Hughes v. City of Auburn

21 A.D. 311, 47 N.Y.S. 235
CourtAppellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York
DecidedOctober 15, 1897
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 21 A.D. 311 (Hughes v. City of Auburn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of the State of New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hughes v. City of Auburn, 21 A.D. 311, 47 N.Y.S. 235 (N.Y. Ct. App. 1897).

Opinions

Adams, J.:

This action was brought under section 1.902 of the Code of Civil Procedure to recover damages for a wrongful act committed by the defendant which, as it is alleged, caused the death of the plaintiff’s daughter, Ellen Hughes.

The gravamen of the complaint is apparently negligence, although its allegations, are doubtless sufficient to sustain an action based upon the existence of a nuisance. But be .this as it may, the act complained of was certainly wrongful,-and, therefore, its further classification is perhaps of minor consequence, the serious question to be considered being whether its commission furnishes a cause of action in favor of the plaintiff.

In characterizing this act as wrongful,” it certainly cannot be charged that a stronger term has been employed than the facts will justify. For it is virtually conceded that the defendant caused a considerable portion of the sewage of the city to be conducted into a sewer which was not designed, and confessedly was inadequate, for that purpose.

That this sewer passed through the .premises of the plaintiff, with whom the decedent resided, and that more or less of its contents found their way into the cellar of her house, is not disputed. And so apparent was it that this condition of affairs was detrimental 'to the health and comfort, of the .community that the defendant’s board of health denounced it as a nuisance and called upon the common council of the city to abate, the same, but this latter body, while recognizing the fact, that a nuisance existed, made little or no effort to remedy the evil complained of. In the meantime the decedent fell sick and died, and the evidence tended to establish the fact that her death was directly attributable to the unsanitary condition of the dwelling wherein she resided, which was doubtless caused by the noisome stench and effluvium arising from the sewage which had been almost constantly deposited in the cellar.

Thus it will be seen that the defendant, through the officials charged with the administration of its municipal affairs, was not only guilty of the most flagrant omission of a duty which it owed to the decedent in common with other residents of the city, but that it likewise committed an act which was positively and affirmatively “ wrongful ” in its nature ; and, consequently, if, as for the purposes [315]*315of this review we must assume is the case, the decedent’s death maybe chargeable to that wrong, we do not see why the plaintiff has not brought herself within the strict letter of the statute, which provides that: “ The executor or administrator of a decedent, who has left him or her surviving a husband, wife or next of kin, may maintain an action to recover damages for a wrongful act, neglect or default, by which the decedent’s death was caused, against a natural person, who, or a corporation which, would have been liable to an action in favor of the decedent, by reason thereof, if death had not ensued. * ■' * * ” (Code Civ. Proc. § 1902.)

The language of this section is broad and comprehensive, and it would seem to provide a remedy in any and every case where the death of one person is attributable to the wrongful act of another, provided the wrongdoer would have been liable for the same act if the death of the injured party had not ensued. In order, therefore, to test the plaintiff’s right to maintain this action, it is only necessary to determine whether the defendant would have been liable in an action brought by the decedent if she had not died, but had only been injured in her health.

If the defendant had wrongfully permitted an obstruction, to exist in one of its public streets, in-’Consequence of which the decedent had received a personal injury, without fault on her' part, no one would question its liability for the wrongful act which caused such injury. (Clifford v. Dam, 81 N. Y. 52.)

Again, if the decedent had been made sick by reason of unwholesome food which had been knowingly furnished her by- a dealer ; or if she had contracted some loathsome disease in consequence of her coming into contact with infected clothing which had been willfully or negligently placed in her mother’s house, will it be. contended that she might not, independent of any statute upon the subject, have maintained an action therefor against the guilty party ?

The facts of this case are somewhat exceptional in their character, and, so far as we have been able to discover, there is no reported case which is in all respects analogous to it; but there are many which, it seems to us, are quite similar in principle, and it will possibly aid us in arriving at a correct solution of this most interesting question to advert to a few of them.

In the case of The King v. Dewsnap (16 East, 196), which was [316]*316an indictment for maintaining a steam engine, with a furnace for burning coal, whereby the air was charged, with smoke and noxious smells to the serious annoyance of the inhabitants, the question arose upon a motion to set aside a rule for a taxation of costs in • favor of the parties aggrieved, as to whether the nuisance complained of, being public in its nature, any one individual could be said to be specially aggrieved thereby; and in disposing of the same Lord Ellenborough makes use of this most forcible language: “ I did not expect that it would have been disputed at this day, that though a nuisance may be public, yet that there may be a special grievance arising out of the common cause of in jury, which presses more upon particular individuals than upon others not immediately within the influence of it. In the case of stopping a coininon highway, which may affect all the subjects, yet, if a particular person sustains a special injury from it, he has an action. This must necessarily be a special grievance to those who live within the direct influence of the nuisance, and are, therefore, parties grieved within the. statute.”

In another early English case (Soltau v. De Held, 9 Eng. L. & Eq. 104) the right of an individual to maintain an action for private damages resulting from a nuisance which might be regarded as public in its nature, was fully considered, and, in reviewing the authorities upon-the subject, it was held by Kindersley, V. C., that where one suffers special or personal damage from a public nuisance, whether by noise or smoke, noxious vapors or noisome smells, or from-any other cause, he may maintain an action therefor, even if many others have sustained a similar injury.

In Lansing v. Smith (4 Wend. 9) Chancellor Walworth stated' the rule to be that every individual who suffers actual damage, whether direct or consequential, from a common nuisance, may maintain an action for his own particular injury, although there may be ' ■many others equally damnified.

In a more recent case, which was decided by the Court of Appeals of this State,, and which was an action for damages occasioned to the plaintiff by reason of the noxious smells emitted from the defendant’s tannery, the rule applicable to cases of this character was stated to be that one who erects and maintains a nuisance which is common to the entire community is, nevertheless, liable to one who has sustained damages peculiar to himself.. And it was added: “No mat[317]*317ter how numerous the persons may be who have sustained this peculiar damage, each is entitled to compensation for his injury.” (Francis v. Schoellkopf, 53 N. Y.

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Bluebook (online)
21 A.D. 311, 47 N.Y.S. 235, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hughes-v-city-of-auburn-nyappdiv-1897.