Brede v. Minnesota Crushed Stone Co.

178 N.W. 820, 146 Minn. 406, 1920 Minn. LEXIS 635
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJuly 23, 1920
DocketNo. 21,941
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 178 N.W. 820 (Brede v. Minnesota Crushed Stone Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brede v. Minnesota Crushed Stone Co., 178 N.W. 820, 146 Minn. 406, 1920 Minn. LEXIS 635 (Mich. 1920).

Opinion

Lees, C.

This is the second appearance of this case, On the first appeal an order denying plaintiffs’ motion for a new trial was reversed with directions to the district court to take further testimony on certain features of the case. Brede v. Minn. Crushed Stone Co. 143 Minn. 374, 173 N. W. 805. Further testimony was taken and additional findings were made and judgment was entered thereon in plaintiffs’ favor after their motion for further and amended findings had been denied. They have appealed from portions of the judgment hereafter referred to.

[408]*4081. The judgment enjoins the defendant from using steam drills in quarrying on the Kletzin land. Electric power must he substituted for steam to do .away with the noise of the steam exhaust. In blasting the upper benches' of stone on this land not more than four drill holes may be charged with dynamite and set off in a single blast, and not more than 24 pounds of 40 per cent dynamite may be used in a blast, with a proportionate decrease if less than four holes are charged. In the lower benches eight drill holes may be charged for á single blast, with not more than 24 pounds of 50 per cent dynamite, to be proportionately decreased if a less number of holes are charged.

These portions of the judgment are attacked by plaintiffs. They contend that, if defendant is to be allowed to use drills and dynamite at all, no distinction should be made between the operations on the Kletzin land and on its other land, known as the Lowry tract. Defendant was quarrying only on the Kletzin land when the action was commenced and when each hearing was had in the court below. As indicated in our previous opinion, there is a possible difference with respect to its rights in conducting its operations on the two tracts. That question was left open. It will not arise unless defendant should resume operations on the Lowry land and conduct them in a manner prohibited by the judgment. We see no occasion for modifying the judgment in this particular.

2. Plaintiffs’ principal complaint is that the noise and vibrations caused by blasts, such as the judgment permits, are not appreciably less than they were before. They assert that the blasting is the pith of the whole case, and that it ought to be stopped. The trial court found that the charges of dynamite above specified contain the least amount of explosive necessary to remove stone from the quarry; that the defendant is using smaller charges of dynamite than formerly; that the noise and jarring effects of the blasts have been reduced to some extent, and that, by continuing to use the quantities specified, defendant will have done all that can be done to reduce noise and vibrations, if it is to be permitted to continue to operate its quarry. These findings rest on the testimony of E. P. McCarthy, a mining engineer, who for a considerable time observed defendant’s methods of blasting. In substance his testimony was that the methods have been changed since the first hearing. [409]*409At his suggestion, moist sand has been substituted for dry sand in tamping the drill holes and a larger quantity of sand is being used. The blasts are set off from four to six times each working clay between 9 a. m. and 4 p. m. There has been a reduction of 10 per cent in the amount of explosive in the dynamite now used. The sound of the blasts carries approximately 600 feet and is no louder than the report made by a blowout in an automobile tire. Since the methods recommended by McCarthy have been adopted “pop shots” are unnecessary. They were used to bréale up large fragments of rock, light charges of dynamite being employed. They were frequent when the earlier method of blasting was practiced. Under present methods the blasts are muffled and there are no “windy shots,” that is, explosions which cause pieces of rock to fly up in the air. The explosive energy is confined to the layers of rock. This causes more vibration in the ground. The stone cannot be gotten out of the quarry without blasting.

With respect to the jarring effects or earth vibrations caused by the blasts, defendant introduced the testimony of one Volaseck, who is connected with the State University and has made a special study of the measurements of earth vibrations using an instrument invented for that purpose. He made a record of the vibrations which followed blasts set off since the improved methods were adopted. Two were made at the house of one of the plaintiffs who lives nearest the quarry, but more than 100 feet away. The needle which records the vibrations, moved over 2 and 2% divisions of the instrument when two successive blasts were set off, the vibrations persisting for about one-half second. The same instrument measured off 1, 2 and 2% divisions as the record of the vibration in the frozen ground caused by the passage of three .successive trains over the railway tracks at the State University within 80 feet of the house where the instrument was placed and the vibrations persisted 20 seconds. The witness testified to numerous additional observations made to compare vibrations caused by other blasts at various distances with those caused by passing street-cars and loaded trucks at equal distances. His observations indicated that a truck, passing along the street 20 feet from the instrument, caused as much earth vibration as blasts approximately 200 feet away, and a passing street-ear from one-half to one-third the vibration produced by similar blasts.

[410]*410We have stated the testimony which was most favorable to defendant in recognition of the rule governing us in determining whether a finding should be sustained when there is a conflict in the evidence. There was a sharp conflict between McCarthy’s and Yolaseck’s testimony and that of numerous witnesses called by plaintiffs, most of whom reside near the quarry and testified that the noise and vibrations from the blasts are • no less than before defendant adopted its so-called improved methods. As a result of a careful examination of all the evidence, we have concluded that there is enough to sustain the findings now under consideration and to justify the trial court’s conclusion that the conditions under which defendant may continue to do blasting will afford plaintiffs the pro-teetion to which they are entitled under our former decision, by which the law of the case was settled.

We held that there was a distinction between the rights of the owner of a stone quarry which must be operated where it is located and the rights of the owner of a factory which is removable; that the distinction is to be recognized in granting equitable relief; that it appeared that defendant was not conducting its business with a proper regard for the comfort of plaintiffs and should be enjoined from continuing to conduct it as it was then doing; that,, in granting relief, the court should not destroy defendant’s business, but should require it to alter its mode of operations so as to reduce to a minimum the annoyances to plaintiffs. Nothing short of an injunction absolutely restraining defendant from blasting would wholly eliminate the things of which plaintiffs complain, and to this they are not entitled, unless we should overrule our former decision, which we decline to do.

3. Plaintiffs urge that, in allowing defendant to use 24 pounds of dy-. namite, the court has disregarded McCarthy’s testimony given on his cross-examination.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Hindman v. Texas Lime Company
305 S.W.2d 947 (Texas Supreme Court, 1957)
State ex rel. Beery v. Houghton
204 N.W. 569 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1925)
State Ex Rel. v. Houghton
204 N.W. 569 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1925)
State v. John Wunder Co.
196 N.W. 961 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1924)
Meyers v. City of Minneapolis
189 N.W. 709 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1922)
Reed v. Village of Hibbing
184 N.W. 842 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1921)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
178 N.W. 820, 146 Minn. 406, 1920 Minn. LEXIS 635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brede-v-minnesota-crushed-stone-co-minn-1920.