Canfield v. Quayle

170 Misc. 621, 10 N.Y.S.2d 781, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1637
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 27, 1939
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 170 Misc. 621 (Canfield v. Quayle) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Canfield v. Quayle, 170 Misc. 621, 10 N.Y.S.2d 781, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1637 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1939).

Opinion

Zoller, J.

Plaintiff is the owner in fee and the occupant of certain real property in the village of Herkimer consisting of the dwelling and premises known as 115 Green street. This property is located on the northerly side of the street. Green street is within what has been designated and defined in the village of Herkimer as a business district. The street runs generally easterly and westerly and on the west intersects North Main street near the business center of the village. Plaintiff lives in the first block east of Main street, which is a comparatively short block, being about 428 feet in length. The paved surface' pf the street in this block is about forty-four feet in width.

[622]*622Plaintiff is one of the leading and most successful physicians and surgeons of the village and county of Herkimer. For many years he has had and continues to have a very large and extensive practice. He has lived within the premises in question for nearly thirty years, part of which is used for offices in connection with the practice of his profession. Plaintiff paid a substantial purchase price for the property at the time he bought it and has since expended a considerable amount of money for repairs and many improvements thereto. The location of this property is exceptionally good for the purposes for which it is occupied and used.

The defendants are lessees of a two-story brick building, formerly owned by the Herkimer Lodge of the Independent Order of Odd Fellows. They took possession in June, 1937. The building is commonly known as the “ Odd Fellows Temple,” and it is about ninety feet in length and forty-five feet in width and is located on the southerly side of Green street in a southwesterly diagonal direction from plaintiff’s home. Defendants conduct and operate therein public bowling alleys. While the temple was owned and used by the Odd Fellows from in or about 1918 to in or about 1930, there were two bowling alleys in the basement of the building. This basement is below the ground level and in addition to the two bowling alleys, which are still maintained and used, contains the boiler room and other space for use in connection therewith.

When defendants entered into a lease of the premises in June, 1937, for five years beginning September first, at a monthly rental of $100, they installed on the second or top floor four bowling alleys, built in part of new material and in part of some bowling alleys which they had owned and operated for several years prior thereto in the basement of what is known as the Richmond Theatre Building on the westerly side of North Main street, some three or four blocks away. In order to adapt the second floor for this purpose it was necessary to remove some partitions which had divided the second floor of the building into a lodge room and other smaller rooms, when it was used by the Odd Fellows. All of this work, including the installation of the new bowling alleys on the second floor, was done in the summer of 1937. These four bowling alleys are of modern and approved construction. There is, no claim made that these alleys are improperly constructed or that there is any undue or unnecessary noise in their operation by reason of such improper or faulty construction. Plaintiff, however, does claim that the maintaining of these bowling alleys, that is the four alleys on the second floor, constitutes a nuisance and that their use late at night and early in the morning, including Sunday mornings, creates and causes great noise and disturbance [623]*623which materially impair plaintiff’s enjoyment of his home. Accordingly, he has brought this action and demands judgment that said nuisance be removed; that the defendants be enjoined from using said building as a bowling alley, except in the basement thereof where the bowling alley was formerly located, and be enjoined from operating said bowling alley at unreasonable hours of the night and early morning and on Sundays, and that the plaintiff recover of defendants the sum of Two Hundred Fifty Dollars ($250) damages and costs of this action.” Upon the trial, however, it was stipulated in open court by plaintiff’s counsel that no money damages were to be proven or demanded and that the plaintiff asked only that the nuisance be permanently abated and removed.

A bowling alley is not a nuisance per se. (Pape v. Pratt Institute, 127 App. Div. 147.) Certainly there is nothing unlawful in connection with the maintenance and operation of such a business and, surely, such a business in itself is not to be considered or classified as dangerous or a menace to the public. Plaintiff, however, contends that he has established sufficient facts to successfully show that defendants are maintaining a nuisance upon or within the property leased.

If the danger or damage threatens the public the nuisance is classified as common; if it threatens one person or a few it is then called a private nuisance. Here, plaintiff says and has offered his testimony in proof and support thereof that a private nuisance exists by reason of defendants’ maintenance and operation of four bowling alleys on the second floor of the so-called Odd Fellows Temple on the southerly side of Green street and within the business district of the village of Herkimer.

As stated many years ago by Judge Andbews of the Court of Appeals in Booth v. R., W. & O. T. R. R. Co. (140 N. Y. 267, 277): “ Whether a particular act or thing constitutes a nuisance may depend on the circumstances and surroundings. * * * The test of the permissible use of one’s own land is not whether the use or the act causes injury to his neighbor’s property, or that the injury was the natural consequence, or that the act is in the nature of a nuisance, but the inquiry is, was the act or use a reasonable exercise of the dominion which the owner of the property has by virture of his ownership over his property, having regard to all interests affected, his own and those of his neighbors, and having in view also public policy.”

Judge Vann, writing for the Court of Appeals in McCarty v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co. (189 N. Y. 40, 46), said: The law relating to private nuisances is a law of degree and usually turns on the question of fact whether the use is reasonable or not under all the [624]*624circumstances. No hard and fast rule controls the subject, for a use that is reasonable under one set of facts would be unreasonable under another. Whether the use of property to carry on a lawful business, which creates smoke or noxious gases in excessive quantities, amounts to a nuisance depends on the facts of each particular case. * * * Location, priority of occupation and the fact that the injury is only occasional are not conclusive, but are to be considered in connection with all the evidence and the inference drawn from all the facts proved whether the controlling fact exists that the use is unreasonable. If that fact is found, a nuisance is established and the plaintiff is entitled to relief in some form. Unless that fact is found, or it is an inference at law from other facts found, no nuisance is established, even if the plaintiff shows that he has suffered some damage, annoyance and injury. * * * Whether the use of property by one person is reasonable, with reference to the comfortable enjoyment of his own property by another, generally depends upon many and varied facts; such as location, nature of the use, character of the neighborhood, extent and frequency of the injury, the effect on the enjoyment of life, health and property and the like.”

In a much older case,

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Bluebook (online)
170 Misc. 621, 10 N.Y.S.2d 781, 1939 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1637, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/canfield-v-quayle-nysupct-1939.