Higgins & Courtney v. Bloch

112 So. 739, 216 Ala. 153, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 65
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedApril 28, 1927
Docket1 Div. 413.
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 112 So. 739 (Higgins & Courtney v. Bloch) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Higgins & Courtney v. Bloch, 112 So. 739, 216 Ala. 153, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 65 (Ala. 1927).

Opinion

TPIOMAS, J.

The location of the defendants’ business is Government street, at its intersection with Scott. The references to death by appellees’ counsel may well be reproduced here. They are:

“The literature of all the ages shows that as a race we fear death, we abhor it, we shrink from it, we hide it from our sight; the heart of every normal human being knows this and need not be told it, nor testimony produced to prove it; the courts declare it to be a fact of common knowledge. Nearly 4,000 years ago Abraham, in purchasing a burying ground from the children of Heth, stated to them that he wanted it, ‘That I may bury my dead out of my sight.’ Nearly 1900 years ago the great Apostle Paul concluded his wonderful treatise on death and Christ’s ultimate victory over it, by the exclamation, ‘Oh death, where is thy sting!’ and Papini in his recent beautifully written Life of Christ says: ‘The first couple *154 had as their duty to love God and to love each other. This was the first covenant, weariness unknown, grief unknown, unknown death and its terror !’ ” >

It may be admitted, that decisions and statutes have added somewhat to the common-law definition of nuisance — the free use by the complainant of his property in its ordinary and legitimate use. Woodstock Operating C o. v. Quinn, 201 Ala. 681, 79 So. 253; East v. Saks, 214 Ala. 58, 106 So. 185. The law of nuisance has been given statement somewhat by our statutes (sections 9271, 9274, of the Code of 1923). And the general effect of damages declared in sections 9275, 9276, of the Code is thus stated:

“If, however, a public nuisance causes a special damage to an individual, in which the public do not participate, such special damage gives a right of .action. * * * A private nuisance may injure either the person or property, or both, and in either case a right of action accrues.”

See Higgins v. Bloch, 213 Ala. 209, 104 So. 429 (an undertaking establishment); Romano v. B. R. L. & P. Co., 182 Ala. 338, 62 So. 677, 46 L. R. A. (N. S.) 642, Ann. Cas. 1915D, 776 (to enjoin the maintenance of gas reservoir); Harris v. Randolph Lumber Co., 175 Ala. 148, 57 So. 453 (a planing mill in the residential district of a city); Simonetti v. Carlton, 17 Ala. App. 105, 82 So. 553; St. James’ Church v. Arrington, 36 Ala. 546, 76 Am. Dec. 332 (maintenance of stables in proximity to residences).

The decree from which the appeal is taken was that the business of an undertaker and funeral director as maintained or carried on by the respondents, at the place indicated in pleading 5, “is a nuisance in the particular locality,” and that the complainants are entitled, “by way of relief, to the abatement thereof, and to a permanent injunction against its maintenance or continuance.” The decree is duly presented for review by assignment of error and argument of coun-' sel.

The burden of-proof is upon the complainant, and allegata and probata must correspond.' Dinkins v. Latham, 202 Ala. 101 (5) 79 So. 493; In Alexander v. Taylor, 56 Ala. 60, 63, Judge Stone said:

“It is a cardinal rule of chancery law that the allegata and probata must correspond in every substantial element of complainant’s cause of action. A case for equitable relief must be shown by the bill, and substantially the same case must be shown in the proof, or in the admissions of the pleadings; and, as averments without proof, or proof without averments, will, neither of them, entitle a party to relief; so, if the bill show one cause of action, and the proof another, though each disclose a ground for equitable relief, yet, for the variance, the bill must be dismissed, unless .the variance be healed by an amendment.” Floyd v. Ritter’s Adm’r, 56 Ala. 356.

It was, in effect, stated on former appeal that the business of an undertaker is not a nuisance per se, unless made so by its location or the manner of its conduct. Higgins v. Bloch, 213 Ala. 209, 211 (4, 5), 104 So. 429. To like effect are earlier decisions of this court in Kingsbury v. Flowers, 65 Ala. 479, 39 Am. Rep. 14; Bellevue Cemetery Co. v. McEvers, 168 Ala. 542, 53 So. 272; Nevins v. McGavock, 214 Ala. 93, 106 So. 597.

It follows that in this jurisdiction equity will not restrain the conduct of business or use of property, which is not a nuisance per se, upon the mere apprehension that the same may be located and conducted or used so as to constitute a nuisance. Kingsbury v. Flowers, 65 Ala. 479, 484, 485, 39 Am. Rep. 14; St. James’ Church v. Arrington, 36 Ala. 546, 76 Am. Dec. 332. The rule for the determination employed is that facts are averred and proved to the satisfaction of the court that by reason o-f its location and future conduct of the business or use of property will “most probably result in a nuisance, from which the complainant will suffer special injury, irreparable' by the ordinary remedies at law” (Kingsbury v. Flowers, supra); that the “threatened acts of the defendant, in the exercise of his lawful dominion over his property” will result injuriously to the complainant’s paramount or superior right of the use and enjoyment of his property similarly situated in that locality (St. James’ Church v. Arrington, supra); and in determining whether a given business, plant or line of conduct is a nuisance by reason of “its location,” or place of operation or prosecution, “consideration must be given to its effect upon persons of ordinary sensibilities” similarly situated, and not by the sensibilities of persons of “very delicate and fastidious taste and sensibilities,” and must be such as to be a nuisance to persons of “average mental and physical conditions” and of “normal sensibilities and tastes similarly situated” (First Ave. Coal & Lumber Co. v. Johnson, 171 Ala. 470, 476, 477, 54 So. 598, 32 L. R. A. [N. S.] 522).

The tests employed in Deegan v. Neville, 127 Ala. 471, 29 So. 173, 85 Am. St. Rep. 137, were probably of irreparable injury and destruction, by way of repeated trespasses of the right of a due and full enjoyment of an estate and the inadequacy of legal remedies to compensate (Woodstock, etc., v. Quinn, 201 Ala. 681, 79 So. 253); that the trespass to complainant’s grounds was continuous, and for which the law furnished no adequate relief and was irreparable. In East v. Saks, 214 Ala. 58, 60, 106 So. 185, 187, it was said:

“The case of Central I. & C. Co. v. Vandenheuk, 147 Ala. 546, 41 So. 145, 6 L. R. A. (N. S.) 570, 119 Am. St. Rep. 102, 11 Ann. Cas. 346, where injunctive relief against, the blasting of fragments of rock upon the complainants’ premises was sustained, differed from *155 ■the instant case only in the circumstance that the premises upon which the rocks were thrown were occupied by the complainant and his family as a dwelling place, whereas here the premises were used only for agriculture and pasturage. But this difference, under the showings of the bill, is one of degree merely and not one of kind. If a property owner is entitled to injunctive relief against the menace of flying rocks about his home, we can see no sound reason for denying it when the menace is to the safety of those who have occasion to be upon other lands in t-he course of their •ordinary and legitimate use. * * *

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Bluebook (online)
112 So. 739, 216 Ala. 153, 1927 Ala. LEXIS 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/higgins-courtney-v-bloch-ala-1927.