Crushed Stone Co. v. Moore

1962 OK 65, 369 P.2d 811, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 303
CourtSupreme Court of Oklahoma
DecidedMarch 18, 1962
Docket39417
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 1962 OK 65 (Crushed Stone Co. v. Moore) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Oklahoma primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crushed Stone Co. v. Moore, 1962 OK 65, 369 P.2d 811, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 303 (Okla. 1962).

Opinion

BLACKBIRD, Vice Chief Justice.

This appeal involves an action to enjoin the operation of a limestone rock quarry, located on land belonging to Harry T. Pratt, about one and a half or two miles from where a section line road, known as “Coyote Trail” intersects with the Sapulpa-Sand Springs road.

In 1950, when the Turner Turnpike was being linked with the Will Rogers Turnpike, a road construction business known as “Layman & Sons” operated this quarry to furnish materials for that road.

After an interval, during which there were no operations at the quarry, Crushéd Stone Co., Inc., leased the land from Pratt, and commenced operating the quarry with its own equipment, in June, 1957. In December of the same year, said Company, hereinafter referred to by the letters “C. S. C.”, suspended its operations at the quarry, but resumed them in June, 1958.

Defendants in error, hereinafter referred to as plaintiffs, are the owners and inhabitants of premises near the quarry, covering rural acreages of from 5 to 40 acres. They instituted this action to enjoin operations at the quarry in October, 1958. The gist of their alleged cause of action against Pratt and C. S. C., was that the operation of the quarry, not only damaged their property, but that it interfered with their lights to the quiet and peaceful occupation, and enjoyment, of them.

The complaints against C. S. C.’s operation, testified to at the trial before the court by four men, who were plaintiffs in the action, together with their wives, and a widow, Lucille Ruddle, were directed against the dust, which filled the air and settled on nearby property; to the noise, concussion, vibration and rock propulsion caused by C. S. C.’s setting off explosives to blast the rock out of the ground; and to the noise and dust caused by the subsequent crushing of the rock into “agricultural limestone” and its loading into dump trucks to be hauled away. Some of said witnesses testified that the air around their homes was so full of dust, after such blasting, that it was hard to breathe; some testified that the dust not only covered the vegetation on their properties, making it look white, but came into their houses— even with the doors and windows closed— coating the furniture and floors and soiling draperies and damaging painted surfaces. Some also testified that the explosions shook the earth as well as their houses, cracking and dislodging the masonry and sheetrock therein and frightening and/or disturbing the occupants. Some also testified that the explosions propelled flying rocks onto the premises, breaking limbs from trees and creating a condition hazardous to both animal and human life. Some of the witnesses also testified that, because of the dust, they could not have the windows and doors of their homes open, and could not hang clothes out in their yards to dry. One witness testified that the dust aggravated his allergies, and worsened his wife’s nervous condition. More than one witness testified that the noise from the work at the quarry disturbed, or interrupted, their sleep.

Defendants attempted to show, by the testimony of some of their witnesses, that some of the claims made by certain of the plaintiffs’ witnesses about the effects of the quarry operations were exaggerated. Part of this testimony was elicited from the so-called “expert” witnesses, Ben Poisner and Harold H. White. Poisner attempted to show, by analyses of dust samples he had *814 made, that most of the dust, of which plaintiffs complained, had too great a silica content to be limestone dust from the quarry operations. White, a consulting engineer specializing on explosive effects, testified in substance, that, at C. S. C.’s request, he conducted two tests with certain seismographic instruments and equipment, scientifically designed to measure impacts from the blasting. According to these tests — one conducted at the well house on Mrs. Rud-dle’s property, July 3, 1957, and another at the Eubanks home, January 14, 1959 — 6800 pounds of explosive, loaded into 50 holes, 31 feet deep, on the face of the quarry, created fewer decibels of noise than one clap of thunder, or New York City street traffic, and insufficient vibration to cause any structural injury on plaintiffs’ premises.

After the trial had been continued from the first week in August, 1959; and, at a further hearing on September 21, 1959, defendants had introduced testimony that they had inaugurated certain corrective measures in their operations which reduced the original ill effects therefrom, and arrangements had been made for the trial judge to go to the quarry a week later, and there watch a test shot being exploded and personally view the situation, the court took the case under advisement and allowed submission of briefs.

Thereafter, in May, 1960, the court adjudged that the manner in which the quarry was being operated constituted a public and private nuisance. He expressed the further opinion, however, that defendants should have an opportunity to “correct” the situation, and gave them until July 17, 1960, for that purpose. After the case was taken under further advisement, until August 8, 1960, and recessed until the next day, both sides were allowed to introduce testimony pertaining to the results of C. S. C.’s attempts to reduce, or prevent, the harmful effects from its operations. After evidence had been introduced, on behalf of defendants, showing that C. S. C., had expended $13,000, or more, making certain improvements in the plant, and had made certain changes in their operations designed to reduce the dust, noise, and vibration from the quarry’s operation, and plaintiffs had countered with evidence contemplated to show that operation of the quarry still constituted a nuisance, the court revisited the area and viewed the situation. When the case came on for judgment August 16, 1960, the court announced that evidence introduced since the preceding May 18, was insufficient to show an abatement of the nuisance. In his judgment, the court affirmatively found, and adjudged, that the operation of the quarry continued to constitute both a public and private nuisance, and ordered it abated by cessation of its operation, within 15 days, and removal of the accumulated stock piles (of agricultural limestone) within 30 days. After the overruling of their separate motions for a new trial, defendants perfected the present appeal.

As their first proposition for reversal, defendants have formulated the following:

“It is the duty of the court in considering an application of equitable power by injunction to take into account the question of comparative injury.”

Having called our attention to evidence showing previous disposition, by trial or settlement, of two actions for damages to two of the same home properties, around which plaintiffs built their case for an injunction here, and to the conflict between plaintiffs’ and defendants’ evidence as to the volume of noise, and intensity of vibrations, from blasting at the quarry, defendants set forth in their brief a quotation from McCarthy v. Bunker Hill & Sullivan Mining & C. Co., (U.S.C.A. 9th Cir.) 164 F. 927, which case was cited in our opinion in Tulsa Creamery Co. v. Tulsa Milk Products Coop. Ass’n, 175 Okl. 51, 51 P.2d 950, 952, for a statement from which defendants’ above-quoted proposition is apparently derived. Defendants also cite the following quotation from City of Harrisonville v. W. S. Dickey Clay Mfg.

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

Related

Lawrence v. Clubcorp NV II, LLC
2025 OK CIV APP 17 (Court of Civil Appeals of Oklahoma, 2024)
RANDLE v. CITY OF TULSA
2024 OK 40 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2024)
STATE ex rel. ATTORNEY GENERAL OF OKLAHOMA v. JOHNSON & JOHNSON
2021 OK 54 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 2021)
Theatre Estates, Inc. v. Village
1969 OK 183 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1969)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1962 OK 65, 369 P.2d 811, 1962 Okla. LEXIS 303, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crushed-stone-co-v-moore-okla-1962.