Soukoup v. Republic Steel Corp.

66 N.E.2d 334, 78 Ohio App. 87, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 161
CourtOhio Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 4, 1946
Docket20061
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 66 N.E.2d 334 (Soukoup v. Republic Steel Corp.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Ohio Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soukoup v. Republic Steel Corp., 66 N.E.2d 334, 78 Ohio App. 87, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 161 (Ohio Ct. App. 1946).

Opinion

OPINION

By SKEEL, P. J.

The plaintiff, who was a part owner of a residence located at 4623 Barkwell Avenue in the City of Cleveland, brings this action against the defendant seeking damages for a nuisance which he claims was caused by the defendant in the operation of. seventy-five coke ovens in the immediate vicinity of his residence.

The plaintiff purchased the property in June, 1942 and since then has, together with his wife, occupied it as his place of residence. The property is located in a district zoned for residence purposes. The part of Barkwell Avenue upon which plaintiff’s property is situated, runs southwest from Broadway *163 to the top of the bank where the Cuyahoga Valley begins and is the first street intersecting Broadway toward downtown Cleveland from the East 55th Street intersection. The Cuyahoga Valley is zoned- for heavy manufacturing and the zoning ordinance provides that among the businesses that may be carried on in the district is the operation of coke ovens. From the foregoing it is clear that plaintiff’s residence, although it is in a residential zone, is in fact at the very edge of a part of the city which is devoted to industrial use.

The Defense Plant Corporation of America, early in 1943, acquired a number of the residence properties across the street from plaintiff, beginning at the end of the street and caused them to be demolished and then cut away the bank so that such property became the slope of bank running from the southeast side of Barkwell Avenue down to the floor of the Cuyahoga Valley. The Defense Plant Corporation, to increase the production of steel for war purposes, entered into a contract with the defendant, The Republic Steel Corporation, to construct seventy-five coke ovens located on the floor of the Valley just beyond the bank above described, and upon their completion leased them to the Republic Steel Corporation to be operated in connection with the manufacture of iron and steel as a part of the war effort.

The coke ovens of modern design, were constructed by The Hoppers Company of Pittsburg, Pa., a company specializing in that kind of construction.

The plaintiff by the first cause of action of his petition, alleges that defendant has for a great many years been engaged in the manufacture of iron and' steel products and has during that time maintained and operated in the vicinity of plaintiff’s residence its Cleveland plant “at which the defendant makes coke, iron and steel, and engages in many related activities.” That on or about October, 1943, the defendant for the first time put into operation the new coke oven installations above described. That in their operation the defendant wrongfully caused and permitted frequent violent explosions and caused and permitted the creation and discharge into the surrounding atmosphere of noisesome, noxious, and poisonous fumes and gases, dense smoke and clouds of dust, dirt and grime, steam and vapors, all creating a nuisance of such character as to endanger the health of persons living as close to such coke oven installations as this plaintiff * * * *” and that such conditions cause damage to his property and endangered the health of himself and his family.

In his second cause of action the plaintiff alleges that in *164 the operation of said coke oven installations as described in the first cause of action, the defendant is in violation of certain ordinances of the City of Cleveland which provide in part as follows:

“Sec. 1715r5. No new plant or plants, or reconstruction of any existing plant or plants, for producing power and heat, or either of them, or any new or reconstructed chimney, connected with fuel burning equipment, shall be erected, installed or operated in the city until plans and specifications of same have been filed in duplicate in the office of, and approved by the Smoke Abatement Engineer, except as hereinafter provid- and a permit issued for such erection, reconstruction or operation.

Sec. 1715-5 (a). Detailed description and drawings of process furnaces, stills and other like fuel burning apparatus, showing the purpose, design, dimensions, combustion .space, amount and kind of fuel to be used, and all other details, shall be submitted to the subdivision of smoke abatement for approval.

Sec. 1715-5 (b). Plans and specifications to be filed shall show the type of installation, size and capacity of such plant and all appurtenances belonging thereto, including all provisions made for the purpose of securing complete combustion of the fuel to be used for the purpose of preventing smoke, fly ash, fumes and otherwise accomplishing the purpose of this ordinance. Said plans and specifications shall also contain a statement of the kind and amount of fuel proposed to be used.”

That the defendant failed to furnish the city such plans and specifications before erecting said ovens. That said operation is also in violation of Sections 1715-12 to 1715-114-B inclusive of the ordinances of the City of Cleveland. These sections of the city ordinances are a part of the smoke abatement code of the City. Section 1715-12 provides:

“The emissions of any smoke within the City of Cleveland, from the smoke stack on any steamboat, steam tug, steam roller, steam derrick, steam pile driver,- tar kettle or any other similar machine or contrivance or from any open fire or from the smoke stack or chimney of any building, roundhouse, or premises, for any period or periods greater than shown in the table set forth in Sec. 1715-13 shall be deemed a violation of this Code.”

*165 Section 1715-13 defines the various kinds of plants and sets forth the Ringelmann Scale Classification.

Section 1715-14-14(a) and 1715-14(b) are as follows:

“Sec. 1715-14: The emission of cinders and fly ash or other solids larger in size than 50 mesh in a concentration greater than four (4) pounds per 1000 pounds of dry flue gas, is declared to be a nuisance and shall, at the direction of the smoke abatement engineer, be abated.”

“Sec. 1713-14(a): On all furnaces built subsequent to the enactment of this ordinance, there shall be installed such means' as are in practicial use in the industry in similar applications to reduce to reasonable limits the emission of dust, cinders, fly ash or other solid particles.” “Sec. 1715-14(b): The emission from any premises of visible fumes, other than smoke, regardless of color or shade of a density equal to or greater than number one (1) of the Ringelmann ■ Chart is hereby prohibited.”

The petition further alleges that the defendant’s operation of such coke oven installations is in violation of Section 857-J of the Municipal Ordinances and that the defendant could, with the exercise of reasonable and proper care, provide “against the wrongful conditions herein complained of.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 N.E.2d 334, 78 Ohio App. 87, 45 Ohio Law. Abs. 161, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soukoup-v-republic-steel-corp-ohioctapp-1946.