Madison v. Ducktown Sulphur, Copper & Iron Co.

113 Tenn. 331
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 15, 1904
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 113 Tenn. 331 (Madison v. Ducktown Sulphur, Copper & Iron Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Madison v. Ducktown Sulphur, Copper & Iron Co., 113 Tenn. 331 (Tenn. 1904).

Opinion

MR. Justice Neil

delivered the opinion of the Court.

■ These three suits were instituted separately in the court below, but tried together here. They embrace, in the main, the same facts and the same questions of law, and will be disposed of in a single opinion.

The bills are all based on the ground of nuisance, in that the two companies, in the operation of their plants at and near Ducktown, in Polk county, in the course of reducing copper ore, cause large volumes of smoke to issue from their roast piles, which smoke descends upon the surrounding lands, and injures trees and crops, and [338]*338renders tbe bornes of complainants less comfortable and their lands less profitable than before. The purpose of all the bills is to enjoin the further operation of these plants; the first bill having been filed against the first-named company, the. last bill against the second company, and the intermediate bill against both companies.

The following general facts are applicable to all of the cases:

Prior to 1870 one Rhat began the operation of a copper mine at Ducktown, and worked it for several years. Subsequently it was owned by the Union Consolidated Mining Company, Mr. Rhat’s successor. These operations were continued until the year 1879, and were then suspended until 1891. During the latter year the Duck-town Sulphur, Copper & Iron Company commenced operating the properties formerly owned and operated by the Union Consolidated Mining Company, and has continued. to operate them ever since. The Pittsburg. & Tennessee Copper Company began operations at Duck-town about the year 1881, and continued until about 1899, when it sold out to the defendant Tennessee Copper Company. The latter began its operations in 1900, and commenced roasting ores in May, 1901. It has continued its works ever since.

Ducktown is in a basin of the mountains of Polk county, in this State, not far from the State line of the States of Georgia and North Carolina. This basin is six or eight miles wide. The complainants are the own-[339]*339érs of small farms situated in the mountains around Ducktown'.

The method used by the defendants in reducing their copper ores is to place the green ore, broken up, on layers of wood, making large open-air piles, called “roast piles,” and these roast piles are ignited for the purpose of expelling from the ore certain foreign matters called “sulphurets.” In burning, these roast piles emit large yolum.es of smoke. This smoke, rising in the air, is carried off by air currents around and over adjoining land.

The lands of the complainants in the first bill, Carter, W. M. Madison and Margaret A. Madison, Verner, and Ballew, lie from two to four miles from the works. The land of Farner, complainant in the last bill, lies six or eight miles away. The distance of McGhee’s land is not shown. The complainants in the first and second bills are the same, with the exception that McGhee does not appear in the first bill, and Yerner and Ballew do not appear in the second bill.

These lands are all thin mountain lands, of little agricultural value. Carter’s land consists of eighty acres, assessed at $80; Vemer’s, eighty-nine acres, at $110; Ballew’s, forty acres, at $66; Madison and wife, forty-three acres, at $83; W. M. Madison, about one hundred acres, at $180; Isaac Farner, one hundred acres, at $180. Avery McGhee has seventy-five acres. W. M. Madison has a tract across the Georgia line, and Mrs. Madison also one of one hundred acres there. The assessed value [340]*340of these last three tracts does not appear. All of these lands, however, lie in the same general section of country, and we assume their value to average about the same, in proportion to acreage.

All of the complainants have owned their several tracts since a time anterior to the resumption of the copper industry at Ducktown in 1891, and have resided on them during this period, with the exception of Avery McGhee, who worked for one of the defendant companies a considerable time, and Margaret Madison, who removed to Snoddy, in Rhea county, two or three years ago.

The general effect produced by the smoke upon the possessions and families of the complainants is as follows, viz.:

Their timber and crop interests have been badly injured, and-they have been annoyed and discommoded by the smoke so that the complainants are prevented from using and enjoying their farms and-homes as they did prior to the inauguration of these enterprises. The smoke makes it impossible for the owners of farms within the area of the smoke zone to subsist their families thereon with the degree of comfort they enjoyed be-’ fore. They cannot raise and harvest their customary crops, and their timber is largely destroyed. •

In the first case it is shown that the complainants sold their timber to the first-named defendant, but they were under the necessity of either selling it, or permitting it to go to waste upon the ground; it having been [341]*341either injured or killed by the smoke. Some of these complainants, however, obtained as much by the sale of their timber to the first-named company as their land cost them.

The facts found in the third case show the following in respect of the situation and injuries of complainant Farner, viz.: “He has lived on his farm since its purchase by him, some twenty or more years ago, and has supported his family, in connection with such other work as men similarly situated do in the support of their families. He has his garden and orchard, and' does, or did, raise corn, hay, and such other crops, and also vegetables, as are usually raised in that mountain section of our country. ...

“The proof in the record shows that the smoke not only causes the wife of complainant to cough, but makes her head ache. It also shows that it has injured and destroyed the timber, or a portion of it, of complainant, and that it injures his crops. The extent to which it has destroyed his timber is a matter of dispute, and it is also a matter of dispute as to the amount of injury it inflicts upon his crops. Some of the defendants’ witnesses say that it has destroyed from eight to ten per cent, of the timber on the place. Other witnesses say— and especially the witnesses of the complainant — that it has destroyed from thirty to fifty per cent, of the timber on the place. . . .

“This complainant testifies, in effect, that if this smoke continues from time to time, and from year to [342]*342year, to envelop bis farm, be will bave to leave it, because it is injurious to tbe bealtb of bis wife, and that, on account of its injurious effect to bis crops, be will be unable to support bis family on it.

“There is no material evidence in tbe record to dispute tbe effect of this testimony of complainant.”

In tbe second case tbe finding of facts shows that tbe injuries to timber' and crops and to tbe comfort of tbe complainants are much tbe same as these already stated. But, notwithstanding these facts, it is also found that tbe lands of at least two of these complainants, Carter and W. M. Madison, bave continuously increased in assessed value from 1895 to 1903, inclusive.

There is no finding in either of tbe cases that tbe output of smoke by tbe Ducktown Sulphur, Copper & Iron Company has increased to any extent since 1891, when tbe business of mining and reducing copper ore was resumed at Ducktown.

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113 Tenn. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/madison-v-ducktown-sulphur-copper-iron-co-tenn-1904.