King v. Hamill

54 A. 625, 97 Md. 103
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedApril 5, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 54 A. 625 (King v. Hamill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
King v. Hamill, 54 A. 625, 97 Md. 103 (Md. 1903).

Opinion

Boyd, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant filed a bill in equity against the appellee praying that an injunction be issued restraining him from building a stable on the line of Centre street, in the town of Oakland, or within twenty feet thereof. The bill alleges that under and by virtue of its charter that municipal corporation had enacted certain ordinances to prevent nuisances in the town, and that among those so enacted and now in force is section 14, chapter 10, title “ Nuisances,” which prohibits the erection of “ any privy, hog pen or stable, or other enclosures designed for the keeping, confinement or stabling of any horses, cattle, swine, sheep, goats or other animal or animals producing offensive smells within twenty feet of any street of said town, under a penalty” therein named; that the appellant owned a dwelling house which is located on a lot fronting on Centre street, which is one of the public streets of the town, in which she and her family live. It is further alleged that the appellee owns a lot on the opposite side of Centre street, directly in front of the plaintiff’s house, upon which he “ has commenced and is now erecting a stable designed for the keeping and confinement or stabling of horses and cattle or other animals which produce offensive smells,” and that the said stable is being built on Centre street instead of twenty *108 feet therefrom as required by said ordinance. It also charges “ That the building of said stable on the line of said street is a violation- of law, and if it should be completed will be a nuisance, and the offensive smells arising therefrom will render the plaintiff’s house almost uninhabitable, and will cause irreparable injury to the plaintiff’s said house and home.” It states that the plaintiff makes the complaint as a citizen and taxpayer, as well as in her individual right as a property owner. A preliminary injunction was granted. The defendant filed an answer to the bill, in which he denied that the ordinance was validly passed, alleging that the Mayor and Town Council of Oakland did not have the authority to pass án ordinance in 1892, when this was enacted, regulating the location of stables within the limits of the town, and that their action in the premises was absolutely null and void. He admits that he has commenced the erection of a stable on his lot, in which he proposes to keep a horse, but denies that he is doing so in violation of law, or that the horse to be kept in said stable will produce offensive smells. The answer also denies that the stable when completed will become a nuisance, or that the odors will render plaintiff’s house almost uninhabitable or cause irreparable injury to her house and home. It alleges that he obtained permission from the Mayor and Town Co'uncil of Oakland to build the stable and he filed a written permit. The case was submitted to the Court below “ for final decision and determination” upon an agreed statement of facts, and, after hearing, a decree was passed dissolving the injunction and dis'missing the bill. From that decree this appeal was taken.

It was agreed that the town had enacted certain ordinances, and among others section 14 of chapter 15 (referred to in the bill as chapter 10), which were codified in 1892. It was admitted that the ordinance and penalty have not been amended or repealed, but remain as they were enacted and codified. Centre street is fifty feet wide. Mrs. King’s house is eighteen feet and five inches from the street, and the stable was being built on the building line of Centre street on Mr. Hamill's lot, *109 sixty-eight feet and five inches from Mrs. King’s residence, and closer to Mr. Hamill’s own dwelling. Among other things the agreed statement says “ That the said Hamill was building said stable at the time he was enjoined in this case—that it was his purpose to keep but one horse in said stable when completed, and that no offensive smells would arise from said stable except such as naturally arise from a horse stable in ■which a horse is kept, and that said stable would only be a nuisance, if at all, in so far as it is declared to be a nuisance by said ordinances of the town, providing the Court finds said ordinance to be a valid and legal ordinance.”

It is not necessary to cite authorities outside of this State to show that a stable is not pet se a nuisance. In Met. Savings Bank v. Manion, 87 Md. 68, this Court so declared in reference to a livery stable. On page 81 it was said, “The authorities which hold that a livery stable in a city is not per se a nuisance are so numerous that it would serve no useful purpose to repeat them. It may, however, be taken as a concession that such is the well-established rule of law about which no controversy can be reasonably expected to arise. And whilst this is unquestionably true it is equally clear that a stable, whether used for livery purposes or for private convenience, may sometimes become a very great nuisance and source of discomfort, (against which) the Courts would not fail to grant relief. But the fact just noted, that a livery stable is not necessarily prima facie a nuisance, suggests caution in dealing with the rights of the owners or occupants of livery stable property.” If a livery stable in a city like Baltimore is not a nuisance per se, surely a private stable in Oakland in which one horse is to be kept, cannot be said to be. The agreed statement sáys ‘ ‘that said stable would only be a nuisance, if at all, in so far as it is declared to be a mdsance by said ordinances of the town.” It would be giving this ordinance a meaning much broader than the language used in it would seem to justify, to say that it was intended to declare a stable built within twenty feet of a street a nuisance, merely because in the code of ordinances it is one of over forty sections *110 under chapter 15, which is headed “Nuisances.” To say that a stable within twenty feet of a street is a nuisance, while one twenty feet and one inch from the same street is not, would be going very far, and if a town council intends to make such distinction it ought to do so in a more certain way than by codifying such an ordinance under the general head of “Nuisances.”

But if it be conceded that it was intended to declare a stable situated as this is, a nuisance, and that the Mayor and Town Council of Oakland had power to pass the ordinances, or it was subsequently ratified by the Legislature, would a Court of equity be justified in restraining the erection of it under the evidence in this record? In St Johns v. McFarlan, 33 Mich. 72, the Court said, “The erection of a wooden building within the limits of a city or village is not in and of itself a nuisance. Neither does the fact that the erection of such is prohibited by ordinance make it a nuisance. If this were so, then the doing of any act prohibited by law would upon the same reasoning be a nuisance.” In Waupon v. Moore, 34 Wis. 450, that Court thus announces the doctrine : “The defendant was not about to erect a nuisance. If it is unlawful for him to erect the building in question, it is made so by the ordinance alone. Without the ordinance, no one can successfully dispute his right to do so. The question is, therefore, will a Court of equity enjoin an act, which would otherwise be lawful but which is made unlawful by a village ordinance or by-law.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
54 A. 625, 97 Md. 103, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-hamill-md-1903.