C. Rice Packing Co. v. Ballinger

223 S.W.2d 356, 311 Ky. 38, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1051
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedSeptember 27, 1949
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 223 S.W.2d 356 (C. Rice Packing Co. v. Ballinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
C. Rice Packing Co. v. Ballinger, 223 S.W.2d 356, 311 Ky. 38, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1051 (Ky. 1949).

Opinion

Judge Knight

Affirming.

Appellees, seven in number, including the city of Covington, brought this suit against appellant, C. Eice Packing Co., hereinafter designated as the Company, to enjoin it from operating its slaughter house and meat packing plant in such manner as to make it a nuisance and requiring it to. abate the nuisance complained of. The petition sets out numerous acts which it alleges

constitute the nuisance complained of. In its answer the defendant denies that it operates its plant in a manner to create a nuisance but alleges that it operates it in accordance with approved and modern methods for the operation of such plants and prays that plaintiffs’ petition be dismissed. With the issues thus made up considerable proof was taken and upon submission of the case the Chancellor, after giving, his • reasons there•for, entered a judgment perpetuálly enjoining and restraining defendant “from operating its plant in such manner as would create, cause, or suffer offensive odors to invade the homes of the plaintiffs or to cause such noises as would interfere with the quiet enjoyment of their homes.” It is from this judgment that this appeal is prosecuted.

Facts in the Case.

The appellant Company has been operating a slaughter house and packing plant in the city of Covington for many years and at the present location at Patton and Eastern Avenue for approximately twenty-five years. During all this time, until recent years, the Company has slaughtered at its Covington plant, cattle only. All hogs slaughtered by the Company were slaughtered at its plant in Maysville,' Ky. until that plant was destroyed by fire some four or five years ago, since which time both hogs and cattle have been slaughtered at the ■Covington plant. ■ It is this fact which- appears to have given rise to the increased noise, dirt and- odors of which appellees complain as the basis of this injunction suit. From 75 to 100 hogs are slaughtered each day three or four days out of- thé week and from 40 to 60 cattle each *40 working day. After the killings the offal, which includes fat, hones and the intestines from both hogs and cattle, is placed in a cooker or rendering machine, called a melter, about five feet by twelve feet and with a capacity of 10,000 pounds. By steam pressure applied to the jacketed melter, but without the steam coming in contact with the contents, the mass of offal is melted or renderéd. The resulting grease is pressed out in an ex-peller and becomes tallow which is sold to soap manufacturers. The cracklins and other protein residue are sold as stock food, principally for chicken feed. During the rendering process the melter is tightly closed and the steam which is forced around the jacket is carried to the roof of the building into a condenser where it is converted back into water and passes off through the city sewer. In preparing the intestines for the cooker the contents of the intestines of both hogs and cattle are forced out and all this fecal matter, blood from the slaughtering rooms and other waste matter are flushed into the city sewer and the intestines, cleaned of this matter, are washed before being placed in the melter.

According to appellant’s evidence this whole operation, the bringing in of the livestock, the slaughtering of the animals, the rendering of the offal and the disposal of the other wastes, is conducted in the most efficient and approved manner and in such a way that there should be and is no odor of any consequence from its plant, only such normal odors as would come from any well conducted slaughter and packing house; that the Company uses chemicals in the rendering process designed to kill all odors that might result from that operation and that the equipment used in its rendering process is of the approved type for that purpose. Appellant introduced in its behalf some half dozen witnesses consisting principally of salesmen and equipment service men who call on the Company, retail butchers who bought from it and employees who worked for it, all of whom testified that in their visits to the plant or while performing their work in and around the plant they detected no unusual odors emanating therefrom; that the place was kept clean and compared favorably with any other packing plant in the Greater Cincinnati area with which they were familiar. Dr. Ward, veterinarian in charge of Federal 'Meat Inspection in the Cincinnati district, testified that during the late war *41 when appellant Company operated under Federal Meat Inspection laws, its operations were being carried on in a proper manner so as to meet all Federal requirements; that it no longer operates under Federal Inspection laws and he no longer inspects it; that he has visited it once unofficially within the past six months before he testified and that so far as he was able to determine the plant was operating in a clean and sanitary manner and compared favorably with plants that operate under Federal Inspection.

Over against this evidence produced by appellants is the testimony of some twenty-five witnesses produced by appellees, including the parish priest of that district, the individual plaintiffs, some officials of the city and others living in the neighborhood. Without detailing all this testimony all of it is in substantial agreement that almost constantly there emanates from the slaughter house unpleasant and obnoxious odors, squeals and other noises from animals being slaughtered and that manure, from trucks bringing stock to the plant, falls onto the sidewalks and in general they picture' an unsanitary condition resulting from the plant as it was being operated. Some of the words and phrases used by the witnesses in describing the odors were “unpleasant — obnoxious— very bad — sickening—hard to describe — a sewer could not. smell worse — not very pleasant — cannot mistake an odor like that — bad odor — uncomfortable—awful—nauseating — so strong you could hardly stand it — makes you sick at the stomach — terriffic—very, very strong — it turns my stomach — most ungodly smell — unbearable— never smelled an odor like it — terrible—horrible—so bad I could not sleep — has made me nervous — revolting —vile—it gags you — it just stinks terrible — don’t know what it smells like — hard to explain — like burnt meat or flesh — foul—nasty odor — like manure — smells worse than burnt hair — disgusting,” etc., etc. Although different witnesses testified that the obnoxious odors could be detected at different times during the day and night they were in substantial agreement that they are worse at times than at others and better or worse dependent on wind direction and atmospheric conditions.

From a careful reading of all the testimony we think it is fairly established that from some condition in the slaughter house, whether it is from the rendering of the offal, the disposition of the waste matter by way *42 of the sewers, or from some other unknown cause, there emanates from this plant foul and obnoxious odors which makes living near it unpleasant and unhealthy. In spite of appellant’s evidence that the latest approved methods are used in the rendering process and therefore no odors can emanate therefrom we have here preponderant evidence that such odors do emanate from the plant. As was said by this court in another nuisance case, Rogers v. Gibson, 267 Ky. 32, 101 S. W. 2d 200, 202, in quoting the trenchant language of the Chancellor below: “ ‘The best test of cause is effect.

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Bluebook (online)
223 S.W.2d 356, 311 Ky. 38, 1949 Ky. LEXIS 1051, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/c-rice-packing-co-v-ballinger-kyctapphigh-1949.