Jones v. Royster Guano Co.

65 S.E. 361, 6 Ga. App. 506, 1909 Ga. App. LEXIS 357
CourtCourt of Appeals of Georgia
DecidedJuly 31, 1909
Docket1620
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 65 S.E. 361 (Jones v. Royster Guano Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jones v. Royster Guano Co., 65 S.E. 361, 6 Ga. App. 506, 1909 Ga. App. LEXIS 357 (Ga. Ct. App. 1909).

Opinion

Bussell, J.

(After stating the foregoing facts.)

1. It is insisted by the defendant that the plaintiff’s petition should be construed as a suit to recover only permanent damages to the freehold, and that depreciation in market value is the only proper item of damages in such a suit. We think, however, that it sufficiently appears, from the allegations of the petition, that the plaintiff was suing for permanent damages to the freehold, and also for damages to the value of the use of the property during the period covered by the maintenance of the alleged nuisance. This is made particularly plain by the amendments offered, because he therein expressly disclaimed that he was suing for depreciation in the market value of the freehold. The premises were used by him for a home, and their use for that purpose had been practically destroyed by the alleged nuisance. In view of the purpose for which he. used the premises, the value of the use could be measured by the results obtained from cultivation of the soil, and if, as he alleged, and as his proof showed, he was using the premises for the purpose of a home and also for growing vegetables and crops for his own sustenance and livelihood, and if the building of the factory and the maintenance of it so as to create a continuous nuisance had rendered his home uninhabitable, and made it impossible for him to grow crops of any kind on his land, lie was being deprived of the use of his property; and he was seeking to make the defendant compensate him for the value of that use. The method by which the value of the use of the [511]*511property is measured in this instance is to show that if the piamtiff could use the property as he had been using it prior to the erection of the nuisance, he could grow crops and live in his home in some degree of comfort, but that the maintenance of the nuisance has destroyed the possibility of devoting the property to that use. The mere fact that he was willing to remain in the house, notwithstanding the great discomfort and annoyance caused by the nuisance, ought not to preclude him from recovering for damage inflicted by the wrongful act of the defendant. Nor is it a sufficient answer to this to say that the jury would not have any certain measure by which the damages could be found. As was said by the Supreme Court of the United States, “as with a blow on the face, there may be no arithmetical rule for the estimate of the damages. There is, however, an injury, the extent of which the jury may measure.” Baltimore & Potomac Railroad Co. v. Fifth Baptist Church, 108 U. S. 335 (2 Sup. Ct. 719, 27 L. ed. 746). In that case the plaintiff sued the defendant for maintaining an engine-house and machine-shop on a parcel of land adjoining its church edifice, and so using them on Sundays and ■other days as to disturb the congregation assembled in the church, to interfere with religious exercises, break up its Sunday school, .and destroy the value of the building as a place of worship. The following instruction was approved by the Supreme Court as being a correct statement of the measure of damages: “The actual amount of pecuniary loss to the plaintiff is not necessarily the rule of damages in actions like the present. In estimating the amount of compensation to the plaintiff for the injury, if any, found to have been sustained by it, the jury may determine the •extent of the injury and the equivalent damages, in view of all the ■circumstances of said injury to said plaintiff, of depreciation in the value of its property during the period embraced in this suit, ■and of interferences with the uses to which said property was devoted by said plaintiff during said period, and of all other particulars, if any, wherein the plaintiff is shown to have been injured ■during said period. . . The suit is brought by a congregation duly incorporated, and they have brought an action to recover •damages for their inconvenience and discomfort in consequence of the acts of the defendant. It is the personal discomfort more than anything else which is to be considered in regard to the assessment [512]*512of damages. Now, I can very easily imagine, and it may often happen, that the construction of an improvement such as this might increase the value of the property in the vicinity, and I am not sure at all that the erection of this workshop in that neighborhood may not really have increased the intrinsic value of the property belonging to the congregation. The evidence does not, as it seems to me, show that this property has been depreciated by the construction of that workshop. We can imagine, and it is not a far-fetched imagination either, that the effect of such a workshop in that neighborhood might be to collect a population around it, and thus increase the population in that neighborhood, and really enhance the value of the property; and yet the congregation would be entitled to recover damages (although their property might have increased in value) because of the inconvenience and discomfort they have suffered from the use of the shop. The congregation has the same right to the comfortable enjoyment of its house for church purposes that a private gentleman has to the comfortable enjoyment of his own house, and it is the discomfort which is the primary consideration in allowing damages.” We do not mean to say that all of the items of damage mentioned in the foregoing instruction are recoverable under the law of this State, but certainly where the effect of the nuisance is to destroy the use to which the owner is devoting his property, he should be allowed to recover in damages the value of the use during the period of its destruction. In some cases the value of the use of the property is measured by its rental value; but where the owner himself lives in the house and cultivates the garden and the fields, and a nuisance is maintained at his very door, making his home uninhabitable and his fields unproductive, he should be allowed to recover the reasonable value of the use of the property for the purposes to which it is devoted. In the case of Swift v. Broyles, 115 Ga. 885 (42 S. E. 277, 58 L. R. A. 390) — a case by the way very similar in its facts to the case at bar, the Supreme Court said: “Undoubtedly, it was his [the plaintiff’s] right to receive additional compensation for any annoyance or discomfort occasioned by the air in and about his dwelling-house being permeated with noisome gases and offensive odors discharged from the defendant’s fertilizer plant. . . Where there is such a wrongful interference with ‘the comfortable enjoyment of property by a [513]*513person in possession, no precise rule for ascertaining the damage can be given, as, in the nature of things, the subject-matter affected is not susceptible of exact measurement; therefore the jury are left to say what, in their judgment, the plaintiff ought to have in money, and what the defendant ought to pay, in view of the discomfort or annoyance to which the plaintiff and his family have been subjected by the nuisance.’" See also 29 Cyc. 1271; Bohan v. Port Jervis Gaslight Co., 122 N. Y. 18 (25 N. E. 246, 9 L. R. A. 711); Danielly v. Cheeves, 94 Ga. 263 (21 S. E. 524); Farley v. Gate City Gas Light Co., 105 Ga. 323 (31 S. E. 193).

2. Exception is taken by the plaintiff to the following instructions to the jury: “1

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Bluebook (online)
65 S.E. 361, 6 Ga. App. 506, 1909 Ga. App. LEXIS 357, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jones-v-royster-guano-co-gactapp-1909.