35 Mo. 87 | Mo. | 1864
delivered the opinion of the court.
This was a suit brought before a justice of the peace by a complaint, as follows:
“ Plaintiff states that he has been damaged by defendant to the amount of fifty dollars, in this, that he, plaintiff, is owner and occupier of certain premises described as follows: one house and lot situated on Poplar street, south side, between Nineteenth and Twentieth streets; that defendant is the owner and occupier of premises adjacent to the house occupied by plaintiff; that said defendant has erected or caused to be erected on his (defendant’s) premises, a certain frame shed, a portion of which encroaches on the premises of plaintiff, and that from said shed project two stove pipes, the smoke from which, through the wilfulness, negligence and carelessness of said defendant, escapes into and on the premises of plaintiff, rendering his house almost untenantable, and otherwise injuring the same, whereby plaintiff is damaged in the sum of fifty dollars, as above stated, and for which said sum he prays judgment against said defendant.”
The evidence given tended to prove the plaintiff’s case substantially.
The defendant asked this instruction, which was refused: “ If the shed, from which the smoke is alleged to have escaped, was entirely upon the premises of defendant, and no smoke pipe encroached, or was carried over, on, or into premises of plaintiff, the plaintiff is not entitled to recover.”
The court did not err in refusing this instruction. The ovidence showed that the plaintiff was injured by the defendant’s negligent or wilful misuse of his property, although neither the shed nor the smoke pipes projected over, or into, plaintiff’s property. It appeared in evidence that, before the suit was brought, the plaintiff had gone to the defendant and asked him to remove his stove pipe, because it caused him great inconvenience, and that the defendant refused to do so.
The judgment is therefore affirmed, with ten per cent, damages.