De Muro v. Havranek

153 Misc. 787, 275 N.Y.S. 186, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1777
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 30, 1934
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 Misc. 787 (De Muro v. Havranek) 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
De Muro v. Havranek, 153 Misc. 787, 275 N.Y.S. 186, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1777 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1934).

Opinion

Taylob, Geobge H., Je., J.

This action in equity (Adams v. Popham, 76 N. Y. 410; Leonard v. Spencer, 108 id. 338; Bohan v. Port Jervis Gas-Light Co., 122 id. 18) is brought by the plaintiffs, who own a small frame and stucco apartment house on the north side of Fegan street in Yonkers, against the defendants, owning the property immediately adjoining on the east, upon which latter the defendants operate a business or factory for the processing of meats and kindred purposes. Defendants use machinery and cooking and smoking appliances. Plaintiffs seek damages for an alleged nuisance which involves noise, odors, soot and grease, up to the time of the entry of the decree, and a permanent injunction restraining the continuance of the alleged nuisance. The defendants conduct their said business in a manner countenanced by the State and Federal laws and by municipal ordinances and regulations. Plaintiffs’ apartment house contains six apartments. It has been owned by them since 1922. The defendants’ adjoining property extends north from Fegan street to Ashburton avenue. It was acquired by the defendants in 1920. It was used then, and •until 1931, by the defendants for similar, although much more restricted, business purposes. In 1920 the Fegan street portion thereof was occupied by a garage fronting on Fegan street, with a yard in the rear thereof extending to the southerly wall of the Ashburton avenue building. This garage and yard adjoined the plaintiffs’ property and existed in practically the same condition from April, 1922, to July, 1931. The defendants’ property (29 Fegan street) has a frontage on that street of thirty-four feet plus. It extends to Ashburton avenue, a distance of about one hundred and seventy-one feet. The Ashburton avenue frontage is twenty-five feet. During the period indicated, the defendants manu-[789]*789factored sausages and processed meats on a lesser scale, in the Ashburton avenue building, a location somewhat removed from the plaintiffs’ premises. No nuisance is claimed to have existed before July, 1931. All defendants’ machinery until then was in the Ashburton avenue property building, although defendants’ then smokehouse was located near Fegan street. The operation of the plant then created no nuisance to the plaintiffs or plaintiffs’ tenants. In July, 1931, the defendants expanded their said business. They engaged in interstate commerce. They altered the Fegan street portion. They eliminated the yard area. They built a solid brick wall along the westerly side of what had been the yard. They eliminated the rear wall on the ground floor of the two-story garage and reconstructed their premises otherwise, so that they obtained and still have manufacturing and other space on the ground floor of their premises from Fegan street to Ashburton avenue, a distance of about one hundred and seventy-one feet. To meet the increase of business several additional smoke chambers and two additional boiling pots were installed in the Fegan street portion of the premises. Machinery theretofore in the Ashburton avenue building was removed into the ground floor of what had been the (Fegan street) garage building and near to its westerly wall. The new wall at the westerly side of what had been the yard closed a window on the first floor of plaintiffs’ apartment house. The defendants had a legal right to do this. Smokestacks were erected on the roof of the defendants’ new one-story extension (previously the yard area). One stack was within a few feet of the easterly portion of the rear porch of plaintiffs’ house. Another larger chimney was located about four feet east of that porch; a flue was erected about eight or ten feet therefrom, and seven skylights were constructed in the roof of the extension, two quite close to the plaintiffs’ easterly wall and five within ten feet of it. The smoke flues were carried some distance above the roof of plaintiffs’ house. Following that expansion and rearrangement of the plant, the defendants did a very substantial business. Their daily production of goods became and has remained large. The production has run as high as 4,000 pounds a day. The operation of the expanded plant from July, 1931, until the present time has been characterized practically daily (Sundays and holidays excepted) by smoke from the smoking of meats and by soot and black grease which enters plaintiffs’ property, settles upon it, and even enters the apartments from the rear (north) when the windows are open. Meaty odors likewise have been disseminated to the discomfort of those occupying plaintiffs’ premises. The defendants’ establishment during said period also has emitted grinding noises incidental to the [790]*790operation of machinery, which machinery has caused vibration noticeable in an annoying degree in plaintiffs’ premises. There is no proof, however, of structural damage to plaintiffs’ premises. These features of defendants’ said operation have caused discomfort to plaintiffs and their tenants, persons of ordinary sensibilities. Wash hung on lines in the rear of plaintiffs’ premises has been damaged by smoke, soot and grease, producing like discomfort and annoyance. Upon all the relevant facts above recited or inferable otherwise from the evidence, I find that to the detriment, damage and injury of the plaintiffs in their said property and estate, the defendants have conducted and maintained a nuisance as described, for the maintenance of which they are liable in lawful compensatory damages to the plaintiffs, and the continuance of which, in its features thus constituting a nuisance, must be enjoined and restrained, subject as hereinafter indicated. The defendants in effect have trespassed in the manner indicated upon plaintiffs’ property and rights. (Booth v. Rome, W. & O. T. R. Co., 140 N. Y. 267, 276.) Such nuisance attributable to the defendants existed, and exists not because their use of their property is unpleasant, unsightly or to some extent annoying to the plaintiffs and their tenants, defendants’ neighbors, but because such use with the incidents stated has interfered and interferes materially with the physical comfort of persons in their own homes ” (plaintiffs and their tenants) and “ also causes some financial injury ” to the plaintiffs (McCarty v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co., 189 N. Y. 40, 50); and because the features of defendants’ operation detailed are such as materially to interfere with and impair the ordinary comfort of existence on the part of ordinary people” (Peck v. Newburgh Light, Heat & Power Co., 132 App. Div. 82, 85, quoted from Joyce on Nuisances, § 182; and read also, upon the general subject, People v. Rubenfeld, 254 N. Y. 245, 248; Dillon v. Cortland Baking Co., 224 App. Div, 303; Miranda v. Buffalo General Electric Co., 140 Misc. 267; Andrews v. Perry, 127 id. 320; Stoneburner v. O-Gas-Co. Sales Corporation, 135 id. 216). Defendants’ said use of their premises has been unreasonable to plaintiffs’ material injury. (Darr v. Cohen, 94 Misc. 471.) Even if the plant has been conducted without negligence on defendants’ part — and in the main this is true except only as to the smoke, soot and grease, as to which there is evidence of negligence in operation —= they are still liable under the facts found. (McFarlane v. City of Niagara Falls, 247 N. Y. 340.) Nor does the circumstance that the defendants are conducting their business in strict conformity with law and with modern appliances relieve them of liability to the plaintiffs, whose property they have thus invaded, (See People v. Borden’s Condensed Milk Co.,

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Bluebook (online)
153 Misc. 787, 275 N.Y.S. 186, 1934 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 1777, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-muro-v-havranek-nysupct-1934.