Pendoley v. Ferreira

187 N.E.2d 142, 345 Mass. 309, 2 A.L.R. 3d 924, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 659
CourtMassachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
DecidedJanuary 7, 1963
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 187 N.E.2d 142 (Pendoley v. Ferreira) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pendoley v. Ferreira, 187 N.E.2d 142, 345 Mass. 309, 2 A.L.R. 3d 924, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 659 (Mass. 1963).

Opinion

Cutter, J.

Residents of Topsfield by this bill in equity seek to enjoin the defendants (the Ferreiras) from conducting nearby in B oxford a piggery which the plaintiffs contend constitutes a nuisance. They also seek damages. The case was referred to a master, whose report was confirmed. The plaintiffs and the Ferreiras have appealed *310 from the final decree which permanently enjoined the Ferreiras “from operating their piggery ... in such an unreasonable manner as to cause a stench to emanate therefrom which materially interferes with reasonable enjoyment of the property of a large number of people living in the vicinity, and from keeping four dogs which bark and yelp, at their piggery, unattended at night.” Nine of the plaintiffs were awarded damages in amounts between $200 and $415.88, and in an aggregate amount of $2,665.88. Facts stated below are based upon the master’s findings.

The plaintiffs live in Topsfield near the Boxford line, in an area varying from 250 yards to about six tenths of a mile from the Ferreiras’ piggery. Their houses, “attractive and well kept up,” are in the price range of $16,000 to $25,000, in “a typical, modern development of quality' houses.” Topsfield since 1950 has changed greatly with “the development of industry on route 128.” That “rural community has become predominantly residential.” In 1954, 506 houses were assessed; in 1959, about 810. At least 30 new houses have been built in Topsfield near the piggery since 1949.

The Ferreiras started the piggery in 1949 on a farm of about 25 acres. They have worked hard on it. In 1950, they had 4 to 5 employees, 400 pigs, and 100 piglets; in 1960, 10 employees, 850 pigs, and 225 piglets. Their net profit has risen from $7,219 in 1954 to $11,745 in 1959. Their investment (at cost without any allowance for depreciation of depreciable items) was land $600, structures $60,000, trucks and equipment $50,000, pigs and piglets, $50,000. There “would be very little salvage value in the structures [probably about $5,000] if the piggery had to be moved. Most of the equipment would be used in a different location with little loss.” A forced sale of the pigs would result in a loss of about $20,000. The Ferreiras “are good hog farmers. Their piggery is in the upper 5% to 10% of . . . [comparable] piggeries insofar as quality of operation is concerned.” The Boxford board of health felt that the Ferreiras had made an honest effort to comply with certain *311 recommendations made in 1957 in its behalf and was “satisfied with . . . [the] operation of the farm.” The Ferreiras have not been negligent.

Prior to 1956 there were “infrequent and not particularly bothersome” odors from the piggery. Beginning in the spring of 1957, the “intensity of the odors and their frequency increased.” In the plaintiffs’ neighborhood, “a ‘garbagy,’nauseating, obnoxious odor . . . invaded the district two or three times a week. While it did not make anyone really ill, it was extremely unpleasant. . . . Outdoor living and entertaining became subject to the vagaries of the wind .... Twenty to twenty-five percent of the time, during the spring, summer and fall, the residents of this area were the recipients of unwelcome odors from the piggery. . . . The odors . . . substantially lessened their enjoyment of their property.” In 1958, 1959, and 1960, the intensity of the odors was less, but still “interfered materially with the [plaintiffs’] enjoyment of their property.” The “typical obnoxious odors of a piggery with 850 grown garbage fed pigs have invaded . . . the newly developed high quality residential area, to the discomfort and annoyance of a large number of residents, and are of such frequency and duration as to create a truly troublesome situation,” even though the “odors . . . are not unbearable or injurious to the health of a normal person.” In the circumstances, the master concluded “that the stench emanating from the Ferreira piggery — despite the due care of the defendants— is a nuisance.”

When the piggery was started, one of the Ferreiras went to the Boxford board of health. He was informed that “Boxford had no provisions for licensing piggeries.” The master found that the Ferreiras “operated with the [board’s] permission and blessing,” but that the Ferreira property had not been “assigned by the board ... as a piggery location under” G. L. c. 111, § 143 (most recently amended by St. 1956, c. 275, § 1). No public hearing has been held on such an assignment and no location assignment was noted in any record as required by § 143. Recommen *312 dations, made in behalf of the board for the conduct of the piggery, “were not an ‘order’ from the board, but in the nature of suggestions. . . . [A]lthough the board exercised a measure of control over the operation . . . the board had no intention to . . . license it under” § 143. A gasoline storage permit granted by the selectmen to the Ferreiras was not a permit from the board of health. The master concluded that no license had been granted by the town “ that would protect the . . . [Ferreiras] against the consequences of maintaining a private nuisance. ’ ’

1. The master’s conclusion that a nuisance exists is consistent with common knowledge that the offensive odors of a piggery with a large number of pigs ordinarily cannot be confined to a small area, here twenty-five acres. These owners of residences within a distance to which substantial piggery odors carry are entitled to specific relief against the frequently recurrent smells which interfere substantially with the enjoyment of their property “to the discomfort and annoyance of a large number of residents.” As the master pointed out, “Legally, a course of conduct that would have been without fault in . . . [a] rural area, has, with the change in the environs of the farm to a residential district, become unreasonable.” See Board of Health of Franklin v. Hass, 342 Mass. 421, 424; Prosser, Torts (2d ed.) § 72, esp. at p. 415. See also Boston Ferrule Co. v. Hills, 159 Mass. 147,150-151. In the nature of things, piggeries will be repulsive to residential neighbors (see Commonwealth v. Perry, 139 Mass. 198, 201) and such repulsiveness is sufficiently great to justify legislative authorization of the “complete prohibition of ‘the employment of keeping swine.’ ” See the Hass case, supra, at pp. 423-424.

It can hardly be contended that damages alone will be adequate compensation for the affront to the senses of a large group of homeowners and their families from the nauseating piggery odors. In the circumstances established by the master’s report, there exists a substantial, unreasonable interference with the proper enjoyment of their residences which calls for explicit injunctive relief. *313 See Stevens v. Rockport Granite Co. 216 Mass. 486, 491-493; Marshall v. Holbrook, 276 Mass. 341, 348; Godard v. Babson-Dow Mfg. Co. 313 Mass. 280, 286-287; Weltshe v. Graf, 323 Mass. 498, 500; Malm v. Dubrey, 325 Mass. 63, 67; Loosian v. Goudreault, 335 Mass. 253, 255; Turner v. Oxford, 338 Mass.

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Bluebook (online)
187 N.E.2d 142, 345 Mass. 309, 2 A.L.R. 3d 924, 1963 Mass. LEXIS 659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pendoley-v-ferreira-mass-1963.