Gray v. City of High Point

166 S.E. 911, 203 N.C. 756, 1932 N.C. LEXIS 93
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedDecember 21, 1932
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 166 S.E. 911 (Gray v. City of High Point) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gray v. City of High Point, 166 S.E. 911, 203 N.C. 756, 1932 N.C. LEXIS 93 (N.C. 1932).

Opinion

Clarkson, J.

At the close of plaintiffs’ evidence and at the close of all the evidence the defendant made motions for judgment as in case of nonsuit, C. S., 567. The court below overruled the motions and in this we can see no error. We think the evidence, taken in the light most *760 favorable to plaintiffs, sufficient to be submitted to a jury on “taking or appropriation.”

The plaintiffs owned about 200 acres of land, about 6 miles from the defendant city of High Point. The defendant, within about 10 to 15 feet of plaintiffs’ land, on the east side of the farm, erected a sewage disposal plant. The city of High Point has a population, according to the last census (1930) of 36,745 inhabitants. The sewage disposal plant cost $460,000. The plans and the plant as constructed were approved by the State Board of Health. The capacity of the plant was designed for a little less than five million gallons of sewage per 24 hours. The amount of sewage that has been going into it for the 24 hours is on an average of less than half of that. The capacity of the plant is double the amount of sewage it is now receiving. The plant was completed and put into operation about 1 June, 1929. On plaintiffs’ farm were good buildings, good home, two-story house, chimney at each end, good well of water, good barn and double crib.

The principle has been long settled in this jurisdiction and so clearly stated in Donnell v. Greensboro, 164 N. C., at p. 334, that we again repeat it: “The decisions of this State are in approval of the principle that the owner can recover such damage for a wrong of this character, and that the right is not affected by the fact that the acts complained of were done in the exercise of governmental functions or by express municipal or legislative authority, the position being that the damage arising from the impaired value of the property is to be considered and dealt with to that extent as a ‘taking or appropriation,’ and brings the claim within the constitutional principle that a man’s property may not be taken from him even for the public benefit except upon compensation duly made,” citing many authorities. Cook v. Mebane, 191 N. C., 1.

In fact, in Jones v. High Point, 202 N. C., 722, the defendant in this action, the principle is tersely stated: “The gravamen of the complaint is the partial taking of the plaintiffs’ property by the creation of a nuisance, and the jury was specially instructed that the defendant had the right to erect the plant and install the machinery. Dayton v. Asheville, 185 N. C., 12; Sandlin v. Wilmington, 185 N. C., 257. . . . (p. 723.) The judge told the jury in words that could not have been misunderstood that the defendant had the right to operate the plant as a governmental function and more than once directed attention to the immediate question whether odors emanating from the plant substantially decreased the market value of the land.” The plaintiff introduced the following witnesses:

C. L. Gray testified, in part: That the land had been in the family nearly 100 years, since 1836, and quite a portion subject to cultivation *761 and free from liens. “Certain refuse from the city goes through the sewer pipes into these receptacles, from the toilets in the city. . . . I hare been on that farm during the last three years. I drop there some three or four times a year. I live in High Point. . . . There are 5 manholes in this 3300-foot line. I have been to this city sewage disposal plant and around it. Well, it is a pretty severe odor of human excrement. . . . The sewage plant is on the east side of our farm, and when the wind is from the east you can smell it then, of course. . . . "When I smell that odor, I would be on the north side of the place about half way, from the middle of it I could smell it. . . . It is very nauseating. It turns your stomach if you don’t move about and get some good fresh air mighty quick.”

Mayfield Hoover: “I live from the Gray place about half a mile, I suppose. I have been at the city disposal plant a time or two, two or three times, I suppose, since it was built. I know about where Mr. Gray’s line is. It is right at 10 or 15 feet from the sewage disposal plant, runs right up to it. There is an odor that arises from this sewage plant that you can smell on this property that is in controversy. This odor is a hard odor to describe. It has a gas and dye odor connected with it and all, an odor that arises, and the weather conditions has a good deal to do with when you smell it, and ivhere you are at in regard to the wind. It is a very obnoxious odor, awful tael odor at times. . . . I have been around the Gray place, the Gray home, since the installation of this sewage disposal plant. You can smell this odor that smells the same as at the plant on the farm there, on the Gray farm, and also on my farm, as far as that is concerned. ... I smelled it five or ten minutes at a time, when there was a breeze blowing in your path, you smelled it. I smelled it practically every two• or three hours in the day. In freezing weather we don’t smell it. The point is, in sultry weather is our trouble with those odors. That starts in the spring of the year, of course. ... I have lived where I am now all my life. ... I haven’t objection to the location where the plant is, if they will eliminate the odor. . . . Seems to me we have been smelling this practically ever since the plant was erected there.”

Will Leonard: “Have been on the Gray farm about once every week for six years. I farm. I know where this High Point sewage disposal plant is. ... I smell it when I am at home. I live about 200 feet from Mr. Gray’s place. I have smelled it on the Gray place. Down there around his feed barn, down on the creelc. I couldn’t say anything else I didn’t like to smell it. It smelled bad. . . . The odor teas detected after the plant was built. I didn’t smell it before. That odor was not there as I know of before. I was there on that place before *762 the time it was built time and time again, and didn’t smell any odor. . . . The place I cultivate is about three-quarters of a mile from this sewage disposal plant. A little further than the Gray farm is, I have been tending that piece of property I am on now for two years. . . . I live about three-quarters of a mile from the disposal plant. I know about when that odor is going to come. I close, my windows.”

M. A. Mitchell: “I have smelled the odor. I was sitting on my front porch, two and a half miles from the plant. "Well, if it is a warm sultry time and the breeze is coming from the south you can smell it.”

H. S. Jones: “I know where the High Point city sewage disposal plant is. I have been there. My land is located about half a mile west of the plant. I have been living there 32 years. That Gray land is the adjoining farm to my home. . . . Q. Where have you been when you smelled those odors? Answer: Well, I have been at my own home and on the Gray farm both, at both places. . . . It is a- very bad odor.

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Bluebook (online)
166 S.E. 911, 203 N.C. 756, 1932 N.C. LEXIS 93, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gray-v-city-of-high-point-nc-1932.