Fish v. Hanna Coal and Ore Corp.

164 F. Supp. 870, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3903
CourtDistrict Court, D. Minnesota
DecidedAugust 27, 1958
Docket5-57 Civ. 21
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 164 F. Supp. 870 (Fish v. Hanna Coal and Ore Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fish v. Hanna Coal and Ore Corp., 164 F. Supp. 870, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3903 (mnd 1958).

Opinion

DONOVAN, District Judge.

In this diversity action plaintiffs Hubert J. Fish and Faye E. Fish (husband and wife) seek damages and an order in abatement because of an alleged nuisance.

The action was tried to the court in Duluth, Minnesota at the May 1958 General Term, and trial was concluded on June 2, 1958. Final briefs were submitted on June 25, 1958.

From the facts developed at trial it appears that plaintiffs moved into their present home in Trommald, Minnesota, in *871 1931. The house and property were purchased from Faye’s father for $500. At the time of trial approximately $3,000 had been expended in improvements. Trommald is a mining community or “location” presently consisting of 35 to 40 occupied dwellings, a store and a tavern. It is located in the Cuyuna Range some five miles from Crosby-Iron-ton. Like other communities on the Cuyuna Range, Trommald owes its existence to the presence of iron ore and the industry devoted to its extraction from the earth. Open pit mines lie in close proximity to Trommald. One such mine is the Morocco owned by defendant. This mine lies directly south of plaintiffs’ property; the mine’s appurtenant property separated from that of the plaintiffs by a public road.

When the plaintiffs moved into possession of their property, the Morocco Mine was not in operation and its pit was filled with water. 1 In 1953 defendant decided to resume operations. This necessitated draining the pit and stripping the overburden of earth and stone from the ore veins. 5,000,000 tons of overburden were removed to extract 1,500,-000 tons of merchantable ore. The overburden was removed from the pit in Euclid trucks to dumps located on land owned by the defendant at points where testing disclosed no underlying ore body. The overburden was placed on a dump site south of the mine until in March 1956 available space at this site was expended. Thereafter, the overburden was placed on a new dump constructed north of the mine and directly south of plaintiffs’ property.

The trucks traversed the road separating the plaintiffs’ premises from that of the defendant on their journey to the north dump. This traffic, consisting of five trucks in continuous operation on eight hour shifts around the clock for six days a week, continued from March 1956 to May 1957 with the exception of two months in the summer of 1956 when mining operations suspended during a nation-wide strike in the steel industry.

The distance between plaintiffs’ house and the road is approximately 103 feet; between the road and the edge of the dump, 72 feet; and between the house and the crest of the dump, 317 feet. A Diesel-motored shovel operated upon the dump. Water trucks sprayed the site at fifteen minute intervals to combat the dust incident to the trucking and dumping operation. Calcium chloride was regularly applied to aid in solidifying or “stabilizing” the dump. The dump was completed and travel to and upon it ceased in May 1957.

Plaintiffs contend 2 that this dumping operation constituted a nuisance in that *872 it was accompanied by intense noise and caused and still causes a continuous seeping of dust onto their premises and into their home thereby interfering with the comfortable enjoyment of their lives and property. As stated in plaintiffs’ brief:

“Plaintiffs claim that the construction and maintenance of the dump constitute a private nuisance by reason of the resulting noise and dust. It is admitted that the mine cannot be moved and it is admitted that the mine itself is not a nuisance either in law or in fact. Nevertheless, the dump did not have to be constructed and maintained across the street from plaintiffs’ house and that the dump is a private nuisance in law and fact.”

The substantive law of Minnesota controls disposition of the case at bar. 3 Minnesota Statutes Annotated § 561.01 defines a nuisance to be:

“Anything which is injurious to health, or indecent or offensive to the senses, or an obstruction to the free use of property so as to interfere with the comfortable enjoyment of life or property. * * * ”

It is not every discomfort resulting from the use to which adjacent property is put that constitutes a nuisance. Noise and dust or smoke incidental to the operation of a business which causes discomfort interfering with the enjoyment of life or property are not, by reason of that interference, nuisances as a matter of law. 4 The interference must be a material and substantial one in order that a nuisance exist entitling the party to relief, and the degree of the discomfort is measured, not by the standards of persons of delicate sensibilities and fastidious habits, but by the standards of ordinary people having regard to the character of the area in which they reside. 5

The conduct of many industries is such as to cause discomfort and inconvenience to persons residing nearby. If the activity producing discomfort and inconvenience is necessarily attendant to the proper conduct of the industry, and the industry is located in a place given over to industrial uses, no relief will be forthcoming unless the activity is so offensive as to constitute a nuisance no matter where located. As stated by the Minnesota Supreme Court:

“No court will stop a great mining enterprise unless it is made to appear that an invasion of private or public right is imminent. * * * Flying fragments, noise and vibrations from blasting, and smoke and rattle from steam shovels and ore trains may be so controlled as not *873 to interfere materially with the peace and comfort of residents. * * * It is reasonable to require those, who take up * * * residence in a municipality dependent for its very existence upon the industry there carried on, to somewhat endure the disturbances and discomforts that unavoidably attend the proper and careful operation of the industry. * * * ” 6

The problem of determining what constitutes a material interference with the enjoyment of life and property in an industrial area is, in the words of the Minnesota Court,

“[one of] * * * measuring what is normal and what is abnormal interference with life in an industrial area.
“ * * * ordinarily the fact that an industry is being operated under methods best calculated to remove the conditions causing the inconvenience is convincing indication that whatever annoyance is being suffered by those living there is only such as is inescapably present in that area. Though negligence upon the part of defendant need not be proved, whether defendant was doing as much as reasonably was possible in the way of careful operation becomes the measure of whether there has been substantial interference with plaintiffs’ enjoyment of life.” 7

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

Related

Crabtree v. City Auto Salvage Company
340 S.W.2d 940 (Court of Appeals of Tennessee, 1960)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
164 F. Supp. 870, 1958 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 3903, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fish-v-hanna-coal-and-ore-corp-mnd-1958.