Dale v. Bryant

141 N.E.2d 504, 75 Ohio Law. Abs. 401, 1957 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 326
CourtMontgomery County Court of Common Pleas
DecidedMarch 22, 1957
DocketNo. 110967
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 141 N.E.2d 504 (Dale v. Bryant) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dale v. Bryant, 141 N.E.2d 504, 75 Ohio Law. Abs. 401, 1957 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 326 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1957).

Opinion

[403]*403OPINION

By McBRIDE, J.:

This case was heard and submitted on an application for a permanent restraining order. The defendants include the owner of the land and the operator of an automobile salvage business which regularly burns vehicles in the open. By agreement, the City Auto Sales, Incorporated, was substituted as defendant for David Barrar.

As appears on Exhibit 1 and from the inspection by the court the area involved includes a “U” shaped plat which, while it has no zoning or restrictions, has been and is used exclusively for residence purposes by several hundred individuals. The only permanent exception is one community grocery store. The north central portion inside the “U” does not appear to be a part of the plat. This portion includes several residences on larger tracts, a narrow open field to the highway and a seven acre tract located in the center of the entire area. It is upon this seven acres that the defendant, John Bryant, commenced his salvage business. The plat itself appears to be rather old. It consists of lots so small that many owners have more than one. The streets are unimproved and some incomplete. There are no side walks, some outside toilets, local water supply and relatively inexpensive housing. However, as indicated, the area is entirely devoted to residential use with the exception of the community store and one or two temporary variations which no longer exist.

The seven acre parcel in the center of this community was used for agricultural purposes until early 1956. At that time used automobiles were moved in for storage. About the middle of October 1956 the defendant, John Bryant, leased the land from City Auto Sales, Incorporated, on a month to month basis for the purpose of carrying on the business of salvaging the metal from automobiles by means of the open burning process. Complaints immediately arose and this suit was filed within approximately sixty days after the defendant commenced his operation.

It appears that, at least in this instance, salvage operations are divided into two functions. The first consists of the storage and stripping of parts for sale with no or only incidental burning. The second consists exclusively of burning, mostly of stripped cars, with only incidental salvaging of a few readily salable parts. The defendant, John Bryant, undertook the latter phase of this salvage program, anticipating a change in his operation as his capital improved. Storage of cars and parts is not a significant item.

The defendant admitted that he burns off about twenty cars a week, usually two or more at the same time. He and the owner of the land agreed to avoid burning on Mondays because of its effect on clothing hung out to dry. This burning off of paint, oil, upholstery, mats, rubber [404]*404tubing and the like is an essential step for salvaging metal for future industrial use.

When the process is conducted in the open without modern equipment bellows of smoke, flying particles, lacy fragments of burnt paint and offensive and unnatural odors are produced and distributed over the surrounding area at the will of the wind and the whim of atmospheric pressure. The burning witnessed by the court and described by neighbors on the witness stand with details as to soiled wash, smoke, and soot deposits on homes, offensive and noxious odors that lingered after the smoke disappeared clearly establish a continuing nuisance in the heart of a residential community.

The area of the effective nuisance is limited and cannot be compared to that of the huge burning garbage dumps which formerly enveloped portions of this county. However the area of effective nuisance is not confined to the seven acres and it does produce damage to real and personal property surrounding the operation and it does cause substantial physical discomfort to the ordinary person, hundreds of whom have resided in their own homes in this area for a period of time long before the salvage operation commenced.

The operation of a business which salvages used cars and parts in an open lot or other area is a junk yard and is not a nuisance per se. The mere storage of automobiles upon the premises does not invade the rights of adjoining owners. Unsightliness of a junk yard does not violate rights of neighbors any more than an unsightly house or other building. Bohley v. Crofoot, 7 Abs 667. A court of equity will not control another in the lawful use of his premises when he does not violate the rights of others. 30 O. Jur. 344.

The nature and definition of private and public nuisances is so well established by the cases and so thoroughly briefed by counsel that repetition is unnecessary here. The court will therefore confine its discussion to the more significant phases of the subject involved in this case: the burning of automobiles for salvage and the initiation of such an activity in an established residential area.

Nuisance is a relative matter which must be determined by its character and magnitude in connection with all of the surrounding circumstances in the same area. A junk yard in a neighborhood given over to maufacturing enterprises is not a nuisance. However where such a business is operated on a large scale in an exclusively residential neighborhood with incessant noise and dirt it is a nuisance. Weishahn v. Kemper, 32 Oh Ap 313, 167 N. E. 468, motion to certify overruled. An injunction will issue at the suit of residents of long standing in an otherwise quiet residential neighborhood to restrain a motor express company from operating a very noisy business during certain hours of the night. McCambridge v. Mahoning Express Company (App) 17 Abs 632; Schlueter v. Billingheimer, 14 W. L. B. 224. An injunction will not issue to prevent the raising of ducks, in a farm area, of several hundred unavoidably noisy ducks, which could be heard by the plaintiff in her home four hundred feet away. De Albert v. Novak, 3 O. O. 425, 78 Oh Ap 80. An [405]*405injunction has been allowed on one lot operated as a junk yard, but denied on another two hundred feet away because the latter was almost surrounded by buildings devoted to manufacturing purposes. Grundstein v. Ashland, 25 O. N. P. (N. S.) 493. It is error to reject evidence and special instructions of law concerning the nature of the business and the character of the neighborhood. Eller v. Koehler, 68 Oh St 51.

Where the business of salvaging used automobiles and parts includes the open burning of cars for the purpose of removing paint, enamel, upholstery and rubber parts and creates obnoxious and offensive gases, odors, smoke, and flying foreign substances, which pass over and upon adjoining residences, the rights of the neighboring home owners are invaded. The owner or operator of such a business will be enjoined. State, ex rel., v. Grillot, 71 Abs 329. While this court has recognized the continuing need for proper facilities in this community, nevertheless new activities of this nature may not be initiated in established residential areas. The rule as to a fit and suitable area for such activities, discussed by the Supreme Court in 1903, is equally applicable today.

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Related

Henn v. Universal Atlas Cement Co.
144 N.E.2d 917 (Montgomery County Court of Common Pleas, 1957)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
141 N.E.2d 504, 75 Ohio Law. Abs. 401, 1957 Ohio Misc. LEXIS 326, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dale-v-bryant-ohctcomplmontgo-1957.