109 S.E. 376 | N.C. | 1921
The defendant company owns a tract of land on which is situated a cotton manufacturing plant of 23,040 spindles and a village of 70 tenement houses occupied by its employees. The plaintiff owns a contiguous tract of land of 252 acres, and the defendant has constructed and operates a septic tank and filter through which the sewage flows from said plant and tenement houses, and then through *524 an open ditch located near a branch which runs through a part of plaintiff's lands.
This is an appeal in a proceeding for a perpetual injunction in which the restraining order was continued to the hearing. The plaintiff alleges and files numerous affidavits that the defendant, since February, 1921, has discharged the sewage and filth from its mill and tenement houses through a sewerage system constructed by it, without properly purifying the same, into a dry ditch near plaintiff's land, from which point it naturally flows upon his land and into a small branch running through his pasture and by his spring whereby the branch and spring have been grossly polluted and rendered unsafe and unfit for use by persons or cattle, and thereby caused the abandonment of the spring and forced the plaintiff to abandon (491) his pasture lands and to move his cattle, used for the purposes of a public dairy, therefrom.
The injunction was continued to the hearing, and the defendant appealed. Subsequently, the court granted a stay of the restraining order till 2 November, 1921, so as to give the defendant an opportunity to make such changes as may be necessary to protect the plaintiff.
The defendant seeks to assert the rights of a dominant tenant to flow the surface water and debris from its premises across the plaintiff's land. The evidence is uncontradicted that the water that falls on defendant's land would, if not diverted by the defendant, naturally flow in another direction (with a slight exception), and that the water used to flush defendant's sewerage system is diverted from its natural flow. Upon these facts, aside from all question of pollution creating a nuisance, the defendant is a trespasser and plaintiff would be entitled to an injunction. The settled law is that while the dominant proprietor can accelerate the flow he cannot divert the water from his premises to that of another upon which it would not naturally flow. Roberts v. Baldwin,
Upon the affidavits of the plaintiff and admissions of the defendant the restraining order was properly continued to the hearing. *525
The defendant seems to rely largely upon the fact that it has constructed a septic tank in accordance with plans furnished by the State Board of Health. C.S. 7129 to 7144, which gives the State Board of Health authority to require sewerage or sanitary privies. We do not think, however, that this will exonerate the defendant from injunction, or liability in damages to the plaintiff who had no day in court or hearing as to the sufficiency of the septic tank either as prescribed or as built. Besides, the Board of Health had no authority to pass upon this matter as against the plaintiff. To allow such a defense to protect the defendant against the nuisance which it has created would be to permit the defendant, a private corporation, to take the property of the plaintiff without his consent, and even without opportunity to be heard. Donnell v. Greensboro,
There are cases in which the Court has denied a restraining order and injunction. But that line of cases has been reviewed by Justice Hoke in Cherry v. Williams,
1. The plaintiff has diverted the flow of the water which he has used in operating his sewerage plant in a direction in which it does not naturally flow, and hence the plaintiff was entitled to his injunction, irrespective of the allegations of nuisance.
2. Upon the affidavits and admissions, the defendant is committing a serious nuisance upon the plaintiff's land, and is jeopardizing the health of the community by the injury to the spring, and otherwise, and to the cattle used in the plaintiff's dairy.
3. The septic tank may or may not have been constructed *526 according to the regulations of the State Board of Health, and the defendant admits that it has not always operated efficiently.
4. While defendant alleges that it has offered to purchase that part of the plaintiff's land affected by the nuisance, this would amount to a practical grant or license to the defendant to perpetually maintain this nuisance alongside of the plaintiff's remaining land. This the defendant cannot compel the plaintiff to accept. The defendant has no power of eminent domain, and to allow such defense would enable powerful individuals or corporations to force out undesired neighbors, by maintaining a nuisance, and would enable them to repeat the Biblical instances of Naboth's vineyard (1 Kings, ch. 21), and Nathan's ewe lamb (2 Sam., ch. 12).
The defendant contends strenuously that a permanent injunction would work an inconvenience to it in the operation of its mill. It has been operated for many years without being a nuisance to the plaintiff, and has only become such since February last, when it installed its new and unsatisfactory sewerage plant, and in any event it has no right to force the plaintiff to abandon the use of his own (493) land for pasture for his dairy cattle and to abandon the use of his spring in order that the defendant may experiment with a disposal of sewage in a manner that is a nuisance to the plaintiff, however satisfactory or convenient such method may be to the defendant.
In Lumber Co. v. Cedar Works,
The defendant must attain its ends, advance its interest, or serve its convenience, by some method, whether in improving its sewerage system or otherwise, which shall be in accordance with the age-old maxim that a man must use his own property in such a way as not to injure the rights of others — "sic utere tuo, ut alienum non laedas."
The judgment continuing the restraining order is
Affirmed.
Cited: Finger v. Spinning Co.,