Neuhs v. Grasselli Chemical Co.

5 Ohio N.P. 359
CourtCuyahoga County Common Pleas Court
DecidedApril 15, 1898
StatusPublished

This text of 5 Ohio N.P. 359 (Neuhs v. Grasselli Chemical Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga County Common Pleas Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Neuhs v. Grasselli Chemical Co., 5 Ohio N.P. 359 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1898).

Opinion

ONG, J.

During the September term of 1895, the case of Werner Neuhs v. The Grasselli Chemical Company, the case of Matilda Malebus v. The Grasselli Chemical Company, and the caso of Matthias Malchus v. The Grasselli Chemical Company, came on for hearing before this branch of the court then presiding in court room No. 6, upon the statement of the issues and the relief sought by the plaintiffs.

All three cases were at that time by the court referred to Honorable James Lawrence as referee, to hear the testimony, and report his finding of fact and law to this court.

The referee has made his report in conformity to the journal entry referring the same to him, and his report is now before the court on motion of defendant to have the same confirmed.

To his report, however, the three plaintiffs, after motion for anew tria! was by the referee overruled and exceptions duly noted, have taken and filed thirty odd exceptions.

The cases involve much property and many intricate legal questions.

On the one hand, it involves not so much property in value to the plaintiffs and yet substantially all they have, which is to them as great an amount and more in that sense than the property of the defendant involved, which is their entire plant or the plant of The Grasselli Chemical Company, amounting to something like $750,000 in value.

The cases have been very thoroughly tried and hotly contended by all the contending parties, so much so that the referee has heard and reported to this.court some 4,600 pages of testimony, and, in addition to the testimony thus taken, considered and repored to the referee, I am advised that he spent considerable time in viewing the premises, goihg [360]*360through all the departments and getting such information as was available and valuable to him in making his report to the court.

The issues involved were simply as to whether or not the business carried on' and conducted by the defendant company was in fact a nuisance; it being claimed by the plaintiffs that the defendants manufacture gases such as ammonia, nitric acid, sulphuric acid and muriatic acid gas which, by reason of the breaking of vessels containing the same, and from other causes, escaped into the air,and by reason thereof are injurious to the health and to the property,and is a public nuisance.

On the other hand, it was contended by the defendant company, that while they did manufacture the gases referred to, and some others, yet the gases do not escape in such quantity as to he either injurious to health or to property surrounding or in the vicinity of their works; and they contend that with the improved methods, all of which they have adopted at a great expense, that within the last four years there have been practically no escaping gases at all such as is alleged and claimed by the plaintiffs in this case.

I am not disposed to commend the referee very highly for hearing so much testimony, and'I regret that his patience did not exhaust long before it did in the hearing of this matter, but I need only to give the name of Mr. Lawrence as a referee, to show, and especially to the bar and bench who know him well, that lie greatest of caie was exercised by him in the hearing- of the case, and that a fearless, honest finding was made by him from the testimony and law in the case.

The court sat very patiently for two and one-half days and heard the arguments of counsel for and' against this repiort; and while, as I have said, the case has been hotly contented and ably handled on both sides, I want to and do say that counsel representing plaintiffs in this case, has evidently given to the case untiring and unceasing efforts. Indeed, I have never had, since I have been on the bench, a case presented more thoroughly than this case has been, by counsel on both sides. But neither counsel nor parties would expect the court in reviewing the report of the referee and passing upon the exceptions filed and errors assigned, toread this entire record. Yet, I have not only taken the time, but have performed the work of going through the record to such an extent as to be en tirely familiar with the facts and the body of the testimony, and did myself go to the wo:ks, look them all over from beginning- to end, in order that 1 might review the testimony and the finding of the referee with a better and clearer understanding of the case.

The motion is made to confirm the report by the defendant; and while the-report involved three small judgments: against the defendant, no exception is: taken by the defendant to the judgments, but the defendant is in court insisting that the entire report'be- confirmed as made by the referee.

The plaintiffs’ contention is that the-referee erred in admitting certain testimony and in his holding as to the-proper parties to one of the actions, together with error in his finding consist ing, as I have said, of some thirty different exceptions, and it can not now be expected that the court will give at length its reasons for the sustaining or overruling of the exceptions.

The first exception is to the sixth finding of fact contained in tiie report — and the exception is to the finding in the report in which this language is used by the referee,to-wit: “In-the business carried on upon said premises the'defendant now employs about 350 men, including its office force and salesmen, with a monthly payroll exceeding- $14.000.and the value of its plant is about $750,000. ”

The plaintiff excepted to the above finding, for the reason that such finding is immaterial, irrelevant and incompetent in the determination of the easq.

The exception to the report in that regard is overruled.

Por the same reason the second exception to the 7th finding of fact is substantially the same, and for the same reason is overruled.

The third exception is to the 8th finding of fact, in which finding the referee used the following language: “The p>art of the city of Cleveland in'which the defendant’s works are located is largely a manufacturing- district. ” The plaintiffs-except to the language used and to the finding,because they say it is immaterial and irrelevant and incompetent; and also for the reason that there is no evidence in the case supporting such finding, and the same is not sustained by the evidence.

There is no question as I sha.li make reference later on.-to the proposition, as a matter of law. The testimony would be entirely competent to show such a state of facts. And, again, upon a.n examination of the record, there is no. doubt in the mind of the court but that there is sufficient evidence to sustain the finding; and I think the finding, instead of being immaterial and irrelevant, is material and relevant, and especially so in view of the finding that the referee finally made in the cause.

The third exception is therefore overruled.

The frurtb exception is to the 8th finding of fact. The referee used the following language: “Ifind, however, that independently of the escape into the air of gases from the defendant’s works as hereinafter found, the emission of. [361]*361such coal smoke renders the premises •described in tlie petition, undesirable for residence purposes, and that such smoke injuriously affects the growth of vegetation in that vicinity.”

Again, we see nothing improper or erroneous .in the finding of the referee.

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5 Ohio N.P. 359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/neuhs-v-grasselli-chemical-co-ohctcomplcuyaho-1898.