constantly and continuously, both day and night, produced, generated and emitted large quantities of smoke, noisome and noxious vapors and sulphurous fumes, poisonous to vegetation. And plaintiffs say that the defendant has during all said time (carelessly and negligently), and unlawfully permitted said smoke, vapors and fumes to escape from its said fires and furnaces, and has (carelessly, negligently) and unlawfully, permitted said smoke, fumes and vapors to escape close to the surface of the earth, and has (negligently, carelessly) and unlawfully failed and refused to build chimneys or smoke stacks to carry the same up into the air high enough to pass away without injuring plaintiffs’ said crop, and has (carelessly, negligently) and unlawfully, during all of said time, fed its said fires and furnaces with soft or bituminous coal as fuel, which coal was highly charged with sulphur, sulphurous compounds and black jack, and which coal produced and generated when burned, smoke and vapors and fumes most poisonous and deadly to vegetation, all of which was well known to defendant, its officers, agents and servants. And that the defendant constructed its said furnaces in and about its said brick kilns and drying houses in such a (careless, reckless and improper) manner that the same did not properly consume the coal fed to them as fuel, but caused and permitted large quantities of said coal to smolder and generate large quantities of poisonous smoke and fumes that would not have been generated provided said furnaces had been*717 properly constructed and had smokestacks connected therewith sufficiently high to cause the said furnaces to ■draw; and that the defendant by and through itself, its officers, agents and servants, during all of said time, fired, fed and maintained its said fires and furnaces in such a (reckless and careless) manner with the coal aforesaid that the said fires and furnaces were constantly kept clogged and overcharged with the said coal, and that by reason thereof the said fires and furnaces could not and did not draw properly, which caused said fuel to smolder and generate and emit large quantities of such smoke, vapors and fumes which escaped from the months of furnaces and was not sufficiently heated .and rarified to raise above the surface of the ground. That by reason of the premises aforesaid the said poisoned and noxious smoke and vapors and poisonous and sulphurous fumes so caused, generated and produced by the defendant as aforesaid, did from time to time and for days at a time, during the entire growing .season of vegetation of the present year, drift and pass over and enter into and spread and diffuse themselves over and upon, into, through and about plaintiffs’ said com so growing as aforesaid on the said land owned and occupied by plaintiffs as aforesaid, and plaintiffs’ said cornfield and the air over, through and about the corn .growing in said field was thereby greatly filled and impregnated with said smoke, vapors and'fumes, and the said smoke, vapors and fues so caused, generated, produced and permitted to escape by the defendant as .aforesaid, and so passing and drifting into and among plaintiffs’ said growing crop of corn as aforesaid, did kill, injure, poison and destroy all the com and corn plants so growing on ten acres of the land so owned and •occupied by plaintiffs as aforesaid, so that plaintiffs’ ■'said com crop on said ten acres of land is wholly worthless.”
There was a trial and at the conclusion of the evidence the defendant requested the court to tell the jury
Whether the amendment changed substantially the claim set forth in the original petition is a question which we need not stop to examine for the reason that it appears that after the motion to strike out was overruled defendant filed an answer and the ease was tried on the issue joined. It appears from the record that the cause was submitted to the court on the amended petition and answer. It is thus seen that there was an answer interposed to the amendment and on the issue so joined the cause was tried. This amounted to a waiver of the defendant’s right to have the ruling on the motion to dismiss reviewed by us. Scovill v. Glasner, 79 Mo. 449; Pickering v. Tel. Co., 47 Mo. 457; Sauter v. Leveridge, 103 Mo. l. c. 621; West v. McMullen, 112 Mo. l. c. 409; Holt v. Cannon, 114 Mo. l. c. 519; Leise v. Meyer, 143 Mo. l. c. 556.
In the original petition both the construction of the brick manufacturing plant and the manner in which it was operated was characterized as negligent and careless. In the amendment this. characterization was: omitted and the allegations thereof in other respects were unchanged. It was not necessary to charge the
An actionable nuisance is anything wrongfully done or permitted which injures another in the enjoyment of his legal rights. Paddock v. Somes, 102 Mo. l. c. 237; Cooley on Torts (2 Ed.), 670; Railway Co. v. Case, 38 Ohio St. 453. The test of nuisance is not injury and damage simply, but injury and damages resulting from the violation of the legal right of another. If there is no nuisance, there is no action however much of injury and damage may ensue, but if a right is violated there is an actionable nuisance even though no actual damage results therefrom. Woods, Law of Nuisances-(2 Ed.), 1015, and cases cited. The right of one to be secure against the undermining of his buildings by water, or the destruction of his crop, or the poisoning of the air by the stealthy attacks of an unseen element, is as complete as his right to be protected against open-personal assaults or the more demonstrative,-but not more destructive, trespass of animals. Cooley on Torts (2 Ed.), 670.
The defendant was an incorporated manufacturing company and was authorized by its charter — article 9, chapter 12, Revised Statutes — to make, manufacture and bum brick near the corporate limits of Brookfield,
Many other eases of similar import might be cited. It is sufficient to say that within the rules thus referred to it can not be doubted that the defendant’s brick burning was a nuisance to plaintiff. The defendant’s plant was about 200 feet from the plaintiff’s field of corn. The smoke and gases escaping from the defendant’s brick kilns indisputably destroyed plaintiff’s growing crop of corn. And it is no answer for the nuisance that the injury resulted from a reasonable use of the defendant’s brick manufacturing plant or that the defendant’s brick kilns were built after the most approved patterns, and that it employed skilled persons in burning the brick, for the fact remains undisputed that the smoke, gases and vapors escaping from the defendant’s brick kilns settled upon and destroyed the plaintiff’s crops and thus greatly injured him in the enjoyment of his property. Though the defendant was an incorporated company — an artificial entity — we can discover nothing in its charter that conferred upon it in respect
We think the judgment ought to be affirmed, and it is accordingly so ordered.