Gay v. Taylor

19 Pa. D. & C. 31, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 233
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Chester County
DecidedSeptember 28, 1932
DocketNo. 828
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 19 Pa. D. & C. 31 (Gay v. Taylor) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Chester County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gay v. Taylor, 19 Pa. D. & C. 31, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 233 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1932).

Opinion

Windle, J.,

This is a bill in equity praying for an injunction restraining defendants from operating Sky Haven Airport, situate adjoining the country residences of three of the plaintiffs and in the vicinity of the hospital of the other plaintiff, on the ground that said operation constitutes a nuisance and also a continuing trespass. An answer and a replication were duly filed and the case was tried at the June Term, 1931. Requests for findings [32]*32of fact and briefs were presented and argument of counsel heard at the December Term, 1931, but not until February 1932 did counsel for the plaintiffs inform the court that he did not desire to file a supplemental brief as he had theretofore requested leave to do.

In addition to the plaintiffs of record as set forth in the above caption of the case, 11 persons owning land adjoining or in the vicinity of the airport certified in writing that they have read the bill of complaint and join in the prayer thereof.

Findings of fact

1. The plaintiffs James H. Gay and Bonner D. Gay, his wife, are and have been since February 21, 1929, the owners in fee simple of an estate known as “Streamline Farm” in the Township of East Goshen, County of Chester, Pa., consisting of about 10 acres of land, upon which are situated the plaintiff’s home and various outbuildings, including stables, barns, kennels, and other buildings incident to a country estate. The said property adjoins on the east the tract of land used by the defendants as an aviation field or flying field or landing field for aircraft, known as Sky Haven Airport. The house on the Gay property is about 500 feet from the five hangars and office building erected beside the landing area of the field. The dirt driveway from the West Chester-Paoli Road, a hard-surfaced road, closely parallels the Gay southern boundary line for about 300 feet, being about 400 feet south of the Gay building.

2. The plaintiff William I. Mirkil is and has been as to about 40 acres thereof since November 10,1926, and as to the balance thereof since February 21,1929, the owner in fee simple of an estate known as “Meadowlane Farm” in the said township, county and State, consisting of about 83 acres of land upon which are erected said plaintiff’s home and various outbuildings including stables, barns, tenant houses, kennels and various other buildings incident to a country estate. The said property adjoins on the east the tract of land used by the defendants as an aviation field or flying field or landing field for aircraft, known as Sky Haven Airport. The house on the Mirkil property is about 1,400 feet from the landing area of the flying field.

3. The plaintiff Rush Hospital for Consumption and Allied Diseases, a corporation of the first class under the laws of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, is the owner in fee simple of a property in said township, county and State, consisting of about 227 acres of land upon which are erected numerous buildings constituting a hospital and sanitorium for the treatment of persons afflicted with and suffering from tuberculosis and diseases of similar kind and character. The said plaintiff acquired title to part of its property, to wit, 44 acres thereof, in 1902, and acquired title to the remaining 183 acres thereof in 1926. The said property of the said plaintiff is situate within a quarter of a mile of the said tract of land used by the defendants as an aviation field, flying field, or landing field for aircraft, known as Sky Haven Airport.

4. The Defendants Samuel W. Taylor, John P. Taylor, Mary T. Kern, and Harry F. Taylor are the owners of a certain tract of land in said township, county and State, containing about 65 acres of land, adjoining the aforementioned properties of Mirkil and Gay on the south and west.

5. The section surrounding the properties above mentioned is a mixed agricultural and country residential section, enjoying the peace and quiet of such a community. There are farms given over to farming and farms that are not operated as such but on which people have simply established country residences, as have the plaintiffs Mirkil and Gay. There are no industries of any substantial nature, a blacksmith shop, gasoline filling station, road stand, and dance hall being the only business ventures in that vicinity, the nearest of [33]*33which, the filling station, road stand, and dance hall, is about one-half mile from the Mirkil and Gay properties. Until the defendants established the airport in question, plaintiffs, including the Rush Hospital, enjoyed the uninterrupted peace and quiet of their estates, subject only to the noises usually incident to country life.

6. Plaintiffs have made substantial improvements for residential and, in the case of the hospital, for curative purposes on their properties, Mirkil having built among other things an outdoor swimming pool and facilities for trap shooting. Plaintiffs Mirkil and Gay occupy their properties the year through as residences, and the Rush Hospital maintains on its premises at all times a hospital or sanitorium for the treatment of tuberculosis.

7. On or about October 1, 1929, subsequent to the acquisition of the above-mentioned properties by the plaintiffs, the defendants, Samuel W. Taylor, John P. Taylor, Mary T. Kern, and Harry F. Taylor leased to the defendant John D. Jacob the tract of land of 65 acres hereinabove referred to as being owned by them, upon which the latter subsequently established the aviation field known as Sky Haven Airport above mentioned.

8. On or about November 26,1929, the State Aeronautics Commission of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania, upon application of the defendant John D. Jacob for the rating and licensing of an airport to be known as “Sky Haven Airport”, licensed the said Sky Haven Airport for the purposes of commercial flying excepting, however, that a license for said airport for the purpose of flight instruction of student pilots was refused. On or about May 6, 1930, the said airport was licensed for all commercial purposes.

9. Thereupon the defendant John D. Jacob proceeded to use the tract of land hereinabove described for all purposes of an airport and airplane flying field. Aircraft were invited and permitted to use said field, to fly over said field, and to fly over the land, estates, and buildings belonging to the plaintiffs and others; aircraft owned and operated by the defendant John D. Jacob and other individuals and corporations were landed on and flown to and from said field and were permitted to fly to and on and fly to and from said field and over the land, estates, and buildings belonging to the plaintiffs and others; the unmuffled engines of aircraft were tuned up and run with loud and unpleasant noises; various other acts of similar nature, including “stunts” in the air, were performed, all by the defendant John D. Jacob or at his invitation or instigation or with his sanction and permission on the aforesaid property leased by him, and over the land, estates, and buildings of the plaintiffs and others. The said defendant John D. Jacob still continues to use said tract of land for the purposes hereinbefore set forth and for the following additional purposes, that is to say, for the transient and permanent storage of aircraft hangars; for maintaining an airport equipped with airplanes, operators, instructors for the use of the public; for repairing, maintaining, overhauling, tuning-up, and general supervision of the various aircraft that at any time may come to the said airport, and for the flight instruction of student pilots.

10.

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Bluebook (online)
19 Pa. D. & C. 31, 1932 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 233, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gay-v-taylor-pactcomplcheste-1932.