N. K. Fairbank Co. v. Nicolai

112 Ill. App. 261, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 523
CourtAppellate Court of Illinois
DecidedFebruary 25, 1904
DocketGen. No. 11,168
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 112 Ill. App. 261 (N. K. Fairbank Co. v. Nicolai) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Appellate Court of Illinois primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
N. K. Fairbank Co. v. Nicolai, 112 Ill. App. 261, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 523 (Ill. Ct. App. 1904).

Opinion

Mr. Presiding Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

April 10, 1900, appellee commenced an action on the case against appellant and others, which was subsequently dismissed against all defendants except appellant, and such proceedings were had in the cause that appellee recovered judgment against appellant for the sum of $500, from which judgment this appeal is taken.

It is averred, in substance, in the plaintiff’s declaration, that the defendant, prior to the commencement of the suit, caused to be deposited on lots 4 and 5 in block 40 of the Canal Trustees’ subdivision of fractional part of S. E. ¼ of Sec. 21, Town. 39 N., R. 14, E., etc., a large quantity of poisonous, rancid, injurious matter, which emitted a foul, obnoxious and injurious odor, intending thereby to injure plaintiff and deprive him of the use and value of his sub-lots 2 and 3 of block 6 in the same subdivision, and permitted said matter to so remain for a long time, etc.; and that the substance so deposited and the odor emitted therefrom had caused the death of a large number of horses belonging to the defendant, and have caused a great deal of sickness in the immediate vicinity of the plaintiff’s property, and plaintiff and his family have been sick, sore, etc., as a result of the presence of said substances, and by reason thereof the utility and value of plaintiff’s property have' been greatly diminished.

Appellant pleaded the general issue.

The location of the premises in question is shown by the following plat:

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Blackwell and Purple streets are north and south streets, and Eighteenth street and the streets parallel therewith are east and west streets. Appellant’s factory extends from Eighteenth street on the north to Twentieth street on the south, and from Blackwell street on the west to Wpntworth avenue (not shown on the plat) on the east. The shaded parts north and south of Tweptieth street indicate the places where it is claimed appellant deposited the substances mentioned in the declaration. Appellee is the owner of sub-lots 2 and 3 on the south side of Twentieth street, fronting that street, and opposite the shaded space north of Twentieth street. Sub-lot 2, the most easterly of the sub-lots, is twenty-four feet west of the shaded space south of Twentieth street. • Sub-lots 2 and 3 are, together, .forty-nine feet in width by 100 feet deep. Appellee has lived in a house on sub-lot 2, known as number 261 Twentieth street, for forty-seven years, and rents out sub-lot 3, known as number 263. Appellant has been engaged in the manufacture of soap at its factory, located as above described, for many years. The shaded part north of Twentieth street will be referred to as the north lot, and the shaded part south of that street as the east lot. The material deposited on the north and east lots was soap-stoclc, which is thus described by John A. Kyle, an analytical chemist in appellant’s employ: “The substance com moni v known as soap-stock is a precipitation that is obtained in the refining of crude cotton seed oil. The crude oil is taken and put into agitators and mixed 'with a solution of caustic soda, and the soap and coloring matter precipitates, under suitable conditions, and settles to the bottom of this machine, and they draw the clear off the top, and the sediment is the soap-stock.” The soap-stock was contained in barrels varying from two to three feet in width. One witness testified that the capacity of the barrels was about 400 pounds. Kyle, appellant’s witness, testified that there were 2,600 barrels stored on the north lot in the spring of 1900, and that the greatest number of barrels stored on the east lot, at any one time, was 7,000. Other witnesses testifled to a much larger number of barrels having been stored, on the east lot. Both lots were fenced in and the barrels Were placed in tiers on the lots. All soap-stock was removed from both lots by September 20, 1900.

There was evidence tending to prove that the barrels were leaky and were sometimes broken, and that' quantities of their contents, which was semi-fluid, ran out on the ground. The main contest on the trial was as to whether the odor proceeding from the soap-stock was or was not offensive, and on this question the evidence was so conflicting as to be irreconcilable, a number of witnesses for appellee testifying that the odor was exceedingly offensive, so much so as to produce nausea and temporary sickness, while a large number of witnesses for the appellant testified that the odor was not offensive to them, some of them even testifying that they could not perceive it at all. The appellee put in evidence the pleadings, master’s report and decree in a chancery suit entitled Frederick Nicolai v. The N. K. Fairbank Company, in respect to which it was stipulated as follows: “It was, thereupon, stipulated by all parties that the parties to this proceeding, and the property involved, are the same as those in the proceeding wherein the pleadings, master’s report and decree offered in evidence were filed.” The bill was for an injunction to restrain appellant from storing soap-stock near to appellee’s premises, the complaint being substantially the same as in the present case. The decree, after confirming the master’s report, finds, among other things, as follows: “That the defendant uses large quantities of soap-stock; that for two and one-half years prior to filing of bill it rented and occupied the east lot, which is about thirty feet east of complainant’s premises, for the storage of many barrels of soap-stock; that the said soap-stock barrels were not all made tight and secure against the action of the elements, and that on being exposed to the sun many barrels warped, came apart and became broken, so that the contents of the barrels, to a large extent, flowed out upon the ground; that said soap-stock when so exposed emits a strong, rancid, oily smell, which is offensive and at times so strong as to make complainant’s house an unpleasant place to live in. and at times to be nauseating, and that it has produced sickness to the stomach on part of complainant’s family and others in the neighborhood; that said odor is so strong and offensive that no person ought to be compelled to endure it.”

The ordering part of the decree is as follows: “It is therefore ordered, adjudged and decreed that the injunction heretofore granted be modified to conform to this decree and that said defendant, M. K. Fairbank Company, and its officers, agents, servants, solicitors and attorneys, and each and all of them, be, and they are, hereby perpetually enjoined and restrained, and hereby commanded to desist from in any manner storing or maintaining, on the two lots by this decree found to be employed by them for the storage of said soap-stock, soap-stock in barrels or other receptacles which are not tight and sound or which will permit said soap-stock to escape upon the ground and emit an odor in such a manner as to be obnoxious and offensive to the complainant and his family or any or either of them, or from attempting so to do.”

The contentions of appellant’s counsel are as follows:

1. The declaration is insufficient, in not alleging that the offensive odors permeated the air on appellee’s premises; citing a form given by Chitty. It cannot properly be said of the declaration that it does- not substantially state a cause of action. It is, perhaps, not as scientifically drafted as it might be; but there are no' defects in it insusceptible of cure by verdict.

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Related

City of Chicago v. McNally
128 Ill. App. 375 (Appellate Court of Illinois, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
112 Ill. App. 261, 1904 Ill. App. LEXIS 523, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/n-k-fairbank-co-v-nicolai-illappct-1904.