Kramer v. Sweet

169 P.2d 892, 179 Or. 324, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 156
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedApril 30, 1946
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 169 P.2d 892 (Kramer v. Sweet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kramer v. Sweet, 169 P.2d 892, 179 Or. 324, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 156 (Or. 1946).

Opinion

HAY, J.

Plaintiffs brought this suit to enjoin, as a nuisance, the operation of a slaughterhouse by defendants. Prom a decree in favor of plaintiffs, defendant Sweet, who is now the sole defendant, has appealed to this court.

The property upon which the slaughterhouse stands was acquired by defendants in 1943. There was an old building upon it, and, in February of that year, defendant Sweet began to enlarge and improve it, and installed *327 therein machinery and equipment for the operation of a slaughterhouse and meat-processing plant. Adjacent to the building, he erected pens and corrals for the reception and holding of animals intended for slaughter. The plant is situated upon the bank of the Grande Ronde River, and the overflow from its septic tanks discharges, through gravel, into that stream. As soon as the plaintiffs learned that the plant was to be used as a slaughterhouse, which was before much of the equipment had been installed, they protested, energetically but ineffectively.

The defendant’s investment in the plant is $10,736.14, of which $100 is in the site, $5,083.92 in the building, and $5,552.22 in equipment.

Plaintiffs reside in the immediate vicinity of the slaughterhouse. The evidence abundantly indicates that the district is chiefly residential in character. All but one of the plaintiffs’ residences are within the city limits of La Grande, and the one exception is just outside the city limits. The district has been laid out in lots and blocks, and is traversed by city streets or by extensions thereof. The grounds around the residences have been improved by sightly lawns and gardens, with shade trees and shrubbery. The Grande Ronde River, flowing in an easterly direction, bounds the district on the north. Defendant’s slaughterhouse is outside the city limits, and is within about 180 feet of the residence of one of the plaintiffs.

The trial court found that the operation of the plant produces noisome and offensive odors, and, in summer, attracts swarms of flies; that the prevailing winds carry such odors and flies to the residences of the plaintiffs; and that, operated as a slaughterhouse between April 15th and November 1st, it is a nuisance. *328 A careful consideration of the evidence has persuaded us that such findings were justified.

While, in our opinion, the evidence preponderates in favor of the plaintiffs, it was not by any. means one-sided. An assistant state veterinarian, who made several- official inspections of the plant, testified for defendant. On his first inspection, he said, he found an excessive number of flies, but the plant and equipment were.clean. He did not approve of the location of the septic tanks with reference to their proximity to the river, but said that the condition was not “too alarming”. He found no “exclusive” or nauseating odors. A member of the Oregon State Police testified that he investigated the plant on various occasions,, and found no nauseating odors present. A sergeant of State Police testified that the slaughterhouse' was in thoroughly good up-to-date condition, with 116 extremely offensive odors other than one would find around any similar establishment. On cross-examination, hówévér, he admitted that he would not like to have 'his 'ovhi house “sitting across” from the plant, but 'said that he considered that to be a “personal question’’. A veterinarian testified that, in his opinion, the plant Avas ás sanitary and clean as it could be, and that'he noticed no offensive smells or excessive numbers of flies: .One householder of the vicinity testified that odors wére present once in a while, and fairly bad at times, but that he felt, if they became bad enough, he could always moA^e! Others testified that they experienced no offensive odors or excessive noises, nor observed any other annoying conditions. A livestock dealer, who said that the defendant was a good customer of his, considered the sanitation and cleanliness of the plant as being “tops”. He admitted that there was an odor, but said that it was a pleasing one to him!

*329 It is true that the witnesses for plaintiffs were mainly plaintiffs themselves and members of their families, and that their testimony was opposed, as above noted, by that of officers who had a certain amount of supervisory control over the plant. However, there was no attempt to impeach the plaintiffs’ witnesses as to veracity or otherwise. They appeared to be worthy and. credible persons. One need not be an expert to be able to smell a foul odor, or to testify about it. Trowbridge v. Lansing, 237 Mich. 402, 212 N. W. 73, 50 A. L. R. 1014. The testimony of these people was strong and convincing. They said that, when the wind is. in the west, the stench is so nauseating that it is impossible for them or their families to enjoy a meal in their, homes, or to sleep in them unless the doors and windows are tightly closed. One of the plaintiffs said that, because of the obnoxious conditions, he sold his property and moved out of the neighborhood. Clearly, plaintiffs were entitled, at the least, to the relief which was awarded them. Ludlow v. Colorado Animal By Products Co., 104 Utah 221, 137 P. (2d) 347.

From the evidence, it would appear that defendant -used reasonable care in the operation of his plant, and the. offensive odors and excessive number of flies which resulted may have been normally incident to the carrying on of such a business. These facts, however, constitute no defense in this case, as the operation has interfered with plaintiffs in the reasonable and comfortable enjoyment of their property. Joyce, Nuisances, section 167; Adams v. Clover Hill Farms, 86 Or. 140, 167 P. 1015; American S. & R. Co. v. Godfrey, 158 F. 225, (C. C. A. 8th) 14 Ann. Cas. 8.

As we have mentioned, the plaintiffs were diligent in protesting against the establishment of the slaughter *330 house, and the defendants, before they had expended much money in that connection, had every opportunity to desist from installing the plant. Surely, within a reasonable distance of the city of La Grande, there are many suitable sites whereon a slaughterhouse might be operated without creating a nuisance.

There was evidence that, upon some of the plaintiffs ’ premises, there are insanitary conditions, such as manure piles and outdoor privies, and that at least one of the plaintiffs keeps a milch cow. Such conditions, however, are not nuisances per se, and, in any event, they cannot be relied upon defensively in the present suit. Ludlow v. Colorado Animal By-Products Co., supra (104 Utah 221, 137 P. (2d) 347); Wade v. Miller, 188 Mass. 6, 73 N. E. 849. Odors which, in the heart of a city, or in a residential district having all the amenities of modern urban existence, might be a nuisance, may be but the ordinary domestic exhalations of unsewered suburbia, such as would offend the nostrils of none but the most dainty. Lex non favet delicatorum votis. Aldred’s Case (1610) 9 Coke 57b, 77 Eng. Reprint 816.

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Bluebook (online)
169 P.2d 892, 179 Or. 324, 1946 Ore. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kramer-v-sweet-or-1946.