140 Mass. 106 | Mass. | 1885
The license was under the Pub. Sts. e. 102, §§ 40, 47, which prohibit the erection of a stationary engine within five hundred feet of a dwelling-house or public building, without a license, in any city or town in which the St. of 1862, c. 74, has been adopted “ at a legal meeting of the city council of the city or the inhabitants of the town called for that purpose.” The St. of 1862, c. 74, was adopted at a regular meeting of the city council, and not at a special meeting called for the purpose. We think that the requirement that the adoption shall be at a meeting called for the purpose is limited to an adoption by the inhabitants of a town, and does not apply to the action of a city council, which is usually composed of different bodies, acting at regular meetings and under prescribed rules of procedure.
The license was “to set up and run a stationary steam-engine, not exceeding two hundred and fifty horse-power, for the purpose of' driving machinery used in generating electricity at their works on Middle Street.” The court ruled, in substance, that the use of the machinery, as well as of the engine, was licensed; and that the plaintiff could not recover on account of noise, jarring, and vibration caused by the machinery, which, but for the license, would give him a right of action for a private nuisance.
This ruling involves the propositions, that nothing which is licensed under the statute can be a nuisance for which an action will lie, and that the use of the machinery was duly licensed. The second only of these is before us for revision.
The language of the license may well be construed as descriptive of the engine only; but, if it is assumed that the intention appears to license the defendant’s works, and the business
Call v. Allen, 1 Allen, 137, which is relied on by the defendant, was under the St. of 1845, e. 197, § 2 (Pub. Sts. c. 102, § 42). That statute prohibited the future erection of a steam-engine in a mill for sawing, planing, or turning wood, without a license; it provided, as to an engine in use in such a mill, that, if it should be adjudged dangerous and a nuisance, an order might be made as to alterations in the building, the length of the smoke-flues,
New trial.