Martin Bldg. Co. v. Imperial Laundry Co.

124 So. 82, 220 Ala. 90, 1929 Ala. LEXIS 384
CourtSupreme Court of Alabama
DecidedJune 27, 1929
Docket6 Div. 379.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 124 So. 82 (Martin Bldg. Co. v. Imperial Laundry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Martin Bldg. Co. v. Imperial Laundry Co., 124 So. 82, 220 Ala. 90, 1929 Ala. LEXIS 384 (Ala. 1929).

Opinions

GARDNER, J.

The complainant to this bill owns a 12-story office building in the city of Birmingham, known as the Martin Building, located on the northwest corner of Fourth avenue and Twenty-Third street. To the east of this building and within about 100 feet thereof, respondent operates a laundry with a steam boiler using soft coal as a fuel, and from the smokestack there is emitted considerable amount of smoke and soot which complainant insists finds its Way into a large number of its offices, thus endangering the health and comfort of its tenants, causing a loss of some of the tenants and a threatened loss of others. Complainant, after requesting of respondent, without avail, an abatement, of this condition, filed the present bill seeking injunctive relief to this end. Upon consideration of the cause for final decree on pleadings and proof, the chancellor denied relief and dismissed the bill, from which decree complainant prosecutes this appeal.

A discussion of the evidence would serve no useful purpose. Suffice it to say the testimony has been read and studied with much care. While there is some evidence tending to the contrary, yet we are of the opinion that the decided weight of the testimony establishes the averments of the bill to the effect that a large quantity of smoke finds its way into complainant’s offices directly from respondent’s smokestack, which, it seems, is the height of complainant’s eighth story. The boiler is fired with from four to six shovels of soft coal every 20 or 30 minutes, respondent using 2 or 3 tons of coal each day, or an average of about 80 tons a month. Each time it is so fired black smoke is emitted from the stack lasting from 30 to 45 seconds. When the wind is from the east this smoke is blown directly into the offices facing in that direction. One of complainant’s witnesses testified: “I have seen a continuous stream of smoke from the stack of the Imperial Laundry to my window. I have seen it so thick you would hardly see the stack from the window. * * * It has happened three or four times a'day if it was blowing in the right direction.” Others testified to like effect, and it is without dispute that complainant has lost one tenant (Montevallo Coal Company) occupying several of the offices, on account of this smoke, and others threaten to leave for like reason.

While smoke is not classified as a nuisance per se, yet it may constitute a nuisance so imperiling the comfort or health of those on the premises invaded by it as to call for injunctive relief at the hands of a court of equity. 46 Corpus Juris, 688; Rouse & Smith v. Martin, etc., 75 Ala. 510, 51 Am. Rep. 463; English v. Progress Elec. Co., 95 Ala. 259, 10 So. 134; Harris v. Randolph Lumber Co., 175 Ala. 148, 57 So. 453; Hundley v. Harrison, 123 Ala. 292, 26 So. 294; Romano v. B’ham Ry., Light & Power Co., 182 Ala. 335, 62 So. 677, 46 L. R. A. (N. S.) 642, Ann. Cas. 1915D, 776; Holman v. Athens Empire Laundry, 149 Ga. 345, 100 S. E. 207, 6 A. L. R. *92 1564; Campbell v. Seaman, 63 N. Y. 568, 20 Am. Rep. 567; McCarty v. Natural Carbonic Gas. Co., 189 N. Y. 40, 81 N. E. 549, 13 L. R. A. (N. S.) 465, 12 Ann. Cas. 840; 1 Wood on Nuisance, § 505.

Our statutes (Code 1923) defining nuisances, merely declaratory-of the common law (First Ave. Coal & Lumber Co. v. Johnson, 171 Ala. 470, 54 So. 598, 32 L. R. A. [N. S.] 522), read as follows:

9271. “A nuisance is anything that worketh hurt, inconvenience, or damage to another ; and the fact that the act done may otherwise be lawful does not keep it from being a nuisance. The inconvenience complained of must not be fanciful, or such as would affect only one of á fastidious taste, but -it should be such as would affect an ordinary reasonable man.”
9274. “Nuisances are either public or private. A public nuisance is one which damages all persons who come within the sphere of its operation, though it may vary in its effects on individuals. A private nuisance is one limited in its injurious effects to one or a few individuals. Generally, a public nuisance gives no right of action to any individual, but must be abated by a process instituted in the name of the state. A private nuisanee gives a right of action to the person injured.”

In Dixie Ice Cream Co. v. Blackwell, 217 Ala. 330, 116 So. 348, 58 A. L. R. 1223, speaking to the question here presented, the court said: “In general, home owners and occupants, as well as all others must endure, without legal recourse, all of those petty annoyances and discomforts ordinarily and necessarily incident to the conduct of those trades and businesses which are usually a part of municipal life, and, which are more or less essential to the existence and comfort and progress of the people. * * * But there are limits to this rule, and, as said in the well-considered case of Hundley v. Harrison, 123 Ala. 298, 26 So. 295: ‘Any establishment erected on the premises of the owner, though for the purpose of trade or business, lawful in itself, which, from the situation, the inherent qualities of the business, or the manner in which ii is conducted, directly causes substantial injury to the property of another, or produces material annoyance and inconvenience to the occupants of adjacent dwellings, rendering them physically uncomfortable, is a nuisance. In applying this principle, it has been repeatedly held, that smoke, offensive odors, noise or vibrations, when of such degree or extent as to materially interfere with the ordinary comfort of human existence, will constitute a nuisance.’ ”

And it was further stated in the opinion that conditions there considered as to cinders, soot, and smoke would constitute actionable nuisance even in a business district.

In this jurisdiction we recognize, In cases seeking injunctive relief, the “comparative injury doctrine,” not universally accepted. Brede v. Minnesota, etc., Stone Co., 143 Minn. 374, 173 N. W. 805, 6 A. L. R. 1092. As said by this court in Clifton Iron Co. v. Dye, 87 Ala. 468, 6 So. 192: “But it is not every case of nuisance, or continuing trespass, which a court of equity will restrain by injunction. In determining this question, the court should weigh the injury that may accrue to the one or the other party, and also ■to the public, by granting or refusing the injunction.”

That a public utility was involved was considered by the court in English v. Progress Elec. Co., supra, and in Nevins v. McGavock, 214 Ala. 93, 106 So. 597, 'the denial of the writ was rested largely upon the question of public convenience or necessity. It is well established also by our authorities that negligence ordinarily is not an element of an actionable nuisance. Harris v. Randolph Lumber Co., supra; Shelby Iron Co. v. Greenlea, 184 Ala. 496, 63 So. 470; Town of Vernon v. Wedgeworth, 148 Ala. 490, 42 So. 749.

The right of complainant as owner and landlord to maintain a bill of this character is well established. East v. Saks, 214 Ala. 58, 106 So. 185. No specific rules for determination of questions of this character are attempted to be established, only general principles declared, and each case determined upon its own facts in the light of these principles. Dixie Ice Cream Co. v. Blackwell, supra; Euclid v. Ambler Realty Co., 272 U. S. 365, 47 S. Ct. 114, 71 L. Ed. 303, 54 A. L. R. 1016.

The Court of Appeals of New York, in Natural Carbonic Gas Co.’s Case, supra, 189 N. Y. 40, 81 N. E. 549, 13 L. R. A. (N.

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Bluebook (online)
124 So. 82, 220 Ala. 90, 1929 Ala. LEXIS 384, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martin-bldg-co-v-imperial-laundry-co-ala-1929.