Froelicher v. Southern Marine Works

48 So. 882, 118 La. 1077, 1907 La. LEXIS 850
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 4, 1907
DocketNo. 16,165
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 48 So. 882 (Froelicher v. Southern Marine Works) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Froelicher v. Southern Marine Works, 48 So. 882, 118 La. 1077, 1907 La. LEXIS 850 (La. 1907).

Opinions

BREAUX, C. J.

Plaintiff asks for judgment against defendant in the sum of $15,000 for injury to himself and family and loss In the value of his property.

The district court rendered judgment in his favor for $10,000.

Defendant appealed.

This is the second suit brought by plaintiff against defendant.

In the language of the defendant’s counsel, to quote from their brief:

“This suit is an echo of that of the same plaintiff against the same defendant, at the time the Oswald Iron Works (111 La. 705, 35 South. 821, 64 L. R. A. 228), but now by amendment to the charter, and even before the first case was decided, the Southern Marine Works.”

We shall, as briefly as possible, state the issues of the first case, the record of which was made part of the present case. They are in certain particulars pertinent in the present case.

The plaintiff alleged, substantially, in the first ease, that he had bought the land in 1884; that he had improved it, erected buildings thereon, in which he conducted his .business, and resided with his family, but after that time defendant erected its works near him; that because of defendant’s noisy plant, the steam, the rust, and the nauseous odors, the value of his property has been depressed, and its use for business and residential purposes materially injured, and even destroyed.

Plaintiff sought to trace all his asserted grievances to the machine shops facing Morgan street, on the left of his premises, and to the boiler works facing Patterson street, in the rear of his lot on the left. He averred that defendants erected their works without permission of the city council, to which application had been made, but which was not granted.

Plaintiff in the first suit placed the damages in the -sum of $2,500, and obtained an injunction.

The decree of the district court in that suit is dated July 2, 1902. It condemned defendant to pay $500 damages, and enjoined it from manufacturing or repairing boilers and tanks in the rear of and contiguous to plaintiff’s property.

The lots to which the injunction referred were numbered 15 and 16 on the Lombard sketch of survey.

In other respects plaintiff’s demand was rejected.

The petition in the case now before us was filed on the 2d day of February, 1903.

We should have stated before that an ap[1079]*1079peal was taken from the decision referred to, rendered by the district court, to this court, and here the decision of the district court was affirmed. The decision here was handed down on the 30th of November, 1903.

We return for a moment to the first case to state that the testimony showed that plaintiff and his family lived upstairs, and he had a saddler’s shop and harness shop downstairs, where he also repaired buggies. His trade is that of a saddler and harness maker.

The testimony for plaintiff in the said suit will have it that his house is in a dilapidated condition and in a sad plight; that the noise from the iron works was not bearable; that he and his family were sufferers on that account, it made them irritable, nervous, and at times ill; .that they had to seek lodging elsewhere.

The present case was tried in the district court in December, 1904.

We are informed by the record that since the first decision was handed down, the date of which we have given above, defendant has placed its blacksmith’s shop, tank, and boiler works on lots 1 and 2, and the machine shop on lots 15 and 16, as also the brazing works. There is also an emery wheel on defendant’s premises.

Therefore it must be borne in mind that, prior to the decision before mentioned, the boiler works faced Morgan street; that, after the decision had been handed down, they were moved to the rear of plaintiff’s lot (that is, to lots 1 and 2) and the machine shops facing Patterson street removed so as to face Morgan street (that is, moved to lots 15 and 16).

Plaintiff’s complaint is that the change has not been of any benefit to him. It has brought him no relief. The noise is louder than ever, and the nuisance more burdensome.

A number of witnesses have been examined; quite a number on behalf of plaintiff, and a larger number on behalf of defendant. Those of plaintiff pretty well sustain the contention of plaintiff, except in a few instances some of them were not as positive as others about the noise and its bad effect. The same may be said of defendant’s cause and of its witnesses. Some of them said that it was not desirable nor advisable to live so near machine shops and boiler works.

Plaintiff, in his pleadings and by the testimony of his witnesses, has given a doleful account of the conditions to which he has been driven on account of the iron plant, the noise of its boilers, and machine shops. He sets forth with some particularity the noises from the caulking and riveting óf iron, steel ■tanks, and boilers, the screeching and rumbling noise of the gearing, the hammering of iron, steel, copper, and brass, the screeches of the emery wheel as the tools and pieces are sharpened, the vibrations caused 1 y the heavy moving machinery, the noxious odors from the ferrofix.

Defendant sought to meet plaintiff’s complaint and statements of his witnesses by testimony of its. witnesses showing a different state of its works. The testimony of its witnesses has it that the machine shops, facing on Morgan street, very near the side ^wooden wall about 20 inches from plaintiff’s house, are not so noisy as plaintiff seeks to have it appear; that there are no disagreeable odors from the works, and no vibrations to cause the damage of which plaintiff complains.

It is in place to state that the plaintiff ffiiilt and occupied his house some time be-, fore defendant’s works were erected on the adjacent lots (15 and 16).

We pass for the time being the plea of res judicata.

The following diagram gives an idea of the place. There is no pretense that the distances are indicated with accuracy.

[1081]

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Bluebook (online)
48 So. 882, 118 La. 1077, 1907 La. LEXIS 850, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/froelicher-v-southern-marine-works-la-1907.