Pennoyer v. Allen

14 N.W. 609, 56 Wis. 502, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 404
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 9, 1883
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 14 N.W. 609 (Pennoyer v. Allen) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pennoyer v. Allen, 14 N.W. 609, 56 Wis. 502, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 404 (Wis. 1883).

Opinion

Oa'ssoday, J.

The order sustaining the demurrer to the equitable counterclaim was affirmed by this coux-t in 5.0 Wis., .308, for the reasons there given. A similar ruling was made in a similar action in favor of the same plaintiffs, and against these defendants and another, in 51 Wis., 360, for the-reasons there given. We do not think that the settlement of September 24, 1867, is a bar to this action, especially as the defendants have since that time, as shown by the undisputed evidence, and, in effect, found by the jury, made several enlargements to their tannery, and each in the direction of the water-cure in question. The court allowed evidence to be given upon the part of the defendants, against the objection of the plaintiffs, tending to show that the tannery was [507]*507kept by the defendants more than ordinarily clean,— cleaner than an average of tanneries. As bearing upon that question, the court was requested to instruct the jury that “ the fact that a business is a lawful one, and that it is conducted in the best possible manner, will not prevent it from being a nuisance.” This instruction was refused 'by the court, and the plaintiffs excepted. And then the court, against objection on the part of the plaintiffs, submitted to the jury, in effect, whether the defendants during the time in question operated their tannery, and the business connected therewith, in a reasonable and proper manner, and whether in such operation any odors, other than such as were incident to a tannery properly conducted, were sent over and upon the premises of the plaintiffs. The first of these questions was answered by the jury in the affirmative, and the second in the negative. These rulings can only be sustained upon the theory that a tannery doing the amount of business of the defendants, operated in a reasonable and proper manner, and sending forth no odors, except such as are incident to such a tannery properly conducted, cannot be a nuisance to the owner and occupant of adjacent premises used as a water-cure like the one in question. Is such the law?

In Walter v. Selfe, 4 De G. &. S., 315, a brick-kiln on premises adjacent to the plaintiffs was held to be a private nuisance, and in deciding the case the learned Yice-Ohancellor Knight Biíuce took occasion to say that he had no doubt, upon the facts and the law, that the plaintiffs, as owners and occupiers of the house, offices, and garden, were “ entitled to an untainted and unpolluted stream of air for the necessary supply and reasonable use of himself and his family there; or, in other words, to have there, for the ordinary purposes of breath and life, an unpolluted and untainted atmosphere; . . . meaning by untainted and unpolluted, not .necessarily air as fresh, free and pure as at the time of building the plaintiffs’ house, . . . but air not rendered to an im[508]*508portant degree less compatible, or, at least, not rendered incompatible, with the physical comfort of human existence — a phrase to be understood, of course, with reference to the climate and habits of England.” That decision was affirmed on appeal by Lord St. Leostaeds (id., 326), and subsequently approved in Pollock v. Lester, 11 Hare, 266, and followed in the Exchequer Chamber in Bamford v. Turnley, 3 Best & S., 62.

In this last case the trial court “ directed the jury . . . to find for the defendant, notwithstanding his burning the brick had interfered with the plaintiff’s comfort, if they were of opinion that the spot where the bricks were burnt was a 'proper am,d convenient spot, and the burning of them was, under the circumstances, a reasonable use by the defendant of his own land.” This direction was held to be erroneous, and the verdict for the defendant was set aside. In giving the opinion of the court it was observed that the direction was plainly founded on a passage in Comyn’s Digest, for which no authority had been cited, and that there was a want of pre" cisión, especially in the words “ reasonable and convenient,” which rendered its meaning by no means clear. The court added: Does this expression mean, as the court understood it in that case, that the place is proper and convenient for the purpose of carrying on the trade, or does it mean that it is a place where a nuisance will not be caused to another ? ” The court then quotes approvingly this sentence: “ A tan-house is necessary, for all men wear shoes, and nevertheless it may be pulled down if it be erected to the nuisance of another; in like manner of a glass-house; and they ought to be erected in places convenient for them.” The opinion continues: The term appears to be used in the same sense when applied to questions as to public nuisances. Thus it is said in Hawkins: . . . £ It seems to be agreed that a brew-house, erected in such an inconvenient place wherein the business cannot be carried on without greatly incommoding the neigh-[509]*509borlioocl, may be indicted as a common nuisance.’ It would seem, therefore, that just as the use of an offensive trade will be indictable as a public nuisance if it be carried on in an inconvenient place, i. e., a place where it greatly incommodes a multitude of persons, so it will be actionable as a private nuisance if it be carried on in an inconvenient place, i. e., a place where it greatly incommodes an individual. If this be the true construction of the expression convenient,’ in the passage from Oomyn’s Digest, the doctrine contained in it amounts to no more than what has long been settled law, viz.: that a man may, without being liable to an action, exercise a lawful trade, as that of a butcher, or brewer, and the like, notwithstanding it be carried on so near the house of another as to be an annoyance to him, in rendering his residence there less delectable or agreeable, provided the trade be so conducted that it does not cause what amounts, in point of law, to a nuisance to the neighboring house.” The court then observed that the introduction into the law of England of the doctrine that a place may be proper and convenient for the carrying on of a trade, notwithstanding it is a place where the trade cannot be carried on without causing a nuisance to a neighbor, would, we think, lead to great inconvenience and hardship, because, ... if the doctrine is to be maintained at all, it must be maintained to the extent that, however ruinous may be the amount of nuisance caused to a neighbor’s property by carrying on an offensive trade, he is without redress if a jury shall deem it right to find that the place where the trade is carried on is a proper and convenient place for the purpose.” The same doctrine was sanctioned by the House of Lords in St. Helen's Smelting Co. v. Tipping, 11 H. L. Gas., 642. See, also, Gaunt v. Fynney, 4 Moak’s Eng. R., 718; Benjamin v. Storr, 10 id., 231.

In Rex v. White, 1 Burr., 333, it was held that “ it is a common nuisance to make acid spirit of sulphur, and thereby impregnate the air with noisome stinks.” In that case Lord [510]*510Mansfield observed, that “ it is not necessary that the smell should be unwholesome; it is enough if it renders the enjoyment of life and property uncomfortable.”

In Aldrich v. Howard, 8 R. I., 246, it was held that “ a livery stable might be a nuisance, notwithstanding it may be an admitted fact that it was well and properly built, in a location as unobjectionable as would be any in the town or city, and is properly kept and managed.

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Bluebook (online)
14 N.W. 609, 56 Wis. 502, 1883 Wisc. LEXIS 404, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pennoyer-v-allen-wis-1883.