Krueger v. City of Faribault

18 N.W.2d 777, 220 Minn. 89, 1945 Minn. LEXIS 504
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedMay 18, 1945
DocketNo. 33,935.
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 18 N.W.2d 777 (Krueger v. City of Faribault) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Krueger v. City of Faribault, 18 N.W.2d 777, 220 Minn. 89, 1945 Minn. LEXIS 504 (Mich. 1945).

Opinion

Peterson, Justice.

Plaintiff, a farmer living on his farm on the banks of the Cannon River about three to three and one-half miles below the city of Faribault, sues the city to recover damages for inconvenience and discomfort caused by its having deposited raw and untreated sewage into the Straight River, which empties into the Cannon at a point just north of the city. The complaint is that sewage containing .waste matter and human excrement so polluted the water that in the spring during high water the sewage was deposited upon plaintiff’s-land and that during the summer the stream gave off such . noisome and offensive odors that plaintiff and his wife in order 'to-avoid the stench Avere compelled to keep the doors and windows of the house shut and often to leave their home in order to get fresh air. Plaintiff’s cows waded in the stream, thereby getting sewage on their udders, and because of that fact the odor *91 from the cattle was offensive and plaintiff had to wash them before milking them. So far as liability is concerned, the case follows the pattern of cases like Huber v. City of Blue Earth, 213 Minn. 319, 6 N. W. (2d) 471; Herrmann v. Larson, 214 Minn. 46, 7 N. W. (2d) 330; and Satren v. Hader Co-op. Cheese Factory, 202 Minn. 553, 279 N. W. 361.

The defense was, first, a denial of plaintiff’s claim that any sewage deposited by the city in the Straight River caused the odors and pollution of which plaintiff complains, and, second, a claim that, if the city’s sewage contributed to those odors and plaintiff’s resulting discomfort, there was no way of determining the extent of the city’s contribution, because there were waste materials coming into both the Straight and Cannon Rivers for which the city was not responsible, and, consequently, that there was no reasonable basis for assessing a definite sum of damages against the city.-

The complaint alleged that plaintiff was entitled to recover for damage sustained for more than six years immediately prior to. the commencement of the action, but the trial court limited plaintiff’s right of recovery, if any, to the six-year period immediately prior to the commencement of the action, that is, from October 1, 1937.

The evidence shows that defendant, at the commencement of the period for which plaintiff seeks recovery, was a city of a little over 12,000 inhabitants and that at the end thereof had a population of about 14,000. During that period it had two main sewers, one for the part of the city lying east of the Straight River and another for the part lying west of it, both draining into the river and depositing raw and untreated sewage therein. Included in the 14,000 population of the city are approximately 3,000 inhabitants of a state institution on the east side of the river, which treats its sewage in what are known as Imhoff tanks so as to remove solids and then drains the effluent into the sewer on the east side of the river. It was also shown that other municipalities upstream such as Owatonna dumped their sewage into the Straight River. On the west side of the city on the Cannon River are certain industries ■ *92 such as a canning factory, cheese factory, woolen mill, flour mill, and slaughterhouse, which deposited vast amounts of untreated sewage into that river above its confluence with the Straight. Beginning in 1940, the canning factory dumped its sewage into the city sewer on the west side of the Straight River. During hot weather the sewage from the canning factory had the same odor as rotten eggs.

There was much controversy below, as there is here, as to the admissibility of a report of an investigation of the pollution of the Straight and Cannon Rivers by the state board of health in collaboration with the state commissioner of game and fish, referred to below as Exhibit 11. The report covered the period from June 1928 to February 1930, which was prior to the one for which plaintiff might recover. Before the report was offered, defendant had offered some evidence to show that the Cannon River at plaintiff’s farm commenced to smell as far back as 1923 or 1924. Plaintiff’s evidence showed that “every year” from 1923 or 1924 to and including the year 1942 the odor from the river at his farm was the same.

The report contained much data concerning the pollution of the Cannon and the Straight Rivers. One of the tables showed the density of the pollution of the Cannon River at a point three miles below Faribault, which according to the testimony was at plaintiff’s land. The report also contained numerous conclusions and opinions of its authors to the effect that the pollution was a hazard to public health because of the danger that people would drink the water or use it for domestic purposes; that bathing and boating in the polluted water were dangerous; that after periods of high water there were deposits of sewage upon the ground attractive to flies, which spread disease by contaminating with sewage carried by them food, dishes, and milk; and that the pollution of the river was a menace to public health because of the danger of contamination of milk resulting from cows’ wading in the stream.

After the report had been received in evidence, defendant called .as a witness Dr. H. O. Halvorson, a chemical and sanitary engineer *93 engaged in the practice of his profession .and in teaching at the University of Minnesota. The witness had made an extensive study of and was familiar with the facts concerning the pollution of the rivers in question and the disposition of sewage and industrial wastes. He testified that the men who compiled the report were “very competént.” On direct examination, defendant used the data contained in the report as a basis for eliciting from Dr. Halvorson opinions concerning the density of the pollution of the two rivers at various points. With the exception of the month of July 1929, the pollution of the Cannon River, according to the witness’s opinion, was greater below its confluence with the Straight River than above it. On cross-examination, the witness stated: “I assume from the evidence that the river [the Cannon] is polluted at the point of the plaintiff [plaintiff’s farm]. That has been so stated.” The evidence showed that to be the fact. Apparently that was an undisputed assumption at the trial. The witness further testified upon cross-examination that the domestic sewage from the city of Faribault was a contributing and substantial factor to the pollution of the river at plaintiff’s property and that the effluent from the state institution was also “a contributing factor” thereto.

He also testified that he agreed entirely with the opinions expressed in the report that the pollution was dangerous to public health because of the fact that it was a source of contamination of milk.

In the charge, which is not otherwise challenged here, the trial judge instructed the jury that the report contained much information which had no bearing at all on the case, such as the parts thereof relating to the Cannon River downstream from plaintiff’s farm and the many opinions and conclusions referred to relative to sanitation, to unhealthful and dangerous conditions, and to the effect of polluted water upon livestock. All these matters the jury was cautioned entirely to disregard. The court indicated that it would permit the jury to take the report to the jury room for use during its deliberations.

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Bluebook (online)
18 N.W.2d 777, 220 Minn. 89, 1945 Minn. LEXIS 504, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/krueger-v-city-of-faribault-minn-1945.