Siviglia v. Spinelli

190 Misc. 690, 75 N.Y.S.2d 120, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3359
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 13, 1947
StatusPublished

This text of 190 Misc. 690 (Siviglia v. Spinelli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Siviglia v. Spinelli, 190 Misc. 690, 75 N.Y.S.2d 120, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3359 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 1947).

Opinion

Warner, J.

Plaintiffs are the owners in fee and the occupants of certain real property in the city of Auburn consisting of. the dwelling and premises known as No. 12 Underwood Street, which said street runs in an easterly and westerly direction. This property is located on the southerly side of the street. There are houses on each side of Underwood Street in the vicinity of plaintiffs’ residence. The American Locomotive Works, the Hemingway Canning Factory, - the Auburn Shank Company and the Auburn Branch of the New York Central Railroad Company are all in the vicinity of plaintiffs’ residence.

[691]*691Defendants are the owners in fee and the occupants of certain real property consisting of the dwelling and premises known as No. 14 Underwood Street on the south side thereof, adjoining the premises of the plaintiffs and westerly therefrom.

Plaintiffs and defendants have occupied their respective properties since sometime prior to the year 1943. The distance between the houses on said properties is about six feet. Sometime in 1943 the plaintiffs built an additional story over their kitchen and put in two additional windows on the side of their house towards the defendants’ residence. Thereafter, plaintiffs complained that the chimney over defendants’ kitchen was not sufficiently high causing smoke and soot therefrom to be carried upon plaintiffs’ premises to their damage and discomfort. Thereupon defendants built an addition to the said chimney over their kitchen raising it to a height about even with the eaves of the addition built by plaintiffs. Defendants in the same year, 1943, built a chimney over a small shack which stands just at the rear of their residence.

Plaintiffs claim that in the operation of said chimneys and the cook stoves attached to same, the defendants use for fuel, slabwood, bark or other wood materials, and that as a result of the manner in which the defendants use and operate said stoves, said smoke stacks or chimneys emanate a large quantity of smoke, soot and partially burned cinders and shavings which are carried by the winds upon plaintiffs’ lands, premises and into their dwelling and on their sidewalks, porches, doors and windows to the great damage and discomfort of the plaintiffs and their family. Accordingly, plaintiffs have brought this action and demand judgment “ 1. That the defendants be forever enjoined and restrained from continuing the said nuisance and from casting or permitting to be cast upon plaintiffs’ said premises said smoke, soot, burned cinders and ashes; 2. That in the alternative, the defendants be ordered to raise their chimneys to a proper elevation whereby said smoke, soot, burned cinders and shavings will not be carried upon the premises of plaintiffs.”

If the conditions' complained of by the plaintiffs constitute a nuisance, then such nuisance is to be classified as a private nuisance since it threatens only a few persons.

In McCarty v. Natural Carbonic Gas Co. (189 N. Y. 40) the subject of private nuisance is considered and Judge Vann writing for the court said: “ The law relating to private nuisance is a law of degree and usually turns on the question of fact whether the use is reasonable or not under all the cireum[692]*692stances. No hard and fast rule controls the subject, for a use that is reasonable under one set of facts would be unreasonable under another. Whether the use of property to carry on a lawful business, which creates smoke or noxious gases in excessive quantities, amounts to a nuisance depends on the facts of each particlar case. * * * Location, priority of occupation, and the fact that the injury is only occasional are not conclusive, but are to be considered in connection with all the evidence and the inference drawn from all the facts proved whether the controlling fact exists that the use is unreasonable. If that fact is found, a nuisance is established and the plaintiff is entitled to relief in some form. Unless that fact is found, or it is an -inference of law from other facts found, no nuisance is established, even if the plaintiff shows that he has suffered some damage, annoyance and injury. * * * Whether the use of property by one person is reasonable, with reference to the comfortable enjoyment of his own property by another, generally depends upon many and varied facts; such as location, nature of the use, character of the neighborhood, extent and frequency of the injury, the effect on the enjoyment of life, health and property and the like.”

Does the controlling fact exist here that the use by the defendants of the two chimneys complained of is unreasonable? This fact plaintiffs must establish by a fair preponderance of proof. If so established then the plaintiffs, in addition, must sustain the burden of proof in showing that because of such unreasonable use by defendants that plaintiffs suffer some unnecessary damage or annoyance which is material and substantial.

It was established on the trial that the complaints, with respect to the use by the defendants of the chimney over their kitchen, arose after the plaintiffs had built an additional story over their kitchen. It seems therefor that the priority rights of the defendants reflect an advantage in their favor with respect to the complaints made by plaintiffs after the alteration of their residence. Nor is it to be overlooked that the defendants after the aforesaid alteration incurred expense in raising the chimney substantially over their kitchen in a reasonable effort to satisfy the demands of the plaintiffs and preserve neighborly peace and harmony. However, plaintiffs are now demanding that defendants be either enjoined from continuing .the use of said chimney or be ordered to raise it to a proper elevation so that smoke, soot, burned cinders and shavings will not be carried upon their premises.

[693]*693Plaintiffs called the City Manager and the Fire Chief as witnesses. The former testified relative to complaints made to him by plaintiffs subsequent to January 1, 1944, relative to conditions at No. 14 Underwood Street causing annoyance to plaintiffs at No. 12 Underwood Street. The latter testified to making an inspection at No. 14 Underwood Street in 1943, and that he observed the chimney over the defendants’ kitchen which came up to about second story windows at No. 12 Underwood Street; that he directed the' occupants of No. 14 Underwood Street to raise said chimney; that he also inspected the shack in the rear of said premises and advised that said shack was a fire hazard and that the chimney thereon should be raised above the gable of the house; that he was at said premises again in 1944 and observed that the chimney over the kitchen on defendants’ premises had been raised 18 or 20 inches. It does not appear that any inspection was made by him on either occasion of plaintiffs’ premises with respect to any damage by smoke or soot but that he inspected the sttfve in defendants’ kitchen which said stove was of a type in general use.

Plaintiffs called a daughter, Mary Comerico, and a neighbor, Carmela Morabito, who testified that smoke from defendants’ chimneys comes over upon and into plaintiffs’ premises when the wind is in the west. That this occurs mostly in the morning. The testimony of each of these witnesses was very general with respect to damage and annoyance except for a specific instance in or about Labor Day, 1944, at 4 a.m., when they stated that smoke came into the residence of plaintiffs’ causing Mrs. Siviglia to be ill.

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Related

Campbell v. . Seaman
63 N.Y. 568 (New York Court of Appeals, 1876)
McCarty v. . Natural Carbonic Gas Co.
81 N.E. 549 (New York Court of Appeals, 1907)

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Bluebook (online)
190 Misc. 690, 75 N.Y.S.2d 120, 1947 N.Y. Misc. LEXIS 3359, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siviglia-v-spinelli-nysupct-1947.