Robichaux v. Huppenbauer

231 So. 2d 626, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5716
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 2, 1970
DocketNo. 3774
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 231 So. 2d 626 (Robichaux v. Huppenbauer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Louisiana Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robichaux v. Huppenbauer, 231 So. 2d 626, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5716 (La. Ct. App. 1970).

Opinion

DOMENGEAUX, Judge.

Multiple plaintiffs alleging to be owners, tenants or residents surrounding the property of defendant Louis Huppenbauer lo[627]*627cated at 1618 Annette Street in the City of New Orleans filed suit for a writ of injunction against defendant alleging that he is utilizing the property as a stable for horses and prayed that he be enjoined from so using it. They allege that the horses and the droppings and other leavings deposited by them have attracted various types of insects and vermin which infest the area, and have caused a stench and odor to permeate their houses which persists throughout the neighborhood. They suggest that this condition is such that it is a public nuisance in violation of Article 667 of the Louisiana Civil Code.

After hearing, the lower court ordered that a writ of injunction issue, permanently enjoining the defendant Louis Huppen-bauer, his agents, employees and all other persons, firms or corporations acting or claiming to act on his behalf, from operating a stable or keeping horses on the premises at 1618 Annette Street in the City of New Orleans. Defendant was granted a suspensive appeal.

We find from the evidence that the defendant is in the sightseeing business and uses colonial-type horse-drawn carriages in the French Quarter in the City of New Orleans for that purpose, and the horses used therefor are stabled at defendant’s aforementioned property at 1618 Annette Street which location is approximately one mile from the French Quarter. The individual horses are hitched to individual carriages and driven to the sightseeing area and after they have completed their tours in the French Quarter, are driven back to the stables where they are kept in livery until they are rehitched for the next day’s work.1

The various witnesses who testified indicated that the number of horses kept at defendant’s stable varies from time to time, from as few as five to as many as 18, inasmuch as the horses come and go. The trial Judge’s conclusion that from 10 to 16 horses are kept at said stables, appears to be an accurate estimate of the numbers involved. The property used by defendant as the stable area was purchased by him in July, 1968 and he immediately began stabling his horses on said property. The property has a narrow frontage on Annette Street of 32 feet which is used as a driveway and extends to the rear for 90 feet where it widens out to 64 feet by 100 feet, said widened area being approximately in the center of the city square. There are a number of stalls situated in the area measuring 65 feet by 100 feet. The immediate neighborhood is residential, most of the houses being of the single or double shotgun, row-type variety. The plaintiff Joseph Bechet resides at 1616 Annette Street immediately next to defendant’s stables; the plaintiff Warren Johnson resides at 1612 Annette Street, one house away; the plaintiff John Robicheaux resides at 1628 Annette Street, two doors from the stable’s gate.

The testimony indicates that, although, prior owners had generally used the property in question as a stable, there had never been such an accumulation of horses as is herein involved prior to the acquisition of the property by defendant in July, 1968.

The record contains testimony from officials of the Bureau of Public Health Sanitation of the City of New Orleans which indicates that two affidavits had been filed against defendant, one with respect to maintaining a harboring place for rats and permitting such conditions to remain, and the other with respect to the improper disposal of manure. These affidavits were filed in one of the Municipal Courts of the City of New Orleans and although the record is not completely clear on the question, presumably the affidavits were recalled by the City of New Orleans Health Department and dismissed after certain inspections were made, which resulted in the present suit being filed. Although the [628]*628ordinances of the City of New Orleans regulate the keeping of horses or stables, (City Code Chapter 7, § 7-7 and Chapter 29, articles 4 and 5), nevertheless we are not here concerned with whether or not defendant secured a permit from the city authorities for keeping horses (City Ordinance No. 2570, § 2), or whether or not the defendant has complied with the requirements of the City Code, supra, but only concerned with whether the defendant maintains a nuisance under Article 667 and the other applicable articles of the Louisiana Civil Code.

It would appear that defendant, at least after the aforementioned affidavits were filed against him, has made some effort to comply with the health regulations, but notwithstanding, we are impressed, as was the trial judge, that the presence of defendant’s horses in such numbers with the resulting continuous deposit of droppings, both solid and fluid, has caused the area to become a breeding place for flies and other insects, particularly the green horsefly type and has become a harboring place for rats. These conditions have further caused a stench and odor that inevitably results from such a condition, particularly in damp and rainy weather. In spite of reasonable cleaning and sweeping of the small area and the removal of manure daily, these conditions persist. It is evident also that during rains, the deposits accumulated on the surface of the ground wash out to the street, sidewalks and gutters fronting defendant’s property. The various plaintiffs and other witnesses testified to these conditions in glaring detail. There was also testimony by some of the plaintiffs that they and other members o.f their families have been bitten by large horseflies, the bite producing a stinging sensation with resultant itching and in some cases water blisters.

The Articles of our Civil Code applicable to the facts of this case are 666, 667, 668 and 669.2 Generally they provide that although the owner of real property may do with it whatever he pleases, he cannot conduct operations upon same which will unreasonably inconvenience his neighbor in the enjoyment of his property.

We deem it appropriate at this point to set out the distinction between a “nuisance per se” and a “nuisance in fact.” A nuisance per se is an act, occupation or structure which is a nuisance at all times and under any circumstances regardless of location or surrounding. A nuisance in fact is one which becomes a nuisance by reason of particular circümstances and surroundings. See Borgnemouth Realty Co. v. Gulf Soap Corporation, 212 La. 57, 31 So.2d 488, Hutson v. Continental Oil Company, La.App., 136 So.2d 714; 66 C.J.S. Verbo Nuisances § 3, pp. 733-734.

Although no cases were cited to us, nor have we been able to find any jurispru[629]*629dence in which the maintaining of a horse or livery stable was declared to be a nuisance, in the old case of Board of Aidermen v. Norman, 51 La.Ann. 736, 25 So. 401 (1899), where from 100 to 150 cattle were kept in pens within the corporate limits, our Supreme Court in passing upon the legality of a city ordinance declared:

“Open cattle yards and pens, located and maintained, as these are, within the limits of an incorporated town, where cattle in numbers are kept for a long period of time, to be fed and fattened for market, belong, we think, to that class of things which ‘must necessarily’ become nuisances.”

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Related

Robichaux v. Huppenbauer
245 So. 2d 385 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1971)

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Bluebook (online)
231 So. 2d 626, 1970 La. App. LEXIS 5716, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robichaux-v-huppenbauer-lactapp-1970.