Smiths' v. McConathy

11 Mo. 517
CourtSupreme Court of Missouri
DecidedJuly 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 11 Mo. 517 (Smiths' v. McConathy) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Smiths' v. McConathy, 11 Mo. 517 (Mo. 1848).

Opinion

Napton, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This was an action of trespass on the case for a nuisance. The first count in the declaration charged that the defendant on a day specied erected on his land a distillery and divers slop pools and hog styes, and that defendant fed a large number of hogs in these pools and styes with the slops from said distillery; that large quantities of slops and offal passed from said said styes into a certain creek, called Bonne Femme, the waters of which ran in a direction from the land of the defendant, towards? through and over the lands of the plaintiffs, whereby divers noxious and offensive smells and stenches arising from the offal and slops entered said dwelling house and premises aforesaid and rendered the same unwhole[520]*520some and annoyed, incommoded and greatly disturbed the plaintiffs in the possession and enjoyment of thersaid dwelling house and farm, and that they were injured and hindered in their business of farming, &c. The second count charges the defendant with having wrongfully and injuriously caused and procured divers noxious and offensive smells, vapours, See., to arise and ascend near the dwelling house of the plaintiffs and on the farm of the plaintiffs, by means of which the dwelling house and farm were rendered uncomfortable and unhealthy and unfit for habitation, See.

The plea was not guilty. At the trial, the plaintiffs gave evidence tend-ding to prove the facts alleged in the declaration. They offered to prove further, that the waters of the Bonne Femme creek were rendered unwholesome by means of the nuisance complained of, and unfit for the use of the horses and cattle and other stock on the plaintiffs’ farm, and that the fish were destroyed and rendered unfit for use. This evidence was excluded and an exception taken.

The court instructed the jury at the instance of the plaintiffs as follows :

1. That if the jury believe that the plaintiffs at the time of the commencement of this suit were in the possession of the lands and premises described in the declaration, that the defendants erected and used, or used a distillery and fed hogs or other animals upon the slop produced and created thereby, and the same was allowed to flow into and run down the creek, Bonne Femme, and created in said creek a disagreeable smell or stench which rendered the use and occupation of the plaintiffs’ premises uncomfortable or unhealthy, they will find for the plaintiffs.

2. If the jury believe from the evidence that the plaintiffs were at the times between the first day of August, 1846, and the time of bringing of this suit, in the possession of the farm and messuages described in the declaration, and that by reason of the defendant carrying on the distillery and erecting or using the hog styes and running the slops of said distillery into said hog styes, and by reason of running the same into the Bonne Femme creek, the offal and slops of said styes and distilleries, they produced noxious and offensive vapors, fumes, smells and stenches, which rendered the habitation of the plaintiffs uncomfortable, and annoyed and incommoded the plaintiffs in the use, possession, occupation and enjoyment of said habitation and farm, or prevented and disturbed them in the possession and cultivation of the said farm, they must find for the plaintiffs.

3. That if the jury believe the use and occupation of the mill, distil[521]*521lery and hog pens, described in the plaintiffs’ declaration, by the defendant, produced or continued any stench or smell at and upon the farm and residence occupied by the plaintiffs, so as to render it uncomfortable or unwholesome for them to use arid enjoy the same at any time complained of in the declaration, they will find for the plaintiffs such damages as the jury believe they may have sustained on account thereof during the time aforesaid.

The court refused to give the following instructions aslced by the plaintiffs:

1. That although the jury may believe from the evidence that the nuisance complained of in the declaration existed before the commencement of this suit, yet, if they believe that the defendant continued it, and by suph continuance rendered the habitation and farm of plaintiffs uncomfortable and disagreeable, or prevented them from enjoying or cultivating the same, in so ample a manner as they otherwise could, they must find for the plaintiffs.

2. That it is not necessary to prove any special damage done by such nuisance, but that it is sufficient to prove that, by reason of the nuisance, the plaintiffs could not enjoy their rights in as ample a manner as they otherwise could.

3. That the measure of damages is the amount of injury the plaintiffs sustained in the comfortable and wholesome enjoyment of the property described, during the times specified in the declaration, to-wit, from the first of August, 1846, to the bringing of this suit.

At the defendant’s request, the court gave the following instructions:

1. To enable the plaintiffs to recover, it is upon them to show to the satisfaction of the jury, first, that the defendant coriimitted some of the unlawful acts charged against him in the declaration; and, second, that plaintiffs sustained some damage therefrom.

2. The present suit is founded on the possession of the plaintiffs, and not upon their title; and the only damage for which they can recover in this action is, that which was occasioned after they acquired the possession of the premises, and before the commencement.of this suit.

3. In the present suit, the plaintiffs have not alleged that the acts complained of have injured the water of the creek by rendering it unfit or less fit for domestic or farming purposes than it otherwise would have been, or that they have destroyed the fish therein; and therefore the plaintiffs cannot recover for any such injuries in this suit.

4. If the stenches of which the plaintiffs complain have a tendency to produce human disease, yet the plaintiffs cannot recover on that grounds [522]*522Unless they are satisfied from the evidence that these stenches did actually produce disease in the plaintiffs, or some of them, or some of their family.

A verdict was found for the defendant. A motion for a new trial was made and overruled, and the case brought here by writ of error.

The principal question in this case grows out of the instructions. It may be inferred from the first and fourth instructions given at the instance of the defendant, and the refusal to give the third, fourth and fifth asked by the plaintiffs, that the Circuit Court esteemed it essential to the maintenance of the action that some special damage should be proved. The first instruction given at the defendant’s request does not use the phrase “special damage,” but when taken in connection with the fourth instruction given on the same side, and the refusal of those which the plaintiff asked on this point, must be understood as conveying to the jury the same proposition which would have been implied by the use of more explicit phraseology. The fourth instruction seems to place the meaning of the court beyond controversy; for, in this instruction, the jury are told that it is not sufficient that the nuisance complained of had a tendency to produce disease in the plaintiffs’ family, but actual disease was necessary to be proved as the consequence of this nuisance before any cause of action accrued.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Mo. 517, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/smiths-v-mcconathy-mo-1848.