Lineberger v. City of Gastonia

196 N.C. 445
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedJanuary 2, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 196 N.C. 445 (Lineberger v. City of Gastonia) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lineberger v. City of Gastonia, 196 N.C. 445 (N.C. 1929).

Opinion

CONNOR, J.

This action was begun on 9 August, 1921. Summons issued on said day was duly served on each of the defendants herein.

The original complaint was filed on 10 August, 1927. Plaintiff alleges therein that he has suffered damages caused by the creation of a nuisance on his land by the trespasses and wrongful acts of defendants. Each of the defendants owns, maintains and operates a sewerage system from which it discharges sewage into Catawba Creek, above the land of plaintiff. The waters of said creek, polluted by said sewage, flow on and upon plaintiff’s land, causing the nuisance which has resulted in damages to plaintiff.

Each of the defendants demurred severally to said complaint, upon the ground that there was a misjoinder therein of parties defendant and of causes of action, in that it appears from the allegations of the complaint that defendants are not and were not joint tort-feasors with respect to the trespasses and wrongful acts alleged therein, but that said trespasses and wrongful acts were and are separate and distinct, each of said defendants acting therein independently of the other defendants, without unity of purpose or concert of action.

Thereafter, on 2 September, 1927, by leave of court, plaintiff filed an amended complaint, in which in addition to the allegations of the original complaint, it is alleged that “defendants have jointly and severally affected the flow of said creek, contaminated its waters as aforesaid, above the land of plaintiff,” and thus caused the nuisance which has resulted in the damages which plaintiff seeks to recover of defendants in this action. Defendants severally demurred to said amended complaint, substantially upon the same grounds as those upon which they demurred to the original complaint.

While the said demurrers were pending, and before the issue thereby raised had been determined, at March Term, 1928, by leave of court, plaintiff took a voluntary nonsuit in this action as against all the de[447]*447fendants except the city of Gastonia. Upon motion of plaintiff the action was dismissed as to the defendants, Winget Yarn Mills Company, Ruby Cotton Mills, Inc., and Dixon Mills, Inc. Judgment to that effect was signed on 24 February, 1928.

Thereafter, at June Special Term, 1928, defendant, city of Gastonia, withdrew its demurrer, and filed an answer to the complaint, denying all the allegations of said complaint upon which plaintiff contends that said city of Gastonia is liable to plaintiff for the damages, resulting from the nuisance alleged in the complaint. At said June Special Term, 1928, upon motion of the city of Gastonia, it was ordered that Winget Yarn Mills Company, Ruby Cotton Mills, Inc., and Dixon Mills, Inc., be and they were made parties defendant by summons duly issued and served upon them. In its motion upon which the said order was made, as the ground for the same, the city of Gastonia alleges that if there is any liability on the part of said city in this action, or if the plaintiff has sustained or is sustaining any damage as alleged in the complaint, the said Winget Yarn Mills Company, Ruby Cotton Mills, Inc., and Dixon Mills, Inc., are liable to plaintiff for said damages as joint tort-feasors, upon the allegations of the amended complaint.

After summons had been served on appellants, and after they had been made parties defendant in this action, upon motion of the city of Gastonia, to wit, on 27 August, 1928, plaintiff filed an amended complaint, which supersedes the original complaint filed on 10 August, 1927, and the amended complaint filed on 2 September, 1927. Demurrers have been filed to this last complaint by each of the defendants, other than the city of Gastonia.

After the judgment dismissing the action, upon motion of plaintiff, as against Winget Yarn Mills Company, Ruby Cotton Mills, Inc., and Dixon Mills, Inc., to wit, on 3 March, 1928, plaintiff began an action in the Superior Court of Gaston County, against each of said corporations, upon the same cause of action as that set out in the complaint in this action. A complaint and answer have been filed in each of said actions. These several actions are now pending.

In the amended complaint, filed on 27 August, 1928, plaintiff alleges that each of the defendants owns, maintains and operates a sewerage system. The city of Gastonia owns, maintains and operates its sewerage system, under the provisions of its charter, as a municipal corporation. The other defendants are industrial corporations; each owns, maintains and operates its own sewerage system, for its own use, and for the use of its employees, and of members of their families. The sewage from each of said systems is discharged into waters which flow through Catawba Creek upon the land of plaintiff.

[448]*448Tbe allegations of tbe complaint more particularly pertinent to tbe decision of tbe question presented by tbis appeal are as follows:

“4. That each of tbe defendants herein severally divert other waters from their usual courses, pollute same as hereinafter alleged, are now diverting, and for more than three years past have so diverted waters to tbe said Catawba Creek above tbe lands of tbis plaintiff, and have for such period severally discharged said waters, together with other offensive. materials as hereinafter alleged into said Catawba Creek, directly or indirectly, above tbe lands of plaintiff, as aforesaid, by means of pipes, sewer lines, and ditches or drains, so divert and deposit into said waters such material together with untreated human excrement and other filthy and obnoxiously odorous materials, having been severally gathered by each and every of the defendants and transported as aforesaid, that by reason of the bringing together of the said filthy materials and depositing same as aforesaid, the defendants have jointly and severally, materially affected, the flow of said creek, contaminated its waters, as aforesaid, above the lands of this plaintiff; which said waters are so contaminated as they flow over the lands of this plaintiff; that at frequent intervals, throughout the year, deposit filth as aforesaid, on and upon the lands of this plaintiff, and among the trees, bushes and shrubbery along said bottom lands, render same veritable breeding places for mosquitoes, flies and other obnoxious insects, and thereby so contaminating the atmosphere with such insects, flies, mosquitoes, obnoxious odors, as to render fully fifty acres of said lands useless for human habitation or tendance, and at times invade his home by means of said flies and mosquitoes, thereby depriving him of the quiet and peaceable possession and enjoyment of same, rendering same all but uninhabitable, greatly menacing the health of his entire family, whereby he has been caused to suffer great mental anguish and pecuniary losses, as hereinafter alleged.”
“5. That by reason of the contamination of the water of said Catawba Creek, as aforesaid, and the consequent contamination of the air as aforesaid, proximately resulting from the joint and several acts of omission and commission on the part of each and every one of the defendants in this action, this plaintiff has been damaged in the sum of ten thousand dollars ($10,000), to the commencement of this action.”

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Bluebook (online)
196 N.C. 445, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lineberger-v-city-of-gastonia-nc-1929.