48 Wash. 320 | Wash. | 1908
The appellant is, and was at the time of the making of the lease hereinafter mentioned, the owner of a four-story brick block in the city of Spokane. The lower or ground floor rooms were designed and used for storerooms, and the other floors were designed for and used as a hotel. It is conceded that the hotel is elegantly and expensively furnished, and has at all times been conducted as a first-class hotel. On the first day of July, 1906, appellant leased to the respondent one of the storerooms on the first floor of the hotel, and respondent went into possession thereunder. The lease is not introduced in evidence, but it is admitted that it was executed, and its terms are undisputed. The complaint alleged, that the lease contained no express restrictions or provisions as to noise, confusion, shaking, or jarring of the building, and that at the time of and prior to the making of the lease it was represented by respondent to appellant that the storeroom was to be used' only as a display and salesroom for its manufactured products, and that there would be created no noise, nor would there be anything about the conduct of its business to disturb in any manner the guests or patrons of said hotel. This allegation was denied by the answer, and it was claimed that the appellant knew that the respondent intended to operate a stamp mill in said building, and consented to its operation. On this question the appellant, Hid-path, testified that it was stipulated and agreed that there should be no machinery placed in- the room that would in any manner be offensive or create a noisy disturbance.
It was shown that, shortly after the execution of the lease, the respondent did install in the leased room a system of machinery propelled by electric power, and that the operation of such machinery created excessive noise, and the jarring, shaking, and vibration of said, building. The appellant, after complaining to respondent of the discomfort and injury the operation of said machinery was causing him, gave respondent the notice required by law and brought this action under the
Many assignments of error are made in relation to the ruling of the court in sustaining objection to the testimony offered by the appellant. But without entering upon a discussion of these alleged errors and saying merely in passing that the court seemed to have adopted a very strict rule in relation to the proof offered by the appellant to sustain the allegations of the complaint, we think, on the merits of the case, that the court erred in taking the case from the jury and granting the nonsuit, and that there was sufficient testimony to have been submitted to the jury on the question of whether or not the operations of the respondent constituted a nuisance within the meaning of the law.
For the purposes of this case it must be conceded that there was no permission given to the lessee to operate the machinery in the manner in which it was operated, there being no testimony offered by the respondent on that subject. There was testimony by about a dozen witnesses, some of the guests in the hotel, others employees therein, by tradesmen in the neighborhood, and by the owner of the hotel, that the machinery created such a noise and quivering in the rooms of the hotel, including the parlor, that it was very annoying to the guests and occupants. Mr. Herman Cominsky testified that the stamp when dropping created a very heavy noise — as he described it, like a large hammier dropping on a piece of iron— and that the vibrations were very strong, so much so that they shook the building. Mr. Lockheart’s description of the noise made by the machinery was as follows: “It makes quite a buzzing and roaring noise. Reminds one to some extent of being on the street cars when air brakes are running.” He also testified that the noise of the hammer dropping was like
“Question. State what occurred after these people took possession of this room in your building. Answer. Sometime — I think it was in August — I went around to the hotel office and I heard a terrible noise in the building and I went to see what it was, and discovered it was machinery running under the floor of the parlor. Mr. Bernheart was with me at the time and we rushed down to the street, and went into the*324 store and Mr. Bernard was there, and I said, ‘You must stop that, it will not do at all, and it will drive everybody out of the hotel.’ And he said he would take it down and I went out.”
He also testified that on Sprague street he had heard the falling of the hammer distinctly, and described the noise as being like that made by a separator of a threshing machine; testified that it shook the glassware on the chandeliers; that you could feel the vibrations of it on your body anywhere in the hotel; that it created an unnatural and unpleasant condition ; that it sometimes ran for several hours in the day and sometimes for a few minutes, and that it jarred the building and was so severe that the floors quivered so that no one would want to stand on them. Mrs. Green, a roomer in the hotel, stated the noise produced by the machinery was loud enough to annoy anyone, and she was annoyed to such an extent that she had complained about it to the clerk in the building. She stated that it was severe enough to annoy one “dreadfully,” and that it annoyed her to such an extent that several times she had dressed and gone out of her room to get rid of it; also stated that she was a woman in good health and not nervous. When asked to describe the noise she said that it reminded her very much of the first shock of the earthquake in San Francisco; that people were not able to engage in conversation in the parlor, nor carry on conversation during the time the machinery was running; that it would be impossible to do so; and without specially reviewing the testimony, there is testimony of several other witnesses to the same effect. If this testimony is true, and it stands now uncontradicted, not being shaken in any way by the cross-examination, the operation of the machinery unquestionably under all authority constituted a nuisance which the owner of the building would have a right to have abated.
The judgment of the lower court is therefore reversed, with instructions to overrule the motion for a nonsuit and to proceed with the trial of the cause.