66 Cal. 171 | Cal. | 1884
Lead Opinion
-The action was brought to abate an alleged nuisance, and to recover damages. The jury gave a verdict for the plaintiffs for $1,000 damages; and from the judgment rendered therefor, and an order denying a new trial, the defendant appealed.
“ From the time the railroad commenced running, about February 1st, 1878, to August 2d, 1878, when this suit was commenced, we were annoyed by soot, and by the machinery and the elevator running up and letting down cars. It shook the whole house ; commenced about seven o’clock in the evening, and continued until ten, eleven or twelve o’clock at night—sometimes until one and two; the noise was continuous during that time; there was a jarring and shaking of the building; the plastering was cracked some ; the elevator sometimes shook the whole house ; the soot came from the smoke-stack to our houses, and came in at the windows, and in the back yard ; in the morning I could clean up a whole pailful; if I lay my hand on the banisters, they are all black ; we were troubled every day with soot; if I open the windows, the dust comes into the whole house ; in the evenings, sometimes when I am reading the paper, they would put the cars upon a small track; I would jump up, thinking it was an earthquake ; the noise mostly is when they are elevating the cars, when the cars went in ; there was shaking and soot that troubled us all the time; sometimes it shook the house so you would have thought it was an earthquake ; as for the soot, it*173 was not possible to clean the stairs or place; if you clean it four or five times, it would be the same thing over.”
Besides a denial of the shaking, noises, and soot, the defendant pleaded its incorporation for the purpose of operating a street railroad along California street, with endless ropes and stationary steam-engines, and that it had authority from the board of supervisors of the city and county so to operate its road, and that all the structures and machinery were necessary to that end, and were properly constructed and operated. When the defendant offered the orders of the board of supervisors in evidence, the court sustained the plaintiffs’ objection thereto. The defendant assigns this ruling as error, on the ground that if it had the legal right to run its cars along the street, the acts complained of could not constitute a nuisance, because the doing of that which is lawful cannot be a nuisance. If this position be correct in its application to this case, the court erred. There is no doubt that the municipality may grant the right to run cars along streets, to be drawn by horses or propelled by steam. The annoyances complained of were not the immediate result of the running of cars ; they were caused by the stationary furnace and machinery of the defendant on its own premises. If the defendant had the right to operate its furnace and machinery in the manner and with the result detailed, the orders of the board of supervisors would not add to such right. The object of the testimony offered was to show that the defendant, in operating its road, was doing a legal act, and to claim that, as a stationary engine was necessary, all results to follow the reasonable use of the engine and its appliances were also legal.
To sustain the ruling of the court, it must be conceded that the defendant had a legal right to run its cars on the street, propelled by the use of steam-power. The question, then, is presented : Had the defendant the right to use its own property (the lot at the corner of the streets), in a lawful business, in such a manner as to produce the results complained of ? Any person may use his own property in such lawful manner as to him may seem fit, having reference always to the right of others to use their property. A person may not use his own property, even in and about a business in itself lawful, if it be used in such a manner as to seriously interfere with another in the
Applying these principles to the facts as presented by the
As said above, the municipality could grant a franchise for running cars along the street, but it could not grant a franchise to materially injure the plaintiffs in their property rights. The franchise which the defendant claimed to hold did not even assume to be for that end. We are aware of the decisions, that where a franchise has been granted for the running of steam-cars along a street, property owners along the line must abide the natural results of a reasonable and proper exercise of the franchise ; but we are of opinion that the reason of those decisions has no application here. The fact that the defendant had since the commencement of the suit (if such be the fact) remedied the evil complained ef, would not interfere with plaintiffs’ right to recover damages for injuries sustained before the commencement of the suit. It was not incumbent on the plaintiffs to prove their injury by value ; it may have been of trivial cost to sweep up a pailful of soot, and yet the soot may have caused serious injury; it may also have been quite out of the question to prove the loss in value sustained by the jarring. It was for the jury to determine a reasonable sum to be proper compensation.
We have examined the points presented by appellant, and are of-opinion that they are substantially covered by the foregoing. Judgment and order affirmed.
Sharpstein, J., concurred.
Concurrence Opinion
-I concur in the judgment. The evidence as to the amount in money of the damages accrued