Masonite Corp. v. Dennis

168 So. 613, 175 Miss. 855, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 88
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedJune 8, 1936
DocketNo. 31440.
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 168 So. 613 (Masonite Corp. v. Dennis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Masonite Corp. v. Dennis, 168 So. 613, 175 Miss. 855, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 88 (Mich. 1936).

Opinion

McGowen., J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellee, George Dennis, Sr., brought an action .at law against the Masonite Corporation, by which he sought to recover damages for the depreciation in the value of his land, alleging same to have been brought .about by the fact that the appellant emptied the waste from its plant into Tallahala creek, which in turn emptied into Leaf river, and as a result of said effluent in the streams nauseous odors were produced, and a sediment was deposited on his land which injured its productivity. Appellee also alleged that the fish in the two *861 streams were hilled, and that the waters of Leaf river were so polluted as to be unfit for human or animal use. Upon issue being joined and the trial of the case before a jury, there was a verdict for one thousand dollars, and a judgment of the lower court was entered accordingly; from which appellant prosecutes an appeal.

Sixteen assignments of error are presented to this court on behalf of appellant, each seriously and earnestly argued; but we shall consider only those which allege that the lower court erred in refusing to grant appellant the peremptory instruction requested by it.

The evidence as a whole did not meet the burden of proof, because it failed to show that the effluent discharged into Tallahala creek from the appellant’s plant was the cause of appellee’s damage. Addressing ourselves to this one question, and adverting to the oft-repeated principle of law that the burden of proof is-cast upon the plaintiff to show by a preponderance of the evidence the liability of the defendant, we will not. undertake to set out in full all the evidence, but only a résumé, with all the legitimate inferences to be drawn therefrom.

Some time prior to 1927, the Masonite Corporation began manufacturing in the city of Laurel a building material called “Masonite board.” Its plant was upon the-banks of Tallahala creek, or very near thereto. The' process of manufacturing this product is fully described in the case of Masonite Corporation v. Hill, 170 Miss. 158, 154 So. 295, 95 A. L. R. 157.

Evidently the appellee recovered in this case on the theory that because of the existence of large quantities of wood fiber discharged with the water from appellant’s plant in Laurel into Tallahala creek, which in turn flowed into Leaf river and traveled forty or fifty miles to his land, where, at times, the wood fiber in firewater destroyed fish, created nauseous odors, and caused a sediment to be deposited in low places on said land,, killing the grass. Tallahala creek is a stream about-, *862 thirty-five or forty feet wide, and not very deep. Leaf river, so far as all the locations involved in this case are concerned, is about two hundred feet wide and from fifteen to forty-five feet deep.

There is no evidence in the case at bar that the wood fiber had decomposed. The fiber discharged into the stream ming'led with the effluent from other manufacturing plants in the city of Laurel, the sewage from the city of Ellisville, and also from the Ellisville State School, all of which contributed to the destruction of animal life in the creek, not because of any artificial chemical substance, but because of the density of the mixture which excluded oxygen from animal life in the stream.

Dennis claimed to be the owner of one hundred eighty-nine acres of land on Leaf river, situated some miles below the point of confluence of Tallahala creek and Leaf river. Appellee is a riparian owner, having more than two miles of frontage on the river due to the bends therein. Forty acres of his land was in cultivation; the balance was swamp and “hammock” land. Appellant’s plant was about fifty miles upstream from appellee’s land.

According to the map, Tallahala creek rises many miles north of Laurel. Leaf river flows in a southeasterly direction past the city of Hattiesburg, many miles north of the point where Tallahala creek empties into it; after this junction the river flows south for miles, where, by conjunction with another river, the Pascagoula river is formed, and it, in turn, empties into the Gulf of Mexico.

The evidence shows beyond dispute that the appellant discharges a million or more gallons of water and wood fiber into the creek daily, and that it had operated for the seven years preceding this suit in 193A with fair and usual regularity. There were slight traces of chemicals, such as tannic acid, soda, and other caustics mingled with the wood fiber in the water, but they were so infinitesimal as compared to the immense volume of *863 water discharged as to demonstrate to a certainty that they conld not have destroyed animal life in the streams involved. The court below so instructed the jury.

The evidence of appellee and his witnesses tended to show that beginning within a few miles of appellant’s plant floods or freshets had occurred four times since 1927, at which times dead fish were deposited on the land near the banks of the creek at various points, and also along the banks of Leaf river below the mouth of Tallahala creek; that on these occasions, a sediment was deposited in the lands near the streams causing, an offensive odor, but that it cleared away within a short time.

Appellee purchased his land in June, 1932. He refers to an occasion when there were odors emanating from the river in September, 1932, to which other witnesses do not seem to refer. Most, of the evidence was directed to July 3 and 4, 1933, when dead fish in large numbers were cast on the land along the banks of the river, and a sediment was deposited by the overflow on the low places of appellee’s uncultivated swamp lands. Appellee testified that one-third of his land was thus injured by the sediment, but when asked to make round marks on a map showing where such matter was deposited, he marked only six places, which covered but a small portion of the one hundred eighty-nine acres of land of which he was in possession and claimed to be the owner. He had no house upon the land, and testified that the uncultivated land was especially adapted to pasturage but that by reason of the sediment grass was killed in some spots. He' also testified that the waters of the river were black during the overflow and the deposit on his land was like “black mud.” He had paid one hundred dollars for the land, which was assessed at about six hundred dollars; the usual rate of assessment in that county was sixty per cent, of its value. He claims that by taking the difference between the value of his land without the pollution in the river and with it there *864 in, lie was damaged from one thousand eight hundred dollars to two thousand three hundred dollars. He testified that the sediment was wood fiber, but made no explanation as to how he knew that; neither was there any showing as to how long the land covered by it would be without grass.

The evidence tended to show that these unusual conditions occurred only when there were floods, and they disappeared, so far as Leaf river was concerned, when the water receded. Appellee stated that on© could hardly detect the odor in normal times.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Anglado v. Leaf River Forest Products, Inc.
716 So. 2d 543 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1998)
Leaf River Forest Products, Inc. v. Simmons
697 So. 2d 1083 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1996)
Leaf River Forest Products, Inc. v. Ferguson
662 So. 2d 648 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1995)
Hughes v. W & S Construction Co.
196 So. 2d 339 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1967)
Western Geophysical Co. of America v. Martin
174 So. 2d 706 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1965)
Associates Discount Corp. v. McDade
158 So. 2d 57 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1963)
Fowler Butane Gas Co. v. Varner
141 So. 2d 226 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1962)
Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Williams
76 So. 2d 365 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1954)
LOVETT MOTOR CO. v. Walley
64 So. 2d 370 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1953)
Louisville & N. R. v. Whisenant
58 So. 2d 908 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1952)
Goodwin v. Misticos
42 So. 2d 397 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1949)
Bankston v. Dumont
38 So. 2d 721 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1949)
Holmes v. T. M. Strider & Co.
189 So. 518 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1939)
Stricklin v. Harvey
179 So. 345 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1938)
Howell v. Viener
176 So. 731 (Mississippi Supreme Court, 1937)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 So. 613, 175 Miss. 855, 1936 Miss. LEXIS 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/masonite-corp-v-dennis-miss-1936.