Kennedy v. Frechette

123 A. 146, 45 R.I. 399, 1924 R.I. LEXIS 8
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJanuary 14, 1924
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 123 A. 146 (Kennedy v. Frechette) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennedy v. Frechette, 123 A. 146, 45 R.I. 399, 1924 R.I. LEXIS 8 (R.I. 1924).

Opinion

*400 Stearns, J.

This is a bill in equity to enjoin the respondent, from operating a factory on premises adjoining complainant’s residence.

The factory is situated on the south side of Amy street in the city of Pawtucket; it adjoins a one storey building of respondent’s situated on the corner of Amey street and Broadway, which extends to the south on Broadway approximately 100 feet, to a point within a few feet of the north line of the land of complainant. The land of the latter extends-southerly along Broadway to the corner of Appleton avenue- and thence westerly on Appleton avenue. Respondent. *401 owns the north corner lot and complainant the south corner lot of the section, thé easterly front of which is on Broadway; this street is a busy thoroughfare, 60 feet wide and on it are two street railway tracks. Complainant’s house, which faces east and fronts on Broadway, is a two tenement wooden dwelling house; in the basement floor on Broadway there is a small barber shop. Complainant lives on the first floor, and leases to a tenant the second floor. .She has owned the property since 1915. Respondent has five small shops in his building on Broadway.

Respondent built the factory in the summer of 1922, to the west of his one story building. The factory which fronts on Amey street, is a two story wooden building, unsheathed and unplastered. The south wall, which is within a few feet of the north side of complainant’s dwelling, is 23 feet high and is built of cement blocks without any opening therein. There are 27 windows on the west side of the factory and 13 windows on the second story of the east side. The east wall of the factory in the lower story is a partition wall between the factory and the stores.

The factory is used for the manufacture of tennis racquets, in which some thirteen workmen are now employed; when run to full capacity, some fifty or more will be employed. There are 24 machines which are operated by 23 electric motors. Included in this number are two circular wood saws, several wood planing machines and a blower used to carry the sawdust and waste wood to the boiler, which is used to produce heat for the factory.

The cause was heard on bill, answer and oral proof. The sole issue was whether the operation of the factory as conducted was a nuisance. After a hearing on the question of a preliminary injunction, the respondent was enjoined by a justice of the Superior Court from operating his factory as he had been doing, but was permitted to operate by the use of one planer for not more than two hours a day, a surface saw for not more than one hour a day and a circular saw for not more than three-quarters of a day. Thereafter the *402 cause was heard by another justice, on the application for a permanent injunction. By this justice, respondent was permanently enjoined from operating his two circular saws for more than two hours in any one day, from sawing and planing any stock in excess of 2 inches in thickness, and from operating his saws and planers after 5 o’clock in the afternoon and on Sundays. In the decree it was further ordered that during the operation of the saws and planers the windows on the west side of the lower floor of the factory should be kept closed, and that the two windows on the ground floor of the factory on the west side nearest complainant’s house should be permanently closed.

The cause is here on the appeal of complainant from this final decree; the reasons of appeal are that the trial court erred in its finding of fact, and that the decree is against the law and the weight of the evidence.

The question is, does the operation of the factory as thus limited and restricted, now create a nuisance. The most substantial objection is to the noise. Although complaint is made of smoke from the factory chimney and of the . vibration caused by the operation of the electric motors, the evidence is sufficient to sustain the finding of the Superior Court that the disturbance caused thereby is hot so serious as to constitute a nuisance.

In Blomen v. Barstow, 35 R. I. 198 (1913) it was held to be an established rule of law, that every person is bound to use his property so as not to injure that of another, or to interfere with the reasonable and proper enjoyment thereof, and that the carrying on of any business which creates objectionable smells or causes great and disturbing noises or vibrations which affect injuriously neighboring property or render the occupation thereof uncomfortable, is a nuisance for which a person whose property is damaged or whose health is injured or whose reasonable enjoyment of his residence is impaired or destroyed thereby, is entitled to relief in equity by injunction.

*403 The authority of the Blomen case and the correctness of the rule of law as thus stated is not questioned. The questions of the amount, intensity and duration of the noise and the effect thereof on the valúe of complainant’s property and the impairment of the reasonable enjoyment of her residence are questions of fact.

The testimony is somewhat conflicting and from the rescripts of the two justices it appears that there is some-difference of opinion in regard to certain facts between the justices who heard the cause at different times. Each justice took a view of the premises, made observations of the effect of the operation of the factory, and the decision of each justice was influenced to a considerable extent by the result of his observations. At the first view, on the motion for a preliminary injunction, the justice arranged for the operation of one saw and a planer with the accompanying motors. From the interior of the Kennedy house when the windows therein were closed, the noise of the motors was heard but was not offensive. Upon opening the windows the noise of the motors was louder, the noise from the one saw and planer was slight. At this time the windows in the factory were closed, the wind was blowing away from the Kennedy house, but two of the machines in the factory were in operation and only small pieces of wood were being put through the saw and the planer. The court was of the opinion that, with the advent of warmer weather and the opening of windows in the house and factory, the noise from the saws and planers would be unendurable. A restricted operation was permitted until hearing on the final decree. At this latter hearing the justice who presided, in his rescript states that although in accord generally with the findings of fact previously made, he differed therefrom in this respect that he did not consider complainant’s residence was located in a residential district; that to the west of complainant’s house the neighborhood was unquestionably residential but that along Broadway, on which complainant’s house fronts, he would call the region a *404 commercial one. The justice took a view in March and at that time the entire plant was started in operation. No marked vibration was felt in complainant’s house. Complainant claims that at this view the plant was purposely run by respondent in a manner to make very little noise. The court while absent from the factory left a sheriff therein, to see that no change was made in the operations, and so far as was possible, to ensure a fair test of the effect of the operations.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
123 A. 146, 45 R.I. 399, 1924 R.I. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennedy-v-frechette-ri-1924.