Brown v. Arkansas Central Power Co.

294 S.W. 709, 174 Ark. 177, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 333
CourtSupreme Court of Arkansas
DecidedMay 23, 1927
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 294 S.W. 709 (Brown v. Arkansas Central Power Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Arkansas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Brown v. Arkansas Central Power Co., 294 S.W. 709, 174 Ark. 177, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 333 (Ark. 1927).

Opinion

Mehaeey, J.

The complaints in the two cases are substantially the same, and allege the'ownership of property by plaintiffs, describing same, and allege that the defendant is a corporation operating an electric light and street-car system, and that it owns and operates a power plant for generating electricity, located in the adjoining block to and east of plaintiff’s property, just across the street from same.

Continuing, plaintiff states:

“That, in the operation of defendant’s said power plant, coal and slack are burned for the purpose of generating steam, and in the burning of same there is thrown off, emitted and permitted to escape from the smokestack or chimney of said power plant, smoke, soot, cinders, ashes, and other refuse, which is thrown, falls, drops and is blown into and upon, and settles in and upon plaintiff’s said property hereinabove described, to her great injury, stopping her drains, causing her roofs, gutters, downspouts, walls and cornices to rot, blackening and destroying the paint on said houses and on the roofs thereof, soiling and ruining the floors, walls and wallpaper, paints, varnishes and other interior finishes, soiling the clothes of the plaintiff and of her family, friends and guests, killing shrubs, flowers, trees and grass, making her housework heavier and more burdensome, it being impossible to keep her house and houses which she rents in a clean and neat condition, thereby destroying the comfort of plaintiff’s home, and causing her and the members of her family great and unbearable personal annoyance, discomfort and suffering.
“That, at said power plant, the defendant owns, maintains, and uses a traveling crane, which, plaintiff is informed, believes and therefore alleges, is used for the purpose of unloading coal, coal slack, and other fuel from railway cars; that, in the operation of said crane, there is caused a loud, grinding, whirring noise, caused by the grinding of the gears, so plaintiff is informed and therefore alleges, and this noise is loud, penetrating and annoying, said crane being operated any and all hours of the day and night, said noise being so annoying, penetrating and nerve-racking that plaintiff, the members of her family, her tenants and families of said tenants, are unable to sleep, rest or enjoy peace and quiet, and particularly the said crane, when so operated, prevents plaintiff from enjoying the peace, quiet and pleasure of her home.
“That defendant has acquired possession of and is using and has been using for some time past a lot directly across the street from plaintiff’s property hereinabove described, and that on said lot it has piled a large number, and is continually piling and maintaining on said lot a large number of telephone poles, piles, timber, lumber, and other forest products, all or most of same having been treated with creosote, and that from said creosote timbers there is thrown off an overpowering odor of creosote, to such extent that the pleasure and enjoyment of plaintiff’s home and the pleasure and enjoyment of her tenants and their families is materially affected, her comfort, as well as that of the members of her family, her tenants and their families, being thereby destroyed, this odor being more marked during the summer, when it is desirable to use her porches and to keep the windows of her home and tenant houses opened.
“That the injuries and damages hereinabove alleged are not the result of the construction of defendant’s power plant as an original wrong, hut are the result of the manner of operation of said plant by said defendant as a continuing wrong, the injuries and damages being successive. That defendant can reasonably operate its said power plant without causing the injuries and damages hereinabove alleged; that the operation of defendant’s said plant is such as to constitute a nuisance, specially injuring and damaging plaintiff as aforesaid.
“That, on account of the nuisances hereinabove described, she has had to reduce the rentals on her rental houses, has had to expend large sums continually in repairing same, in excess of that which would be necessary on account of the ordinary wear of same; that, even though she has reduced the rentals on her said houses below what a reasonable rental for such houses so situated would be, she has been unable to keep the same rented, although many expressed the desire to rent and occupy the houses, but refused to* do so on account of the nuisances and acts of the defendant above described; that those who have, rented and occupied said houses have-remained only a short time, when they would leave on account of the acts of the defendant hereinabove described and set out.
“That she has been damaged by the acts of the defendant hereinabove set out during the three years immediately prior to the filing of the complaint herein, as follows:
“Loss of rent on rental houses $1,080; damage to houses, including her residence, from cinders, soot, smoke, etc., $3,600; personal annoyance, discomfort and -the loss of the enjoyment of her home $5,000.
“Wherefore plaintiff prays judgment in damages against the defendant for the sum of $9,680, for costs, and all other general and proper relief.”

The defendant filed a motion to require plaintiff to make his complaint more definite and certain, which motion, was granted, and plaintiff then filed the following amendment to his complaint:

“Comes the plaintiff, Mary E. 'Brown, and by leave of the court and in response to defendant’s motion to make more definite and certain, files this her amendment to her complaint.
“That the particular acts and conduct of the defendant in the operation of its plant which are wrongful and cause the operation thereof to constitute a nuisance are as follows:
“The use of soft coal and slack for the purpose of generating steam, in the burning of which there is thrown off and emitted smoke, soot, cinders, ashes and other refuse; permitting to escape from the smokestack or chimney of its said power, plant smoke, soot, cinders, ashes and other refuse, which is thrown, falls, drops and is blown upon plaintiff’s premises as alleged in her original complaint; the burning of'coal as fuel without efficient spark and cinder arresters, cinder traps or screens, and without efficient smoke consumers or smoke-washing equipment; the burning of coal in its furnaces in such manner as does not secure complete combustion; the making of a grinding, whirring, loud, penetrating, nerve-racking noise in the operation of its traveling crane; the use of a lot directly across the street from plaintiff’s property for the purpose of piling and storing telephone poles, piles, timbers, lumber and other forest products treated with creosote, there being thrown off therefrom an overpowering, sickening odor.
“That the particular injuries and damages which are' successive and which flow from the wrongful operation of said plant are those mentioned in the original complaint.

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Bluebook (online)
294 S.W. 709, 174 Ark. 177, 1927 Ark. LEXIS 333, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/brown-v-arkansas-central-power-co-ark-1927.