People v. Detroit, Belle Isle & Windsor Ferry Co.

153 N.W. 799, 187 Mich. 177, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 570
CourtMichigan Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 23, 1915
DocketDocket No. 167
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 153 N.W. 799 (People v. Detroit, Belle Isle & Windsor Ferry Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Michigan Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Detroit, Belle Isle & Windsor Ferry Co., 153 N.W. 799, 187 Mich. 177, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 570 (Mich. 1915).

Opinion

Steere, J.

This case involves the validity of an ordinance of the city of Detroit relative to the so-called smoke nuisance as applied to marine practice. Section 1 of the ordinance provides:

“That the emission of dense black or gray smoke from any smokestack or chimney used in connection with any steam boiler, locomotive or furnace of any description, in any apartment house, building, boat or any other structure, or in any building used as a factory, or for any purpose of trade, or for any other purpose whatever, within the corporate limits of the city of Detroit shall be a public nuisance per se.”

Section 6 of said ordinance is as follows:

“The owner or owners of any locomotive, engine, steamboat, tug, dredge, or pile driver, and the general manager, superintendent, yardmaster, engineer, fireman or other officer or employee having in charge or control the operation of any locomotive, engine, steamboat, tug, dredge, or pile driver, within the corporate limits of the city of Detroit, who shall cause, [179]*179permit or allow such dense black or gray smoke to be emitted therefrom within said corporate limits, shall be deemed guilty of creating a public nuisance and of violating the provisions of this ordinance.”

Under this ordinance complaint was filed against defendant and appellant in the recorder’s court on the 18th day of August, 1908. A motion to quash and dismiss the complaint was made by the defendant on several grounds:

(1) That in a former case in the same court the ordinance was held to be impossible of observance in marine practice and therefore invalid, and that decision was a bar to this prosecution. '
(2) That the ordinance was unreasonable and invalid because there was no known appliance which could be used upon marine boilers to prevent the issuance of smoke.
(3) Because it would destroy the value of defendant’s property, it being a practical impossibility to rearrange the equipment of the boats so as to prevent the issuance of smoke.
(4) Because the ordinance destroys the value of defendant’s property without making adequate compensation therefor, and deprives the defendant of its property without due process of law.
(5) That the Federal courts had exclusive jurisdiction to regulate the navigation of these vessels.
(6) That the ordinance and complaint declare smoke a nuisance per se, and there is no charge that defendant created or maintained a common-law nuisance.

The motion to quash being denied, proofs were taken at intervals from November 27, 1908, until February 16, 1911. This testimony related to the reasonableness or unreasonableness of the ordinance as applied to marine practice; as to what devices to prevent the issuance of smoke had been able to accomplish on boats; and the experiments of this defendant and others with devices to prevent smoke emission and their impracticability in the operation of boats. On February 16, 1911, at the close of the case, the motion [180]*180to quash was again renewed for the same reasons, and for the further reasons:

(1) That the ordinance was invalid and unreasonable, because it made no allowance for smoke that must be emitted when fires were being started, cleaned, or pricked; (2) because it appeared from the testimony that there were no devices known in marine practice that would successfully prevent the emission of smoke.

This motion was denied, the defendant found guilty, and a fine was imposed.

The case is reviewed in this court by writ of error. It appears from the record that in October, 1906, a similar complaint had been lodged against the same defendant, and that on May 27, 1907, the same judge who heard the case at bar delivered an opinion, in part, as follows:

“I find, as charged in respondent’s fourth objection, that_ this ordinance is impossible of observance in marine practice. The overwhelming preponderance of evidence in this case compels me to this conclusion. Indeed, after the fiasco in the Lansdowne Case, the people seem unable to suggest any device which has even a fair record for preventing smoke in marine practice. I do not believe it would be just or reasonable to compel marine interests to experiment with every quack nostrum for smoke prevention which is exploited by promoters. In land practice, approved and successful devices are known to the engineering profession; I am convinced that none such is known in marine practice. If there was, I am confident that Frank E. Kirby would know, and tell, about it.”

Nevertheless the court on the second hearing reached a contrary conclusion. A portion of the opinion follows':

“The whole subject of the unreasonableness of this ordinance and of the possibility of complying with its mandate in the present state of the marine engineering art has been exhaustively investigated and studied for a long period of time. Witnesses of- noted scientific attainment have been produced, and their testimony is in the record. In addition to the taking of testimony, [181]*181the court and counsel went to the city of Chicago in June, 1910, and personally investigated the operation of the marine plant in the dredge ‘Francis J. Simmons,’ operating off Lincoln Park in Chicago, and of the tug ‘Keystone,’ operating in conjunction with the dredge ‘Simmons.’ These marine plants were equipped with what is known as the Jones underfeed stoker. The ‘Simmons’ is engaged in sucking dirt from the bottom of Lake Michigan and pumping it through possibly a mile of pipe to the shore, where an addition is being built to Lincoln Park. The work is irregular; frequent stops being necessary.
“The personal inspection of the court was conclusive, beyond all cavil or question, that the marine plant of the ‘Francis J. Simmons’ did not emit any objectionable smoke when the underfeed stoker system was in operation; but that, when the underfeed stoker system was shut off, dense black or gray smoke was forthwith emitted from the stack, and almost immediately ceased when the underfeed stoker system was put back in operation.
“The personal observation of the court as to the tug ‘Keystone’ was to the effect that, although the Jones underfeed stoker was installed in cramped quarters, it rendered satisfactory service in preventing the emission of smoke.
“In June, 1911, counsel for the city invited the court and counsel for the defendant to inspect a similar equipment on an excursion steamer known as the ‘City of Benton Harbor,’ plying between Chicago, 111., and Benton Harbor, Mich. Through some misunderstanding, counsel for the defendant did not participate in this inspection, but counsel for the city and the court journeyed from Chicago to Benton Harbor on the ‘City of Benton Harbor,’ and personally observed the effect of the operation of the Jones underfeed stoker in that marine plant. For several miles of the journey another ship, called the ‘City of South Haven,’ which was not equipped with the Jones underfeed stoker, journeyed on a parallel course to that of the ‘City of Benton Harbor,’ and the contrast in the smoke emitted was most marked.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 N.W. 799, 187 Mich. 177, 1915 Mich. LEXIS 570, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-detroit-belle-isle-windsor-ferry-co-mich-1915.