Kennerty v. Etiwan Phosphate Co.

17 S.C. 411, 1882 S.C. LEXIS 75
CourtSupreme Court of South Carolina
DecidedAugust 8, 1882
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 17 S.C. 411 (Kennerty v. Etiwan Phosphate Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kennerty v. Etiwan Phosphate Co., 17 S.C. 411, 1882 S.C. LEXIS 75 (S.C. 1882).

Opinion

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Mr. Justice McGowan.

The plaintiff owns a farm near the works of the Etiwan Phosphate Company, which was incorporated for the purpose of carrying on the business of manufacturing commercial fertilizers. He alleges that in their business the defendants manufacture large quantities of sulphuric acid, which is one of the most pernicious gases in its effects upon vegetable and animal life ; that the works are so constructed that sulphuric acid gas and other pernicious gases and noisome smells escape in the atmosphere and come ov.er and on his' farm and dwelling-house, to the injury of the crops and trees so as unpleasantly to affect him in his own person, both in his fields and home, and by so doing the plaintiff is irreparably damaged by the defendant corporation.

[413]*413The complaint further exhibits an agreement and covenant which on or about June 10th, 1876, the plaintiff entered into with the defendant corporation to settle a case then pending at law between the same parties for damages from the same cause, which, after requiring that the defendant company should pay $2250.00 and the costs of that action, $179.00, provided as follows: “And further, upon the said company raising the duct or escape pipes to their trunk, through which the fumes and gases from the manufactory are let off into the air to an elevation of tnaenty-fi/oefeet higher than their present elevation, being fifty-six feet high; and further, upon said company undertaking to keep, and actually keeping at all times their escape-pipes through which their fumes are let off at the said measured elevation and at the same distance from the land of the said John Kennerty as they now are, and their said pipes to be always of such a diameter that no greater volume of fumes can be precipitated through the top of the pipes than at present into the air. Thereupon the aforesaid terms and conditions being complied with by the company, and continued to be performed on their part, I, John Kennerty, do agree not to oppose opening of the verdict given in this case on the day of April, 1876 ; and at the option of the said company defendant will discpntinue my present action against them, and release all claim of right of ¡action for damages, past or future, against the said company, that may accrue to the crops of the adjacent lands of plaintiff, Kennerty, and arising from the fumes or gases that may escape from the company’s works into the air, but for future damages resulting from this cause alone, and no other, do I release, and I consent not to sue the said company for damages arising from this cause, and from this alone, so long as the conditions herein stipulated to be Icept by them are observed,” etc. Appended to the contract was a receipt for the money agreed to be paid.

The plaintiff does not allege that the defendants have failed to perform any of the covenants to be by them performed. He does, however, allege that the danger of the injury above stated recurs with every season, and that he has no adequate [414]*414remedy at law, and prays an injunction against the defendant. An order was granted temporarily restraining the defendant from so using its works as to injure the plaintiff. It seems that an answer and a reply were filed, but without taking evidence, upon motion after notice, Judge Kershaw granted an order to dismiss the complaint upon the ground that “ it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.” The parties disagreeing about the “Case” for the Supreme Court, the judge settled it by directing the answer and reply to be stricken out and only the complaint included. From this order the plaintiff appealed, and also from the order dismissing the complaint, upon the following exceptions:

1. Because in the pleadings in the case presented to the court, a cause of action was therein stated; which entitled the plaintiff to produce his proofs and be heard in support of his right to the relief asked for.

2. Because the defendant, having fully answered the complaint, admitted thereby a cause of action to be stated in the complaint; and could not, after such answer, move to dismiss the complaint on the ground that it did not set forth a cause of action.

3. Because his honor having read the pleadings in the case, the complaint, the answer and the reply, had before him a cause of action stated in the pleadings, that is, damage to the crop of the plaintiff by the wrongful act of the defendant; the answer of the defendant denying the damage, and pleading a release by the plaintiff from all actions for damage — -past, present or future; and the reply of the plaintiff that the release relied on by the defendant was obtained under circumstances which did not entitle the defendant to the benefit of the defence, because of it set forth in the answer, should not have dismissed the complaint without full hearing.

4. Because the decree dismissing the complaint was made upon motion, not at the hearing of the case, and without opportunity to the defendant to sustain, by his proof, the averments of his complaint as to the damage he sustained; and to the release, as not giving the defendant the exemption from all suits for damages as claimed in the answer.

[415]*4155. Because tbe complaint set forth damage by the defendant to the plaintiff in two modes; first, in that done to his crop by the fumes and works of the defendant; and next, because of the damage done by fumes and vapors escaping from the works of the defendant; making his residence, because of offensive smells, unwholsome and uncomfortable; and for such damage the release set up the defendant did not in terms profess to exclude every right of action; but by the limitation in its terms to damage done to the crops, did not affect the plaintiff’s right to sue for a cause of action, sounding in damages, because of injury done to his residence and home, as such.

6. Because the decree dismissing the complaint would bar the plaintiff from any recovery against the defendant because of damage done to his crops, his property, his residence and home, his health, and his person because of a paper set up as a release; and excludes all evidence to prove that such paper, so called a release, was not binding on the plaintiff, and could not give to the defendant an exemption of liability for all damages, however sustained, and occasioned by the acts of the defendant willful or otherwise.”

The appeal from the order “settling the case” was not argued here, and we regard it as properly abandoned.

The first four exceptions make the point substantially that after answer filed and issue joined it was too late to consider the case exclusively with reference to the allegations of the complaint; and that the judge should have allowed the plaintiff to prove the facts of the case put in issue. The objection was in fact an oral demurrer, under the sixth head of section 167 of the Code upon the ground that “ the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.”

The Code enacts that the only pleading on the part of the defendant shall be a demurrer, or an answer, and after setting out the grounds upon which alone a demurrer can be interposed, provides in section 171 that “ if such objection be not taken by demurrer or answer, the defendant shall be deemed to have waived the same, excepting only the objection to the jurisdiction of the court, and the objection that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 S.C. 411, 1882 S.C. LEXIS 75, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kennerty-v-etiwan-phosphate-co-sc-1882.