Darr v. Cohen

94 Misc. 471, 158 N.Y.S. 324
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 1916
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 94 Misc. 471 (Darr v. Cohen) 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
Darr v. Cohen, 94 Misc. 471, 158 N.Y.S. 324 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1916).

Opinion

Giegerich, J.

The action is to abate a private nuisance. The plaintiff, since October 1, 1910, has been the lessee and occupant of an apartment on the ground floor of the seven-story brick and stone apartment house known as the ‘ ‘ Wilmington, ’ ’ situate at the southeast corner of Broadway and Ninety-seventh street, in the borough of Manhattan, New York city. The evidence shows that the “ Wilmington ” is a high class apartment house, with separate bathrooms, kitchen and rooms for each apartment, which are separate from each other, and that it is situated in a residential neighborhood composed of high class apartments in the built-up portion of Manhattan island. The plaintiff’s present lease for said apartment was made in September, 1915, and expires on September 30, 1916, and the plaintiff is paying the same rent as he paid before the nuisance complained of was created. The ground floor and a part of the basement of that portion of the apartment house in question fronting on Broadway is used for business purposes and, among other things, for a restaurant. The complaint alleges, and the answer does not deny, that the restaurant is now operated by the defendant and has been operated by him and his predecessors since March, 1915, when it was installed. The restaurant adjoins plaintiff’s apartment, now consisting of two rooms and a bath, the bedroom thereof being immediately adjacent to the walls separating it from the restaurant. Such walls are an ordinary lath and plaster studded wall about six inches in thickness and a fireproof block partition wall about five inches in [473]*473thickness, which fireproof wall was erected wholly within plaintiff’s apartment in November, 1915, when it was changed from a three-room to a two-room apartment by throwing the two rooms next to said wall into one large room. About March, 1915, a dumbwaiter and appurtenances and- attachments were installed and erected immediately adjacent to and run up and down against said walls which separate plaintiff’s bedroom from the restaurant, and are operated at frequent intervals during the whole of each day and night. The plaintiff seeks to enjoin the operation of such dumb-waiter and the shouting of orders for food up and down the dumb-waiter shaft. Although the allegations of the complaint with respect to these matters are denied, the evidence satisfies me that the dumb-waiter is of improper construction. There is great play between the car of the dumb-waiter and the guides on which it runs, with the result that the running of the car is accompanied by a loud noise. The rope which operates the car of the dumb-waiter runs in a wheel with a very shallow groove, so that the rope is liable to and does at times slip off, causing the car to be operated with a loud noise. The car has no shock absorbers at the top, so that when it strikes the top of the shaft or wheel there is a loud report. The easterly wall of the dumb-waiter shaft is not fireproofed, as required by section 97 of the city ordinances, in consequence of which the walls between the restaurant and plaintiff’s apartment are thinner than they would be if fireproofed, and the ropes of the dumb-waiter strike such walls at frequent intervals with a loud report. The evidence further establishes that the dumb-waiter is often negligently operated by running it faster than necessary and by letting it go down with a sudden fall, and that the defendant and his representatives often place large quantities of dishes on the [474]*474dumb-waiter and then allow it to go down with a sudden fall, all of which results in loud noise, and that the defendant and his representatives at frequent intervals during each and every day and night call and shout orders for food up and down the elevator shaft. I also find that the operation of the dumb-waiter and the noise and shouting above mentioned.are distinctly heard in plaintiff’s apartment at frequent intervals during all hours of' each night, with the result that plaintiff is substantially deprived of rest and sleep while in his apartment and suffers great annoyance by reason thereof; that the noise is of such a character as to materially interfere with and impair the ordinary comfort of existence on the part of an ordinary person, the plaintiff’s apartment being thereby rendered unfit and useless for the purposes for which it was and is leased by him, viz., a strictly private, dwelling apartment.” I further find that the defendant’s predecessor in the restaurant and the landlord of the said apartment often promised to abate the nuisance, both before and after the making of the last lease of the plaintiff’s apartment; that before the alteration of the plaintiff’s apartment in November, 1915, it was possible for the plaintiff, by leaving one room of his apartment unoccupied, to shut out a part of the noise arising from the operation of the restaurant; that on several occasions before the bringing of this action the plaintiff, orally and in writing, requested the defendant to abate the nuisance, and that on one occasion when the plaintiff requested the defendant to cease the operation of the dumbwaiter, the latter replied, in substance, that “ I am much obliged to you for telling me how to run my business. Maybe, you do not know it all. You can’t make me stop running that dumb-waiter.” There are many cases in the books where the unreasonable use [475]*475of premises to the material injury of others has been enjoined. The questions presented by this case are therefore not novel and their disposition is governed by the well-established rule that no one may make an unreasonable use of his own premises to the material injury of his neighbor’s premises, and, if he does, the latter has a right of action even if he is not driven from his dwelling, provided the enjoyment of life and property is materially lessened. Bohan v. Port Jervis Gas Light Co., 122 N. Y. 18; Pach v. Geoffroy, 67 Hun, 401; affd., on opinion below, 143 N. Y. 661; McCarty v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co., 189 id. 40, and cases there cited. In Bohan v. Port Jervis Gas Light Co., supra, it is said in the prevailing opinion, at pages 23, 24 and 25: “If one carry on a lawful trade or business in such a manner as to prove a nuisance to his neighbor, he must answer in damages, and it is not necessary to a right of action that the owner should be driven from his dwelling; it is enough that the enjoyment of life and property be rendered uncomfortable. * * * While every person has exclusive dominion over his own property and may subject it to such uses as will subserve his wishes and private interests, he is bound to have respect and regard for his neighbor’s rights. The maxim l8ic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas ’ limits his powers. He must make a reasonable use of his property. * * * The wants of mankind demand that property be put to many and various uses and employments, and one may have, upon his property, any kind of lawful business, and so long as it is not a nuisance, and is not managed so as to become such, he is not responsible for any damage that his neighbor accidentally and unavoidably sustains.” In Pach v. Geoffroy, supra, the court, speaking by O’Brien, J., said (p. 405): “If the evidence justified the findings that the operation of the dynamo [476]

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Bluebook (online)
94 Misc. 471, 158 N.Y.S. 324, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/darr-v-cohen-nysupct-1916.