G. & H. CATTLE CO. v. Commonwealth

227 S.W.2d 420, 312 Ky. 315, 1950 Ky. LEXIS 646
CourtCourt of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976)
DecidedFebruary 24, 1950
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 227 S.W.2d 420 (G. & H. CATTLE CO. v. Commonwealth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Kentucky (pre-1976) primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
G. & H. CATTLE CO. v. Commonwealth, 227 S.W.2d 420, 312 Ky. 315, 1950 Ky. LEXIS 646 (Ky. 1950).

Opinion

Chief Justice Sims

Reversing.

The G-. & H. Cattle Company, a corporation, and R. L. Colter, its officer in charge of its operations in feeding cattle in Anderson County, were jointly indicted for committing a common nuisance. The court directed a' verdict in favor of Colter but let the case go to the jury as to the Company and it was convicted and fined $2,500. The Company made a motion in this court for an appeal and has assigned five errors in seeking to reverse the judgment: 1. The demurrer should have been sustained to the indictment; 2. the instructions were erroneous; 3. a verdict should have been directed in its favor; 4. incompetent testimony was admitted; 5. misconduct of the Commonwealth Attorney.--

The indictment charged the accused “on the 1st, 3rd, 6th, 13th, 14th, 17th and 21st days of November, 1947, and on divers days thereafter, habitually and continuously during the period from and after said dates, within twelve months before the finding of this indictment * * * did unlawfully and wilfully suffer and permit filth and refuse, manure, offal and filth, from several hundred cattle then on their premises (here follows description of the land) to drain into Salt River ’ ’ and pollute its waters and make them unfit for- domestic uses *317 and purposes to the discomfort and annoyance of people residing' in the neighborhood and to endanger and jeopardize the health of those residing in Lawrenceburg and using city water.

As we understand, the criticism of the indictment is that it did not charge continuing and habitual wrongful acts on the part of accused. Even a cursory reading of the portion of the indictment just quoted refutes the argument and clearly shows it charges a continuity of the acts averred to be a nuisance. The mere fact that the acts complained of did not follow each consecutive day, does not prevent them from being continuous in the eyes of the law where the acts continued through the month with only two or three days intervening between each act. In Com. v. Kentucky Distilleries & Warehouse Co., 154 Ky. 787, 159 S. W. 570, 571, an indictment for a common nuisance was held to be good where it charged the offense was committed on Dec. 10, 1910, “and on divers days thereafter, habitually and continuously * * V*

The same criticism is made of the instruction that was made of the indictment, that there was a lack of continuity in the acts submitted to the jury. We have just seen that the indictment charged a continuity of acts and as the instruction followed the indictment, it submitted to the jury’s determination whether or not there was a continuity of the objectionable acts on the part of the accused.

In determining whether or not a verdict should have been directed in favor of the Company it is necessary to state briefly the facts proved. During the month of November 1947, the Company through its Vice-president, Colter, fed hay and grain to 1,900 cattle in a feedlot of about 30 acres. This lot was located on a plateau some quarter of a mile from Salt River. There were three feeding pens in the lot, each of which was surfaced with concrete and there were ditches leading from the pens and lot which drained the urine and manure dropped by the cattle into a large basin or pond. There was a pump in this basin which ran almost continuously and pumped its contents therefrom into' eight other basins to prevent it from overflowing. These nine ponds or basins had an aggregate capacity of nineteen million gallons, while the droppings from the cattle in a period *318 of a year were estimated at from ten to twelve million gallons.

There was a little ravine or natural drain from basin No. 1 which lead 300 or 400 yards to the river. From the point it entered the river to the intake at the pumping station of the Lawrencehurg Water Plant is approximately three miles. To increase the amount of water in the river the city used three dams, one of which is located at its pumping station and the other two are between it and the drain leading into the river near the feed-lot. The first dam is eight feet high and is located about one and a half miles below the feed-lot, while the second dam is something like a mile below the first and the same distance from the third dam. These dams are of importance in this case because the water flowing over the first two will be aerated before it reaches the intake at the Water Plant.

Allen Hanks, Paul Simpson and Vernon Shelton testified they went up the river to the mouth of the drain on several different days between November 3rd and 21st, 1947, and saw a little stream of urine and manure some 18 or 20 inches wide and two inches deep running down the drain into the river. Simpson specifically stated that a basin of the Company was overflowing into the drain and running into the river. Truman Birdwhistle, Superintendent of the Lawrencehurg Water Plant, testified that on Nov. 6th he saw basin No. 1 overflowing into the ravine and running into the river. He instructed the man in charge of the pumping station to add more chlorine to the water to purify it. Ernest Snodgrass accompanied Birdwhistle to the mouth of the ravine on November 14th and saw this small stream of cattle urine and manure running into the river but he did not travel up the ravine to see from where it was coming.

Drs. S. C. Gribbs and John B. Lyen went up the river in a boat on November 21st and while they saw no stream running into the ravine, there was a bad odor in the river at the mouth of the ravine and there was a difference in the color and smell of the river water above and below the mouth of the ravine. Both doctors in answer to a hypothetical question that if a stream of manure and urine 18 inches wide and two inches deep ran from cattle pens through the ravine into the river from November 3rd to November 18th, stated it would *319 so pollute the water at the pumping station three miles down the river as to make it unfit for human consumption. There was evidence of numerous witnesses who used the city water during the interim just mentioned that the water when first drawn from the faucet was cloudy, smelled had and tasted worse. However, they admitted on cross-examination that it tasted and smelled of chlorine.

Mr. Hanks, County Sanitarian for the Health Department of Anderson County, was neither a chemist nor a bacteriologist, so on November 6, 1947, he collected three samples from the water of the river and sent them to the laboratory of the University of Kentucky for analyses. The first sample was taken 15 feet from the bank 75 feet above the mouth of the drain; the second was taken one foot from the bank of the river opposite the north of the drain; and the third was taken from.a water tap in the city of Lawrenceburg. We will not repeat the technical analyses of these three samples, but it will suffice to say the first showed no odor; the second showed “odor; faint, but not disagreeable;” the third analysis reads:

“Lab. No. 326880. Date Nov. 12, 1947. The sample of City Supply water from property of City of Lawrenceburg (11-7-47) sent, by you was received Nov. 8, 1947.
“Bacteriological examination of this sample indicates that this water supply at the time sample was taken,

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227 S.W.2d 420, 312 Ky. 315, 1950 Ky. LEXIS 646, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/g-h-cattle-co-v-commonwealth-kyctapphigh-1950.