Board of Commissioners v. Elm Grove Mining Co.

9 S.E.2d 813, 122 W. Va. 442, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 73
CourtWest Virginia Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 1940
Docket9002
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 9 S.E.2d 813 (Board of Commissioners v. Elm Grove Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering West Virginia Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Commissioners v. Elm Grove Mining Co., 9 S.E.2d 813, 122 W. Va. 442, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 73 (W. Va. 1940).

Opinions

Maxwell, Judge:

This is a suit to enjoin a public nuisance. From a decree granting the prayer of the bill, the defendant was awarded this appeal.

The suit is based upon this statute:

“The state commissioner of health or any county or municipal health officer shall inquire into and investigate all nuisances affecting the public health within his jurisdiction; and any such officer or the county court of any county or any municipality is authorized and empowered to apply to the circuit court of the county in which any such nuisance exists, or to the judge thereof in vacation, for an injunction forthwith to restrain, prevent or abate such nuisance.” Code, 16-3-6.

The plaintiff is the Board of Commissioners of the County of Ohio, a public corporation. The defendant is Elm Grove Mining Company, a private corporation. The plaintiff is the officiary which fulfills for Ohio County the duties which are generally discharged by county courts. This arrangement for Ohio County, established by legislative enactment in pursuance of Section 34, Article VIII of the West Virginia Constitution of 1872, has been preserved *444 under authorization of Section 24 of Article VIII as amended in 1879. Since the plaintiff is empowered to act in lieu of a county court, it clearly comes within the provisions of the above quoted statute which authorizes county courts to proceed for the abatement of nuisances affecting the public health.

The defendant is a mining company engaged in the production and marketing of bituminous coal. Number 3 mine of the defendant is situated near the National Pike (U. S. Route No. 40) about one and one-quarter miles east of the town of Triadelphia which is a community of approximately three hundred population. Triadelphia lies between the mine and Elm Grove which is within the eastern boundary of the City of Wheeling. The distance from Triadelphia to Elm Grove is about two miles.

The alleged nuisance is a burning pile of gob or refuse materials from defendant’s mine number 3, which pile has been created by the defendant in the course of its operations at that mine. The basis of the complaint is that in the vapors emanating from this burning material there is sulphur dioxide in quantity deleterious to the health of the people of that community.

The alleged harmfulness of the gob pile fumes is denied by the defendant.

For each party to the controversy much testimony was taken. The record is large.

The town of Triadelphia is an old community. It came into existence many decades before the defendant opened and began to operate mine number 3 about the year 1915. Incident to this operation, and from the beginning, defendant cast aside on its own property refuse from the mine. Accumulation of these materials through the years has resulted in a gob pile approximately two hundred feet wide and a thousand feet long, with a variant height from thirty to sixty feet. This pile of material caught fire in 1930 and since that time has been burning continuously in a smothered activity. Though it is testified by men experienced in the mining of bituminous coal that large gob piles will take fire from spontaneous combustion, the evi *445 dence seems to establish that this fire was caused by incen-diarism. For the defendant it is testified that extended and repeated efforts, though futile, have been made by it to extinguish the smoldering embers.

For the plaintiff more than a score of lay witnesses, residents of the community, testified respecting the harmful effects of these fumes on the witnesses themselves or members of their families. The substance of this testimony is that through much of the time, within a radius of somewhat more than a mile of the gob' pile, the atmosphere is pungent with the odor of burning sulphur; that this condition varies with the humidity, wind currents and the activity of the gob pile fire; that many times, regardless of warmth of weather, it is necessary for them to keep the doors and windows of their homes tightly closed in defense against the fumes; that the gases given off create a burning sensation to the nose, throat, eyes and respiratory tract with resultant irritation thereto, causing headache, coughing, loss of appetite and sleeplessness. Illustrative of the situation, we note particularly the testimony of two witnesses. One of them, now residing with her husband and baby elsewhere than the neighborhood of mine number 3, testified that for a period of seven months they lived in a home within two or three hundred feet of the burning gob pile; that when they moved into that home the child, then eleven months old, was of normal health; that while there the child suffered much from soreness of throat and impaired appetite, resulting in loss of weight; that when the baby was taken away from that community it promptly regained normal condition. Another witness, an elderly man, testified that the fumes affected his throat, particularly his vocal cords; that he has noticed that when he is away from the community for a few weeks, the irritation in his throat subsided.

There was also the testimony of several physicians called by the plaintiff:

Dr. R. M. Pedicord, who lives at Elm Grove and for twenty-five years has been a practitioner in that community, and who at the time of giving his testimony was *446 Health Commissioner of both the City of Wheeling and the County of Ohio, testified that in passing along the highway near the gob pile he has experienced irritation of his nose and throat; that the fumes inflame the mucous membrane of one’s nose and throat and bronchial tubes, also that they affect the eyes and lungs; that such disturbance of the throat leads sometimes to. acute bronchitis “which predisposes to more serious disturbances” such as pneumonia and tuberculosis; that he has patients at Triadelphia who are suffering from physical disorders attributable to the deleterious fumes emanating from the burning gob pile; that in his opinion the fumes are a menace to health.

Dr. A. V. McCoy, a resident of Triadelphia, testified that he has practiced medicine in that community for eleven years; that patients of his have suffered from irritation of the throat and nose and from shortness of breath caused by the gob pile fumes, especially on damp days; that among his patients, irritations and lesions of the nose and throat abated when, the fire in the gob dump subsided from the application thereto of water by the defendant; that in his opinion the fumes are injurious to the public health.

Dr. Burke Megahan testified that he has been practicing in the Elm Grove and Triadelphia communities for eight years; that he has patients in that vicinity suffering from bronchial irritations which he attributes to the fumes from the gob; that he can detect the fumes in the atmosphere whenever he passes that way, especially if the air is heavy; that in his opinion the fumes are harmful to everybody in that community.

Dr. J. R.

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Bluebook (online)
9 S.E.2d 813, 122 W. Va. 442, 1940 W. Va. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-elm-grove-mining-co-wva-1940.