Burford Oil Co. v. Wadley

41 S.W.2d 689, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1386
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedJuly 13, 1931
DocketNo. 2555.
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 41 S.W.2d 689 (Burford Oil Co. v. Wadley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Burford Oil Co. v. Wadley, 41 S.W.2d 689, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1386 (Tex. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

PELPHREY, C. J.

Milton Wadley, plaintiff in the trial court, brought this suit against defendants, Burford Oil Company and Pecos Refining Company, corporations, for damages. He joined the two defendants in one suit and based his cause of action upon his sole ownership of 7¾ acres of land prior to and at the time of the suit, upon which at the times mentioned was situated his home, and upon which ho operated *690 liis dairy plant. He alleges the adequate equipment of his dairy, describing same in detail, for the purpose of producing and selling dairy products to the public, including milk, cream, butter, and buttermilk. He alleges, in effect, the subsequent construction by defendants of the refineries adjacent to his then existing dairy plant, and their operation, in refining crude oil into finished and refined products, such as gasoline, kerosene, lubricating oils, and other petroleum products, which he alleges produced and resulted in producing odors and fumes and smoke which contaminated his dairy products, and thereby decreased the value of his said real estate constituting his dairy plant, and, preventing the enjoyment of the same-as his home, materially decreased the profits of his said dairy business and destroyed the good will of his dairy business. He alleges that the operation of said refinery plants in such close proximity to his said dairy constitutes and at all times since its operation has constituted a nuisance intolerable to be borne by plaintiff: by reason of the facts, stated in extensive detail, briefly to the effect that his dairy products became contaminated and impregnated with gas and oil fumes; that in connection with and in addition to said refinery defendants have dug pits or sumps into which run the crass and refuse from the refinery, often setting the contents of said pits or sumps on fire, and on such occasions great billowy and overhanging clouds of dense black smoke, full of black oily soot, settled over and into plaintiff’s residence, blackening the contents thereof, and ■covering his milk cows, his dairy barns, his milkhouse and lots, his cows thereby becoming grimy and sooty, their udders covered with black oily soot, the products of his dairy infested with objectionable odors and oily substance to the extent of materially reducing their value and sales, and practically destroying plaintiff’s said business. Plaintiff states in detail the items of damages, which we omit.

Plaintiff alleges that since the filing of his .suit and because of the matters complained of he was compelled to remove his dairy from his said premises and to obtain a place elsewhere .at great expense; that by his labor and attention to business he had built up a good will which, by reason of the matters complained of has been lost and destroyed. Plaintiff alleges that as to the matters and things complained of defendants are and at all times were joint tort-feasors; that at all times.mentioned the •defendants acted in concert with each other in •connection with all such matters; that the particular part each is performing is unknown to plaintiff but known to each defendant ; that they were incorporated ' simultaneously, and in part with an interlock-, ing directorate, each to perform some duty .and assume and perform some function or functions in connection with said refinery; •that the work of each complements the work of the other, and the two together make a complete whole; that the enterprise is advertised as the enterprise of the Burford Oil Company, but they act and at all times have acted in concert and to each other’s interest, and there is a unity of purpose between them.

Plaintiff prayed substantially as follows: For the rental value for month of his residence and former dairy property after he vacated same; damages to his dairy business; the difference in value of his said real estate and improvements thereon without said nuisance and with said nuisance, that is, its cash market value at the times mentioned less its cash market value with said nuisance; damages to plaintiff and his wife on account of suffering and inconvenience in the occupancy of said premises while occupying same; damages to his trade in his dairy business in the form of “good will”; for 'exemplary damages.

Defendants answered severally, each by pleas in abatement, suggesting a misjoinder of parties defendant, in that the pleading failed to show a joint tort, a general demurrer, special exceptions, general denial, and an affirmative pleading to the effect that plaintiff’s loss of business, if any, was due to general business conditions in the vicinity of his dairy, and to his own negligence; that the two refineries had increased plaintiff’s business and the value of plaintiff’s land more than the refineries had decreased said business, if same had been decreased. The court heard and overruled defendant’s, pleas in abatement, their general demurrer, and special exceptions, except as to special exception 21, to plaintiff’s claim for damages on account of his alleged reduction of his income from his dairy business, which exception the court sustained, and submitted the case on all other issues to the jury on special issues.

On special issues submitted, the jury found all issues from a preponderance of the evidence :

1. Defendants, naming them, “are acting together in a common purpose and in pursuance of a common design in manufacturing gasoline and operating their plant at the point, where they are now operating.”

2. “Defendants were acting together in a common purpose and in pursuance of a common design in manufacturing gasoline and operating their plants at the time complained of in plaintiff’s petition.”

3. The jury finds “that oily and sooty substances, objectionable odors and black smoke emanate from the plant of said defendants, or either of them.”

4. “Said oily and sooty substances and objectionable odors and black smoke reached the premises of the plaintiff in such manner as to disturb the plaintiff and his family to the *691 extent of becoming a nuisance, as tbat term is hereinafter defined.”

5. Such nuisance is of a permanent character, or treated as permanent by the parties to this suit.

6. Plaintiff .was compelled to abandon his properties as described in his petition solely by reason of said nuisance.

7. Plaintiff, during the times mentioned in said petition, had established “a good will” as that term is hereinafter- defined, in connection with his dairy business.

8. Plaintiff was damaged in said good will by the acts of defendants in the operation of their refineries at the times mentioned in plaintiff’s petition.

8a. The value of said good will immediately before the damage occurred was $1,800; immediately after said damage occurred the value of said good will was nothing.

9. The intrinsic value of plaintiff’s real estate with the improvements described thereon, with the oil-refining plant of defendants, in operation at the points where they are now operating,' is $1,525.

10. The intrinsic value of plaintiff’s said property, if said oil-refining plants of defendants were not in operation at the point where they now operate, is $5,337.50.

11. The jury finds “that either of said defendants contributed to the act of the other in creating such nuisance.”

12.

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Bluebook (online)
41 S.W.2d 689, 1931 Tex. App. LEXIS 1386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/burford-oil-co-v-wadley-texapp-1931.