Myer v. Minard

21 So. 2d 72, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 289
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 16, 1945
DocketNo. 6795.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 21 So. 2d 72 (Myer v. Minard) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Myer v. Minard, 21 So. 2d 72, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 289 (La. Ct. App. 1945).

Opinion

This is a suit for damages alleged to have been caused by the crowing of a big red rooster, and for an injunction to prevent like disturbances in the future. For a cause of action, plaintiffs filed the following petition:

"I. That petitioner, Mrs. Leonora Myer, is the owner of the premises situated in the City of Shreveport and known as Municipal No. 554 Kings Highway, and that petitioner, Jacob S. Myer, is the son of Mrs. Leonora Myer, and resides with her in the residence at 554 Kings Highway.

"II. Petitioners now show that Frank S. Minard, also a resident of your said Parish and State, resides at Municipal No. 540 Kings Highway, in the City of Shreveport, Louisiana, which premises adjoin the premises owned and occupied by your petitioners as aforesaid.

"III. Petitioners further show that the said Minard owns and maintains on his premises several roosters and that said roosters constitute and for some time in the past have constituted a flagrant and private nuisance, as is more particularly hereinafter set out.

"IV. Petitioners further show that for the five or six weeks immediately prior to the date of filing this petition, the said roosters, and particularly a large red rooster, have begun to crow at the hour of approximately five o'clock (four o'clock Standard Time) in the morning, and that said roosters, and particularly said red rooster, continue to crow loudly at intervals of approximately fifteen minutes until about six-thirty A. M.

"V. Petitioners now show that the noise, aural disturbance, din and cacophony produced by the crowing of said roosters can be distinctly heard by petitioners during the period mentioned, and that petitioners have been for the period of several weeks mentioned above, and up to the time of the filing of this petition are awakened from their slumbers by the din and noise created by the crowing of said roosters.

"VI. Shows that the loss of sleep and deprivation of rest sustained by petitioners on account of said noise has produced in the plaintiffs a condition of nervousness, and unless said condition is stopped, will result in extreme nervousness and mental and physical disorders.

"VII. Petitioners show that they have remonstrated with said Minard with reference to said roosters, and have called upon him in writing to cause the discontinuance of the noise and din, and for the suppression of the nuisance above set out, but without avail, and that they are entitled to a judgment herein enjoining and inhibiting said Minard from further permitting said roosters to crow during the period above mentioned, or any other period or periods of the night, and also for damages commensurate with the inconvenience, annoyance and injury suffered by them up to the time of beginning this action.

"VIII. Petitioner Mrs. Leonora Myer shows that she is entitled to the sum of $500.00 damages for the annoyance, inconvenience and disturbance of her morning slumbers by reason of the unlawful and tortious crowing of said roosters, and particularly of said large red rooster, above described, and that petitioner Jacob S. Myer is likewise entitled to the sum of $500.00 damages for the annoyance, inconvenience and disturbance of his morning slumbers by reason of the unlawful and tortious crowing of said roosters, and particularly of said large red rooster, which amounts are in no way excessive, and represent the actual damages suffered and sustained by petitioners.

"Wherefore, petitioners pray for service hereof, with citation upon said Frank S. Minard, and after all legal delays and due trial had, for judgment permanently enjoining and inhibiting said defendant from continuing to maintain said roosters, or any other roosters, and to allow them to crow so as to disturb the peace and slumbers of petitioners, and commanding him to cause the discontinuance of the said nuisance, and the further crowing of said roosters, and to fully abate the nuisance above described; and awarding damages to petitioner Mrs. Leonora Myer in said sum *Page 74 of $500.00, with legal interest from judicial demand, and in favor of petitioner Jacob S. Myer in the like sum of $500.00, with like interest from judicial demand, together with all costs of this suit."

Defendant filed exceptions of no cause and no right of action and the exception of no cause of action was sustained by the lower Court. Plaintiffs filed a motion for a re-hearing and amended their petition alleging that the City of Shreveport has a population of 100,000 inhabitants, and that the section of the City in which petitioners and defendant reside, as well as the general area, is exclusively a residential district and has been for many years and there are no areas in said locality adapted to the use of poultry farms or the raising of chickens, and, in any event, the keeping of said rooster was and is not essential to raising chickens. The rehearing was granted and after argument thereon on the exceptions filed to the amended and original petitions, the lower Court rendered judgment sustaining the exception of no right of action and dismissed plaintiffs' suit. They are now prosecuting this appeal.

Plaintiffs do not allege that defendant's rooster or other chickens are improperly housed or fenced. They do not complain of any insanitary conditions due to the chickens. They do not allege that the chickens are allowed to come on their property to scratch up the flowers, or otherwise desecrate their premises. Their sole and only complaint is that the big red rooster crows at five o'clock A. M. and every fifteen minutes thereafter until six-thirty A. M. each morning. That is, he crows seven times each morning. They do not complain of the rooster crowing at midnight or any other hour of the night or day. This big red rooster is a most unusual bird if he limits his crowing to the hours complained of by plaintiffs. It is not alleged by them that the crowing of the big red rooster was any different from that of any other rooster, therefore, under the allegations of plaintiffs' petition, the only question presented is whether or not the usual crowing of a rooster in the morning hours is a nuisance which plaintiffs are in law entitled to have abated. In Paragraph VII of the petition, plaintiffs allege that they are entitled to a judgment enjoining and inhibiting defendant from further permitting the said rooster to crow during the period of time set forth in their petition, or at any other time during the night.

[1] Although there seems to be nothing impossible in these fast-moving times, we doubt if anyone has yet learned how to stop a rooster from crowing in the early morning, other than by wringing its neck. Therefore, the right claimed by plaintiffs is the right to prohibit defendant from keeping a rooster on his premises. At this point we wish to state there is no claim by plaintiffs that there is a law prohibiting the keeping or raising of chickens in the City of Shreveport. We are therefore justified in assuming that there is no such law. The crowing of the cock in the early hours of the morning is not a nuisance per se, and it is not alleged to be a nuisance due to any unlawful or improper conduct of defendant in the handling or keeping of said rooster on his premises.

Our courts recognize the distinction between a lawful business, improperly operated, so as to constitute a nuisance, and one properly operated that causes some inconvenience to the residents of a neighborhood. In the case of Crump v. Carnahan,155 La. 648, 99 So. 493, the Court said:

"There can be no doubt of the soundness of the rule that every person is required to use his own property and to conduct his business in such a manner as not to cause undue annoyance, disturbance, and discomfort to his neighbors, nor to impair the reasonable enjoyment of his neighbor's home.

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Bluebook (online)
21 So. 2d 72, 1945 La. App. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/myer-v-minard-lactapp-1945.