Grubbs v. Wooten

5 S.E.2d 874, 189 Ga. 390, 1939 Ga. LEXIS 701
CourtSupreme Court of Georgia
DecidedNovember 14, 1939
Docket12880.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 5 S.E.2d 874 (Grubbs v. Wooten) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Grubbs v. Wooten, 5 S.E.2d 874, 189 Ga. 390, 1939 Ga. LEXIS 701 (Ga. 1939).

Opinions

Atkinson, Presiding Justice.

3. By the allegations of the petition that was dismissed on general demurrer, the business involved in this case is that of display and) sale of tombstones and monuments designed and intended to be placed over the graves or bodies of deceased persons, such business having recently been commenced and still conducted in an exclusively residential section of the City of Atlanta. The ground of complaint is that operation of the business at that place is harmful to the petitioners and others in the vicinity, affecting their health and property and causing irreparable damage that should be enjoined. In the brief of the attorney for the plaintiffs it is stated: “We do not claim that the cemetery-like display is necessarily a nuisance per se, but we do claim that it can be a nuisance per accidens, and that the case should have been retained rather than dismissed on demurrer.” Thus the controlling question as raised by the special assignments of error, as shown in the statement of facts and insisted on in the brief is reduced to that of enjoining a nuisance. It is declared in this State: “A nuisance is anything that works hurt, inconvenience, or damage to another; and the fact that the act done may otherwise be lawful shall not keep it from being a nuisance. The inconvenience complained of shall not be fanciful, or such as would affect only one of fastidious tastes, but it shall be such as would affect an ordinary reasonable man.” Code, § 72-301. Citing and applying this law, it was held in Thrasher v. Atlanta, 178 Ga. 514 (173 S. E. 817, 99 A. L. R. 158), that an airport is not a nuisance per se, although it might become a nuisance from the manner of its construction or operation; and further that “Mere apprehension of injury from the falling of planes is not sufficient to authorize an injunction against aerial navigation over the property of the complainant.” In Holman v. Alliens Empire Laundry Co., 149 Ga. 345, 350 (100 S. E. 207, 210, 6 A. L. R. 1564), it was said: “Every *393 one lias the right to use his property as he sees fit, provided that in so doing he does not invade the rights of others unreasonably, judged by the ordinary standards of life and according to the notions of reasonable men. The right to use one's property as he pleases implies a like right in every other person; and is qualified by the doctrine that the use in the first instance must be a reasonable one. . . That the business itself is offensive to others, or that property in the neighborhood of such business is necessarily adversely affected thereby, or that persons of fastidious taste would prefer its removal, is not sufficient. Applying the foregoing principles to the case in hand, the defendant may make use of its property, and carry on any business not per se a nuisance, that produces no unnecessary, unreasonable, unusual, or extraordinary impregnation of the air with smoke or soot, to the sensible inconvenience and discomfort of plaintiff's tenants, or to the actual, tangible, and substantial injury of plaintiff’s realty.”

In Austin v. Augusta Terminal Co., 108 Ca. 671, 677 (34 S. E. 852, 854, 47 L. R. A. 755), may be found this statement: “If a great manufacturing plant had been erected on the adjoining lot, the market value of plaintiff's house might have been greatly injured, no matter how silent the operations of the mill. Properly conducted, decently appointed, and orderly-managed stores, shops, factories, and business houses, erected in close proximity to residential quarters, frequently cause great depreciation in values; in the popular sense, they cause damage, but in such cases the annoyances, the inconveniences occasioning the loss in value, are not actionable, because they arise from lawful uses. The owners of these establishments are as much entitled to the use and enjoyment of their property as is the owner of the residence property reduced in value by their presence.” In Standard Oil Co. v. Hahn, 165 Ga. 575, 580 (141 S. E. 643), it was said: “In determining this feature of the case [noises at filling stations] we must apply common sense and common experience. None of these noises'are alleged to be unnecessary and! unreasonable! They are the ordinary noises incident to the operation of filling-stations. Those arising from the back-fire of engines are not due to the operation of the filling-station but to the operation of automobiles and trucks. It is true that some noises may be created by taking off and putting on tires; but, as we have seen, these noises are necessary incidents of this *394 work. Petitioner describes both classes of these noises as loud, roaring noises.5 But wa can not hold that this designation is apt and correct. Some noise will attend the taking off and putting on of tires at this station; but they are not necessarily so loud and so roaring as to disturb the sleep of petitioner and his family in his residence. It involves some stretch of the imagination and undue apprehension to hold that these noises will so disturb the sleep of petitioner and his family as to impair their health. We do not think that the ordinary use of a filling-station is so serious a matter as to disturb the sleep of nearby residents, and impair their health. The usual noises incident to its operation do not have such direful results.55 All of the foregoing with other cases of similar import are cited and applied in the recent case of Wilson v. Evans Hotel Co., 188 Ga. 498 (4 S. E. 2d, 155), where, among other things, it was said that “erection and operation of gasoline filling-stations are not nuisances because they are- erected in residential sections and in close proximity to residences.55

In Harper v. Nashville, 136 Ga. 141 (70 S. E. 1102), involving-nuisances created by location of cemeteries, it was said: “Cemeteries are a necessity. A place where the dead may be given decent Christian burial must be established, and the location of such must necessarily be upon some tract of land more or less suitable and commodious; and it is impossible to find a tract of land that is not contiguous to the lands of some one else. And inasmuch as cemeteries must be established and should be located where they are reasonably accessible, it is rarely possible to so fix their location, when they are designed for the use of a populous town or city, where they will not be in more or less close proximity to some residence; and unless the soil of the land used as a cemetery and that of the contiguous owners is such as to cause a drainage which will produce a contamination of the waters, thereby putting in jeopardy the health or lives of the owners of the contiguous lands and the health of their families, or unless the air would be contaminated, courts o£ equity will not interfere by the grant of injunctive- relief to prevent the establishment and location of the cemetery. Cemeteries are not per se nuisances, and it is only in exceptional cases that their establishment and location would be enjoined by a court of equity. Where it is shown that the location of a cemetery in some place would contaminate the water used for drinking pur *395

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Bluebook (online)
5 S.E.2d 874, 189 Ga. 390, 1939 Ga. LEXIS 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grubbs-v-wooten-ga-1939.