Max Wright, T/a Wright's Grocery v. Masonite Corporation, Max Wright, T/a Wright's Grocery v. Masonite Corporation

368 F.2d 661, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4665
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedOctober 19, 1966
Docket9941_1
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 368 F.2d 661 (Max Wright, T/a Wright's Grocery v. Masonite Corporation, Max Wright, T/a Wright's Grocery v. Masonite Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Max Wright, T/a Wright's Grocery v. Masonite Corporation, Max Wright, T/a Wright's Grocery v. Masonite Corporation, 368 F.2d 661, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4665 (4th Cir. 1966).

Opinions

HAYNSWORTH, Chief Judge:

We affirm the District Court’s dismissal of this action in which the plaintiff sought damages for loss of a stock of goods in his grocery store as a result of contamination by noxious gases, for the invasion was not intentional within the requirements of the North Carolina rule.

In the winter of 1963, there was a strong odor of formaldehyde gas in the plaintiff’s grocery store. A large portion of his stock of goods became infected with the odor. Many items were returned after sale, and the remainder of the infected goods became unsalable. Wright had never before experienced such a loss.

He sought the assistance of a number of governmental agencies whose investigators were unable to detect any formaldehyde gas in the atmosphere outside Wright’s store, though it was obviously present within the store. Finally, however, an acquaintance with access to some laboratory facilities took samples of the outside air which, according to tests conducted by him, disclosed the presence of some such gases.

Approximately 200 feet from the plaintiff’s store was a building in which the defendant conducted its factory operations. Approximately 5% of its production of masonite board was finished with synthetic lacquers and varnishes. Such lacquers and varnishes contain a urea-formáldehyde resin. In the process of formation of the resin, a very small quantity of free formaldehyde may be left. Moreover, when such a resin is subjected to heat or certain acids it may suffer a chemical breakdown with consequent release of formaldehyde gas and ammonia.

It was the plaintiff’s theory that formaldehyde gas was present in the exhaust from the spray booth in which synthetic lacquers and varnishes were applied to some of defendant’s products and was the source of the gases which permeated his stock of goods. His initial inference was not an unnatural [663]*663one, for when he first noticed the obnoxious odor in his store, it seemed to him to resemble the odor of a lacquer or varnish, though the governmental investigators thought the odor in the store unlike that of the defendant’s exhaust gases.

Though there was evidence of a source of the contamination inside the store, in the vaporization of lighter fluid leaking from a number of containers stored near a gas-fired heater, and though the odor disappeared shortly after those containers were moved at the suggestion of governmental investigators, the District Court resolved the factual conflict in plaintiff’s favor. It found that the defendant’s plant was the source of the offending gases that caused the harm to the plaintiff’s goods. At the same time, the District Court found, on uncontradicted evidence, that the defendant knew nothing of the harm that the plaintiff was suffering until after the event, that it had received no prior complaints from the plaintiff or from anyone else and that others living in the area experienced no similar harm. So far as appears on this record, no one has since suffered any such harm from exhaust gases discharged by the defendant.

On the basis of these findings the District Court concluded that the invasion was not intentional and that the defendant’s conduct was not an actionable private nuisance under the iaws of North Carolina, which govern us in this diversity case.

Some American states have applied the rule of Rylands v. Fletcher,1 in noxious gas cases. They are collected in Prosser on Torts, 3rd Edition, at pages 524-6. They include Maryland and South Carolina, in this Circuit, but not North Carolina. The more general rule in the United States confines the Rylands v. Fletcher doctrine to ultrahazardous activities. This is recognized by Prosser and by the Restatement. Since the North Carolina Supreme Court, in discussing this subject, frequently has cited and paraphrased the Restatement, it provides a particularly useful point of reference.

In the Restatement of Torts, the Ry-lands v. Fletcher doctrine, as applied to ultrahazardous activity, is set forth in §§ 519-20. The very different rules governing liability for private nuisances are set forth in Chapter 40, the first section of which is 822. That section provides that an actor is liable for a nontrespassory invasion of another’s interests in land if, in this context,2 the invasion is both intentional and unreasonable. Under § 825, the invasion is intentional within the meaning of § 822 only if the actor acts for the purpose of causing the harm or knows that it is resulting or is substantially certain to result from his conduct. Sections 826, et seq., elaborate the rules for application of the concurrent requirement that the actor’s conduct be unreasonable.

Morgan v. High Penn Oil Co., 238 N. C. 185, 77 S.E.2d 682, was a noxious gas case. There was no question that the invasion was intentional within the meaning of Restatement §§ 822 and 825, for it was the result of a persistent discharge of gases after actual notice of the harm they were causing. Nevertheless, the Supreme Court of North Carolina took pains to point out:

“ * * [A] person is subject to liability for an intentional invasion when his conduct is unreasonable under the circumstances of the particular case * * *. See Scope and Introduction Note to Chapter 40, American Law Institute’s Restatement of the Law of Torts * * *.
“An invasion of another’s interest in the use and enjoyment of land is intentional in the law of private nuisance when the person whose conduct is in [664]*664question as a basis for liability acts for the purpose of causing it, or knows that it is resulting from his conduct, or knows that it is substantially certain to result from his conduct. Restatement of the Law of Torts, § 825 * (page 689).

Its ultimate conclusion was expressed in the following language:

“ * * * When the complaint is construed as a whole, however, it alleges facts which show a private nuisance resulting from an intentional and unreasonable invasion of the plaintiffs’ interest in the use and enjoyment of their land.” (page 690).

The first sentence from the first excerpt from the Morgan opinion, quoted above, cannot be construed as meaning the injury is intentional if the actor’s conduct is unreasonable. In that case, it was conceded that the harm was intentional. The action was for an injunction and for damages suffered after notice to the defendant, admittedly received, of the harm the fumes were causing. The Court’s language is simply the equivalent of, “though the invasion be intentional within the meaning of the rules contained in Restatement, Torts, Chapter 40, the actor is not liable unless his activity was also unreasonable.” That this is so, finds support in the fact that the Court documented its statement by a general citation to the entire introductory note, to Chapter 40 of the Restatement. Any doubt about the meaning of the first sentence, however, is dispelled by the fact that, in its very next breath, the opinion defines exactly what is meant by an “intentional invasion.” This is done in the very language of Restatement § 825, though without quotations, and is followed, immediately and appropriately, by a citation of that section.

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Bluebook (online)
368 F.2d 661, 1966 U.S. App. LEXIS 4665, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/max-wright-ta-wrights-grocery-v-masonite-corporation-max-wright-ta-ca4-1966.