Andrews v. Western Asphalt Paving Corp.

193 Iowa 1047
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedJune 23, 1922
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 193 Iowa 1047 (Andrews v. Western Asphalt Paving Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Andrews v. Western Asphalt Paving Corp., 193 Iowa 1047 (iowa 1922).

Opinion

Arthur, J.

— I. In July, 1919, the defendant erected an asphalt plant or mixer on the right of way of the Illinois Central Railroad Company, in Onawa, Iowa, about 42 feet from the residence occupied by plaintiff, on the north and a little to the west of the house, and operated the plant for a period of about four months, while plaintiff was occupying as a residence the property above described, owned by Emma Craven. The asphalt plant was erected and operated for the purpose of making a hot mixture of asphalt and sand, to be used in paving streets in Onawa. A large movable crane was also operated at the plant, in unloading materials for the paving. The asphalt mixer was a plant 50 or 60 feet long and some 25 feet high. It consisted of a steam plant, with hoisting machinery, two large metal vats in which was boiled the asphalt, a.large sand drum, and other equipment, and four furnaces, in which were used four or five tons of soft coal a day. A number of men were employed to operate the plant, and some of them worked during nights, wheeling and dumping coal into the bunkers, hoisting-barrels of asphalt to the platforms, chopping them open, and dumping the contents into vats, where it was heated to a boiling liquid. Men also frequently worked at night in repairing-machinery, and in so doing hammered and pounded on same almost continually. Numerous automobile trucks during the daytime came and went every few minutes, hauling the hot asphalt mixture from the plant to the street where the paving was being laid. The truck drivers, living in different parts of the town, [1049]*1049were called to work by whistles sounded at early hours of the morning'.

Plaintiff’s cause of action was alleged in two counts: (1) For damages to the real property; and (2) for damages to her household goods, clothing, growing garden, and other personal property; and for physical suffering, annoyance, inconvenience, and personal discomfort suffered by the operation of the plant and machines adjacent to the premises occupied by her.

The damages to real estate, she alleged, were caused by the asphalt plant’s being operated almost continuously, both night and day, since it continually caused and gave off dense clouds of smoke, soot, asphalt fumes, cinders, ashes, and other' dirt, which, during the greater portion of the time, blew, settled, and drifted upon and into the dwelling house occupied by plaintiff and her husband. The said smoke, soot, fumes, cinders, ashes, and dirt also drifted into and were blown into the inside of said dwelling house, and soiled, injured., and damaged the wall paper and the paint and varnish on the rooms on the inside of said dwelling house, and also destroyed, tarnished, and blackened the wall paper, walls, and woodwork, to such an extent that the same will have to be all rehnished and gone over again; and the machines jarred and shook and racked the house, and caused the plastering therein to become cracked and loosened from the walls and ceiling; also, employees of defendant, in operating the plant and in driving trucks to and from the plant, destroyed the fences on and around the premises.

Plaintiff attached to her petition an itemized statement of such damages, such as cost of paint to repaint the house and outbuildings; cost of labor in repainting the buildings; cost of wall paper; cost of material and labor-'to reconstruct fences; and cost of material and labor and replastering of house, etc.

Plaintiff demanded damages to her personal property, and presented an itemized statement, consisting of damage to fruit trees and vegetables and household effects, and extra work required and done by her on account of soot and dirt which sifted into the house, etc. Other items of damages were claimed in both counts, but were withdrawn from the jury by the court.

[1050]*1050Defendant denied liability, in a general denial. As an affirmative defense, defendant alleged:

i estoppel- equitabie estoppel: estoppel. ‘1 That said asphalt plant and mixer and said machine were conducted and operated without any extraordinary or unusual emanations therefrom: and that the plaintiff knew, long before said plant was installed and said work was commenced, that said plant would be installed and said work - commenced and prosecuted, and permitted said plant to be installed and the work to be commenced and prosecuted without any protest or objections whatever on the part of plaintiff or her assignors; and by said conduct on the part of the plaintiff and her assignor in • not making objection or protest, defendant was induced to erect and operate said plant, and thereby plaintiff and her assignor are now estopped from claiming damages arising therefrom.”

On motion of plaintiff, the special defenses of freedom from negligence and the pleading of estoppel were stricken.

There was no dispute in the facts as to the erection and operation of the asphalt plant and the effect upon plaintiff’s property from the operation of the plant. The only evidence offered by defendant was in support of its affirmative defense presented, of freedom from negligence, and estoppel. As above stated, such affirmative defense was stricken at the beginning of the trial, before the introduction of evidence began. After plaintiff had rested, defendant offered the evidence of N. P. Eandic, superintendent of the plant during the period involved, who had had some fifteen years’ experience as superintendent of asphalt plants, to show that the plant was constructed and operated in the usual and ordinary manner. On objection of plaintiff, such testimony was excluded.

Defendant offered to prove:

“That the asphalt plant, the erection and operation of which the plaintiff complains, was commenced to be operated early in July, 1919; and prior to the time when said erection was commenced, and with the knowledge on the part of the plaintiff and her assignor of the intended erection thereof, and during the time the plant was being erected, the completion of which [1051]*1051was not until the latter part of August, 1919, neither the plaintiff nor her assignor made any objection or protest as to the location or intended operation of said plant; and that, by the knowledge of the plaintiff and her assignor, as aforesaid, and her acquiescence and her failure to object and protest against the erection of said plant, the defendant, relying thereon, was thereby induced to and did erect the said asphalt plant at an expense of $18,000, and operated the same.”

Objection was made that the offer was “incompetent, irrelevant, and immaterial, and being no legal defense to this action;” and the court ruled: “The objection is sustained, holding that estoppel is not a defense in this case. ’ ’

Error is predicated on the withdrawal from the consideration of the jury of the issue of estoppel presented by defendant; and this presents the vital question in. this case. This assignment covers and includes the ruling of the court in sustaining plaintiff’s motion to strike that portion of defendant’s answer in relation to estoppel; the refusal to permit defendant to introduce testimony offered, above set forth; the giving of Paragraph 5 of the instructions, in which the issue of estoppel was definitely withdrawn from the jury; and also the striking of the evidence of the witness Eandic.

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Bluebook (online)
193 Iowa 1047, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/andrews-v-western-asphalt-paving-corp-iowa-1922.