Frost v. Berkeley Phosphate Co.

26 L.R.A. 693, 20 S.E. 280, 42 S.C. 402, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 58
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedOctober 22, 1894
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 26 L.R.A. 693 (Frost v. Berkeley Phosphate Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Frost v. Berkeley Phosphate Co., 26 L.R.A. 693, 20 S.E. 280, 42 S.C. 402, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 58 (S.C. 1894).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Chief Justice McIver.

The plaintiff brought this action to recover damages from the defendant company for the injury done to plaintiff and his property by reason of the noxious gases generated in defendant’s mill, located very near by, and at some points adjoining, plaintiff’s land, and erected for the purpose of manufacturing commercial fertilizers. It is alleged in the complaint that in the preparation and manufacture of these fertilizers “one of the elements in the preparation is the manufacture, in very large quantities, of sulphuric acid, [408]*408in the manufacture of which acid are produced certain gases, fumes, or vapors, of very injurious results to vegetable life, in some cases destructive of it altogether, and also highly deleterious to animal life;” and it is further alleged that these noxious gases, fumes, and vapors thus escaping from defendant’s mill have greatly injured, and to some extent entirely destroyed, plaintiff’s crops and other vegetation growing on his land, and have proved so detrimental to health as to render plaintiff’s premises unfit for habitation. The plaintiff offered testimony tending to prove these allegations, and, on the other hand, testimony was offered by the defendant tending to contradict the same. The case was submitted to the jury, under the charge of his honor, Judge Aldrich, who found a verdict for the defendant, and plaintiff appeals upon the several grounds set out in the record, which practically impute two errors to the charge, which will hereinafter be stated; but we think it due to the Circuit Judge that his charge, as well as the exceptions thereto, should be incorporated in the report of the case.

The first error imputed to the Circuit Judge is in charging the jury as follows: “A man has the right to engage in any lawful occupation, or to use his premises in any proper and lawful industry; but in the exercise of his rights, he must so use his property as not to unlawfully and unreasonably injure his neighbor’s property. If he does so use his property in an unlawful and unreasonable manner, as to injure his neighbor, then, as to that neighbor, that would be a nuisance, and for that nuisance that neighbor would have the right to bring action in the civil court and demand compensation in the way of damages;” and in stating to the jury as the gist of this case: “Is the Berkeley Phosphate Company so operating and conducting its business as, by the escape of these gases and vapors, as alleged in this complaint, to injure, in an unreasonable and unlawful manner, Mr. Frost’s property?” We have italicized the objectionable words in these two extracts from the judge’s charge, simply for the purpose of indicating the point of the objection.

[409]*4091 [408]*408It seems to us that this charge isopen to two objections: 1st. That it left to the jury the decision of a question of law; for we [409]*409do not find anywhere in the charge anything to indicate what would be an unreasonable or an unlawful use of the defendant’s premises, or what would constitute an unreasonable or an unlawful injury to the plaintiff’s property, and the jury were left without any rule or principle by which to determine whether Mr. Frost’s property was unreasonably or unlawfully injured by the defendant. If, therefore, the jury had been ever so well satisfied that the property of the plaintiff had been very seriously injured by the use to which defendant had put its own property, they could not, under this instruction, have found for the plaintiff without further determining the question, whether the defendant had so used its own property as to unreasonably and unlawfully injure the property of the plaintiff; for the determination of which they had been furnished with no rule or principle by the Circuit Judge. How the jury could determine whether the defendant had made a lawful use of its premises, without any instruction as to what would be a lawful use, it is difficult to understand.

2 The second objection to this charge is, as it seems to us, that it unwarrantably limits the operation of the maxim, Sic utere tuo ut alienum non Icedas, so as to allow the owner of a tract of land to so use his own land in the prosecution of any lawful business as would necessarily or probably injure his neighbor, provided he takes all reasonable care to prevent such injury. This we do not understand to be the law. On the contrary, we think if one uses his own land for the prosecution of some business from which injury to his neighbor would either necessarily or probably ensue, he is liable if such injury does result, even though he may have used reasonable care in the prosecution of such business. This doctrine is supported not only by reason, but by the weight of authority, as is shown by the cases cited by appellant’s counsel. The rule is well stated in a note in 5 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law, at page 3, in these words: “In general, if a voluntary act, lawful in itself, may naturally result in the injury of another, or the violation of his legal rights, the actor must at his peril see to it that such injury or such violation does not follow, or he must expect to respond [410]*410in damages therefor; and this is true regardless of the motive or the degree of care with which the act is performed.”

In the case of the Susquehanna Fertilizer Company v. Malone, 73 Md., 268 (25 Am. St. Rep., 595), a case very much like the one under consideration, it was held that: “No principle is better settled than that where a trade or business is carried on in such a manner as to interfere with the reasonable and comfortable enjoyment by another of his property, or which occasions material injury to the property itself, a wrong is done to the neighboring owner for which an action will lie; and this, too, without regard to the locality where such business is carried on; and this, too, although the business may be a lawful business, and one useful to the public, and although the best and most approved appliances and methods may be used in the conduct and management of the business” — citing Attorney General v. Colney Hatch Lunatic Asylum, L. R. 4 Ch. App., 147; Pinckney v. Evans, 4 L. T. N. S., 741; Stockport Water Works v. Potter, 7 Hurl. & N., 160; Rylands v. Fletcher, L. R., 3 Eng. Ir. App., 330. Again, in the same case, it is said: “We cannot agree with the appellant that the court ought to have directed the jury to find whether the place where the factory was located was a convenient and proper place for the carrying on of the appellant’s business, and whether such a use of his property was a reasonable use, and if they should so find, the verdict must be for the defendant * * * Nor can any use of one’s own land be said to be a reasonable use which deprives an adjoining owner of the lawful use and enjoyment of his property;” and the learned judge proceeds to show that the only case which gives countenance to the view contended for by appellant is Hole v. Barlow, 4 Com. B. N. S., 334, which had been distinctly repudiated in the subsequent cases of Bamford v. Turnley, 31 L. J. Q. B., 286, and Tipping v. St. Helen Smelting Co., 4 Best & S., 608.

In Wilson v. City of New Bedford, 108 Mass., 261 (11 Am. Rep., 352), the case of Rylands v. Fletcher, supra,

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 L.R.A. 693, 20 S.E. 280, 42 S.C. 402, 1894 S.C. LEXIS 58, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/frost-v-berkeley-phosphate-co-sc-1894.