Baldwin v. Miles

20 A. 618, 58 Conn. 496, 1890 Conn. LEXIS 80
CourtSupreme Court of Connecticut
DecidedMarch 31, 1890
StatusPublished
Cited by30 cases

This text of 20 A. 618 (Baldwin v. Miles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Connecticut primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baldwin v. Miles, 20 A. 618, 58 Conn. 496, 1890 Conn. LEXIS 80 (Colo. 1890).

Opinion

Torrance, J.

On the 14th of May, 1886, an injunction against the continuance of a nuisance was issued by the Superior Court against the present defendants, at the instance of the plaintiffs and others, and the case at bar is a proceeding in the form of a complaint alleging a violation of the injunction and ashing that the defendants be attached and committed to jail as for a contempt in such violation.

In obedience to the order to show cause issued in the case the defendants severally answered denying the breach, and [497]*497after a hearing had the court below found them each guilty of contempt, and ordered them to pay a fine of one hundred dollars each, and the costs of the proceeding, and to stand committed until the judgment should be complied with. The defendants have appealed to this court for divers claimed errors in the rulings of the trial court upon questions of evidence and also for holding upon the facts found that the defendants had violated the injunction.

Before considering the questions presented by the defendants’ appeal, it will be well to dispose of the claim made by the plaintiffs on the argument before this court, to the effect that the judgment of the Superior Court in a case of contempt cannot be reviewed by this court, unless there is in the case as presented here a question as to the jurisdiction of the Superior Court.

There are unquestionably scattered through the text books and reports many statements and dicta which apparently or in fact support such a claim; but we think it will be found on a close examination that the authoritative decisions of courts of last resort sustaining such a claim as broadly as it is here made, are very few.

And whatever views may prevail elsewhere, we think the law of our own state, at least so far as cases like the one at bar for a civil contempt are concerned, must be regarded as settled adversely to the plaintiffs’ claim.

In the case of Rogers Manufacturing Company v. Rogers, 38 Conn., 121, upon a reservation, and in Hull v. Harris, 45 Conn., 544, upon a motion in error, both of them cases of contempt for violating an injunction, and in the more recent case of Welch v. Barber, 52 Conn., 147, a case of contempt brought here by appeal, this court considered and decided questions other than questions of jurisdiction.

In Catlin v. Baldwin, 47 Conn., 173, which was a case of contempt for violating an injunction, this court said:—“ Our system of administrative justice as a rule delays the enforcement of judgments of courts of original jurisdiction until they have been affirmed by this court, if the parties to be affected exercise their right to bring their cause here.” [498]*498There may be some exceptions to this rule, as is pointed out in that case, but the case at bar does not come within the exceptions.

On principle also we think such a view of the law is the correct view.

The case at bar is a case of civil contempt as defined in Welch v. Barber, above cited. In such cases, as the offense is not committed in the presence of the court, the judge can have no knowledge of the facts which constitute the offense, except as they are communicated to him by others. As is said in that case —“ He could not of his own motion and upon facts within his own knowledge render judgment against the delinquent. As the facts must be established by proof a trial is necessary.”

If a trial be necessary it follows that it must be conducted according to the law of the land and in such a manner as to deprive none of the litigants of their legal rights in the trial of their cause. If by the action of the trial court in the conduct of such trial a party is deprived of any of his legal rights in the presentation of his cause or of his defense, we know of no good reason why, if he desires it, the errors of law arising on such trial which have resulted to his harm ought not to be reviewed by this court on appeal or other appropriate proceedings in error.

We come now to the reasons of appeal filed in the case, and inasmuch as the view we take of the sixth reason of appeal disposes of the case, we pass the other reasons without further consideration.

The sixth reason of appeal is to the effect that the court below erred in its construction of the language and effect of the judgment or order of injunction.

The defendants contend that the order regulated only the business of making phosphate manures at their establishment, and not the business of extracting fish oil and making fish pumice, and that the court below ruled against this claim and in so doing erred.

To determine whether the defendants are right in this elaim we must look at the language of the injunction—both [499]*499of the order itself and of the finding of facts on which it was based, and also at the finding and judgment of the court below. The finding on which the injunction is based and which forms a part of the injunction is to the following effect: that the defendants from August 24th, 1885, to the date of that suit ha.d been carrying on at Welch’s Point in Milford the business of extracting fish oil and making fish pumice, and also the business of making phosphate manures; that in carrying on this business they had collected and stored large quantities of partially dried fish scrap, phosphate rock, dried fish, fresh phosphate, and sulphuric acid mixed with coal tar; that with such materials the business was so carried on as at times to produce nauseous and sickening stenches, which were diffused through the air, and large quantities of acrid tarry substances of filthy and disgusting smell were produced which were deposited along the shores of the sound, creating a nuisance to the then plaintiffs and a large part of the people of Milford; that these stenches arose from and during the mixing of said acid and other materials to make phosphate manures, and on warm days when the wind blew from the southward towards the land, were a nuisance to the then plaintiffs and other people living within a radius of two miles of Welch’s Point; that on cold days, or when the wind blew from the land towards the water, the smells were not a nuisance to the then plaintiffs or the public, and that prior to the time when phosphate manures began to be manufactured at said establishment the business of extracting fish oil and making fish pumice there, though producing disagreeable smells, occasioned no nuisance public or private. After finding these, and other facts which are omitted because they have no bearing upon the present discussion, the language of the injunction or order is as follows:

“ It is ordered and adjudged that the manner of conducting said business at Welch’s Point by said John Guyer and his agents and assigns, and by the George A. Miles Company’s agents and assigns, shall hereafter be regulated as follows:

[500]*500“1. Between the first day of July and the fifteenth day of September in any year no materials shall be mixed with sulphuric or other acids or chemicals, for making any phosphates, phosphate fertilizers or phosphate manures, except as by law provided, nor so as to constitute a nuisance to the plaintiffs or the public; nor shall said business be so carried on at said establishment as to produce any noxious or offensive odors or stenches constituting a nuisance, at any time when the wind is from any point of the compass from east around southerly to west, or so as to be at any other time a nuisance to the plaintiffs or the public.

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Bluebook (online)
20 A. 618, 58 Conn. 496, 1890 Conn. LEXIS 80, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baldwin-v-miles-conn-1890.