Irby v. Panama Ice Co.

168 So. 306, 184 La. 1082, 1936 La. LEXIS 1149
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedMarch 30, 1936
DocketNo. 33763.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 168 So. 306 (Irby v. Panama Ice Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Irby v. Panama Ice Co., 168 So. 306, 184 La. 1082, 1936 La. LEXIS 1149 (La. 1936).

Opinion

ROGERS, Justice.

This is an appeal from the refusal of the trial judge to grant a preliminary injunction to abate an alleged nuisance.

The defendant company is the owner and operator of an ice manufacturing plant situated at the corner of Chartres and Toulouse streets, in the square bounded by Royal and St. Louis streets, in the city of New Orleans. The ■ plaintiffs, thirteen in number, reside on Royal street, in the vicinity of defendant’s plant.

Plaintiffs allege, in substance, that during the month of June, 1935, the defendant changed its power plant from steam, generated quietly in a brick building fronting Toulouse street, to high-speed internal combustion gas engines set up in a shed in the rear portion of its property, and installed other and larger noisy equipment, and permitted ammonia and gas fumes to escape' into plaintiffs’ premises. That the noises and vibrations “are unusual, excessive, disturbing and burdensome to such an .extent as to interfere with and substantially prevent the rest and sleep of each and- all of your petitioners, the said noise and vibrations being particularly disturbing and offensive during the hours of the night; that the aforesaid noises and vibrations interfere-with and prevent the rest and sleep o.f each and all of your petitioners to such an extent as to threaten the impairment of their health, unless the same be abated.” The petition charges that the enlargement and expansion of defendant’s plant was violative of the municipality’s Comprehensive Zoning Ordinance, which was made a part of the petition. Miss Irby further complained that the alleged nuisance impaired the value of her property in excess of $5,-' 000.

The defendant company, after its exception of no cause of action was overruled, answered the petition, denying all the allegations, except as specially admitted. Defendant averred that the ice plant had been established at its present location since the year 1907. That the capacity of its plant when first installed and at the time of the passage of the zoning ordinance was 100 tons per day, and that since the installation of the new machinery referred to in the petition the capacity of the plant has- been reduced to 50 tons per day. Defendant specially denied that the internal combustion gas engines were set up in a rear she.d and averred that they were set up in the main building of its plant. ■ ■

*1085 The issues involve only questions of fact,, which the trial judge, after hearing a number of witnesses produced by the -parties,, resolved in favor of the defendant. After a close reading of the testimony, we are not prepared to hold that the trial judge erred in his findings.

This appeal is by twelve of the thirteen original plaintiffs. Among the appellants are five married couples, the other appellants being Miss Irby and Mrs. L. W. Hutchinson, one of her tenants. Three of the married couples — Mr. and Mrs. Allen, Mr. and Mrs. Hutchinson, and Mr. and Mrs. Sherry — live on the lake side of Royal street, facing in the direction of defendant’s factory. The Allens and the Hutchinsons live in the block opposite the block in which the factory is situated, and the Sherrys live in the adjoining block towards Canal street. Mr. and Mrs. R. I. McClure, Miss Irby, her mother, Mrs. George D. Lilly, her stepfather, Dr. George D. Lilly, and her tenant, Mrs. L. W. Hutchinson, live in the same block with the factory, so that the rears of the McClure property and the Ir-by property are in close proximity to it. The record indicates that the Lillys and Miss Irby are the principal complainants against defendant’s plant, and that they are the real prosecutors of this suit.

The evidence shows that the defendant purchased the ice plant in 1912 and has continuously operated it since July 15, 1913. From time to time, defendant has made needed changes in the machinery and equipment. For the purpose of more economical operation to meet sharp competition of its business rivals, defendant found it necessary to install two internal combustion engines in its plant. The engines which are of a semi-Deisel type, were placed in position in the early summer of 1933. They are mounted on large concrete foundations which, in turn, rest on a concrete slab three feet thick. When installed, the engines were equipped with standard size Maxim silencers. Shortly after their installation, Dr. Lilly complained about the noise, and the officers of the defendant company, not, as they contend, because their plant was making more noise than any other ice factory, but in an earnest endeavor to please the adjacent residents, equipped the engines with specially constructed Maxim silencers, two sizes larger than the standard size. At the same time there was erected on the side of the building where the engines are located a wall of double thickness with a five-inch dead air space in between composed of special sound absorption material.

Miss Jane Irby, an emancipated minor, acquired her property by inheritance from her grandfather, William R. Irby, in 1933. The property is designated by the Nos. 516-524 Royal street and is situated in the Vieux Carre, or original French quarter of the city of New Orleans. Mr. Irby was patriotically interested in preserving that section of the city for its historical associations and as an attraction for tourists. He selected this property, known as the “old Soniat” or “Brulatour” property, among others, for rehabilitating and preserving. He purchased the property for $10,000, and spent between $60,000 and $70,000 in remodeling and renovating it for commercial establishments on the lower *1087 floor and apartments on the upper floors. This was long after decendant’s plant was established and in operation. At the time the property was purchased it was being run as a cheap boarding house, and the rear portion, now occupied by Dr. and Mrs. Lilly, as an apartment, was used as a warehouse. In addition to containing shops fronting on Royal street, the lower portion of the property, in accordance with the request of Mr. Irby, is permitted to remain open daily for public inspection, several hundred persons a day inspecting the patio and visiting the art gallery, which is maintained in the rear. At Mardi Gras and on special occasions the number of daily visitors is considerably larger.

The neighborhood is almost exclusively commercial in character. In fact, with certain specific exceptions, it is so described in the zoning ordinance. The buildings, generally, are old and dilapidated. The lower floors are occupied by numerous and varied commercial businesses. The upper floors are used for residential purposes. Also as “studios” for entertainment purposes by persons who reside elsewhere. In the immediate neighborhood of .the Irby and McClure homes and the defendant’s ice plant, is the large lumber yard of the Kross Lumber Company, which separates the rears of the Irby and McClure properties from the ice plant. This lumber yard, which opens on Toulouse street, also adjoins the Irby property on the side towards St. Louis street. Adjoining that is an automobile parking ground and gasoline station. Royal street, on which the Irby and McClure properties face, is a narrow street, with a car line in the center. Chartres street, which parallels the rears of the properties, is also a narrow street on which a bus line operates. Both streets, which are one-way thoroughfares, are subject to heavy traffic.

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Bluebook (online)
168 So. 306, 184 La. 1082, 1936 La. LEXIS 1149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/irby-v-panama-ice-co-la-1936.