Barton v. Union Cattle Co.

7 L.R.A. 457, 44 N.W. 454, 28 Neb. 350, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 360
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 31, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 7 L.R.A. 457 (Barton v. Union Cattle Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barton v. Union Cattle Co., 7 L.R.A. 457, 44 N.W. 454, 28 Neb. 350, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 360 (Neb. 1889).

Opinion

Cobb, J.

This cause was appealed from the judgment of the district court of the county of Sarpy, which dissolved the injunction against the defendant and dismissed the action of the plaintiffs.

The suit was brought to restrain the defendant from polluting the waters and injuring the flow of the current of Papillion creek, by discharging into it the manure and offal from the extensive cattle-feeding barns maintained by the defendant, in such manner and degree as to injure the stream for husbandry, and destroy it for watering live stock on the adjacent premises of the plaintiffs.

The facts appear, that in 1885 the plaintiffs bought two parcels of land lying on said stream; the one of 80 acres was originally pre-empted by Gilmore, and was bought of one Erost, by which names it is designated; the other, of 160 acres, was bought of Gates, after whom it is called, both lying on the creek below the defendant’s lands and barns. In the same year, the defendant bought 400 acres of land on the creek, adjacent and above the lands of plaintiffs, for feeding-barns and grounds for its cattle. The barns are alleged to provide stalls for 3,500 cattle, each animal having a small separate stall, ranged in rows, heads and tails, in uniformity, with aisles for feeding between head rows, and the like between tails for carrying away manure and offal — the droppings falling into a trough to be carried off by a flow of water in quantities, two or three times daily, and thus conveyed to a sewer through [353]*353which it is carried on into the stream, amounting to 1,000, 000 gallons daily. By this method, it is claimed by the plaintiffs, the water of the stream is disturbed and polluted, rendered foul for all common uses, and impregnated with noxious exhalations, destructive to husbandry, and dangerous to health. The plaintiffs ask that the judgment below be reversed, that the injunction against the defendant be restored and continued, remedying the injuries complained of, and for general relief.

The answer of the defendant. admits the location of the land and property of either party on Papillion creek, in Sarpy county, as alleged; and admits maintaining the cattle barns in the manner stated; and sets up that the plaintiffs had notice and full knowledge of the manner and results of defendant’s business prior to establishing it, and consented thereto, and therefore have no cause of complaint.

Upon the trial, the allegations of the petition as to the ownership and occupation of the property constituting the plaintiffs riparian proprietors of a portion of the small stream called the Papillion, in Sarpy county, were fully proved and that they owned and occupied said property on either side of said stream for general farming and cattle raising purposes. The allegations of the petition as to the occupation of a large tract of land upon said stream, immediately above and adjoining the land of the plaintiffs, by the defendant company, and the use of it by said defendant in the manner and for-the purpose as set out in the plaintiffs’ petition, was also fully proved. The nature, character, and extent of the damage and injury to the plaintiffs, caused by the use of the defendant’s feeding barn, and the casting of the manure and urine of their cattle, and other fo,ul and deleterious substances therefrom, into the said stream, and.such substances mixing with the water of said stream and floating down to and upon the land of plaintiffs, was also proved. I shall not deem it [354]*354necessary to set out specifically the dates of the acquisition of their several rights in their respective properties upon said stream, by the parties plaintiffs and defendant, as upon a careful examination of the evidence applicable to that branch of the case it does not appear that either party has acquired any prescriptive rights or been guilty of laches which can be urged against them in the case.

While from the evidence it may be deemed probable that the nuisance to the plaintiffs’ land, by the defilement of the water of the creek,, was aggravated by the discharge of premature calves, or, as one of the defendant’s wit-messes calls them, “slumps or deacons,” therein, along 'with the ordinary dung and urine from the cattle, during •■a portion of the time covered by the pleadings, to an •extent not to be apprehended generally in the future, yet '.it appears from the evidence that the method used by the ■defendant of using warm or heated feed tends to cause ■cows to prematurely drop their calves; and where large numbers of them are kept together and fed in that manner, an entire cessation of that source of defilement is scarcely to be expected. But aside from this, it is fully established by the evidence that the maintenance of defendant’s feed atable in the manner contemplated by its owner, and those skilled in that method of feeding cattle, and operated .strictly in accordance with the rules and requirements of the system adopted, contemplates and will inevitably cause the destruction of the stream below so far as its value to the plaintiffs is concerned, and for the use and purpose for which it has heretofore been deemed most useful and valuable.

Considerable evidence, as well as discussion, on the part of defendant, is devoted to the proposition that the injury complained of is trifling, and it is sought to show that plaintiffs may provide means of watering their stock without resorting to Papillion creek, by the outlay of a few hundred dollars and an annual expenditure of twenty per [355]*355cent of the original cost. To this point defendant cites the case of Jacobs v. Allard, 42 Vt., 33. In that case plaintiffs .were the owners and operators of a starch mill propelled by water; defendant was the owner of a shingle mill on the same stream above. The cause of action was “ that the defendant, with the intent and design to injure the orators and damage and hinder them from the use of the water for the purpose of their starch factory, threw into the stream the sawdust and shavings and waste from the shingle mill, * * * and that they render the water impure and unfit for making starch, and clog the penstock and prevent the use of the starch factory,” etc. The court, in the opinion, say: “ The evidence makes a strong impression on our minds that much of the trouble which the plaintiffs claim, and give evidence to show that they experience in the condition of the water as it comes to their works, is attributable to the manner in which they have constructed and adjusted a new dam, in reference to their works, and to the lack of proper fenders and strainers to protect against impurities that may get into the stream from the mills and works above the plaintiffs’. It would seem that by modes and means which they could, without unreasonable pains and expense, have adopted and put in use, they could have secured themselves from the troubles complained of, while the defendant was using his shingle mill and letting the sawdust and waste from it go into the stream.”

The distinction between the above case and the case at bar, in respect to the remedy suggested, is that in the one case it is a prevention of the effect of the pollution, and in the other it contemplates the enduring of the effect of the pollution of the stream, but suggests the creation of an artificial water-course to supply plaintiffs’ land, and contemplates the abandonment of the stream which is the subject of the litigation. The difference, as it seems to me, is radical in principle; and I do not think that the com[356]

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Bluebook (online)
7 L.R.A. 457, 44 N.W. 454, 28 Neb. 350, 1889 Neb. LEXIS 360, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barton-v-union-cattle-co-neb-1889.