Sprague v. Sampson

114 A. 305, 120 Me. 353, 1921 Me. LEXIS 59
CourtSupreme Judicial Court of Maine
DecidedJuly 12, 1921
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 114 A. 305 (Sprague v. Sampson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Judicial Court of Maine primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sprague v. Sampson, 114 A. 305, 120 Me. 353, 1921 Me. LEXIS 59 (Me. 1921).

Opinion

Wilson, J..

The defendant conducts a monumental business in the Village of Dover, and since 1886 has occupied small buildings or sheds situated in the rear of buildings fronting on the main street of the village and surrounded chiefly by buildings devoted to business purposes, several of which, however, including the plaintiff’s having the upper stories used as dwellings.

The building of the plaintiff was constructed in 1920. The lower story is used for offices and the second story as a residence. The plaintiff occupies the office on the first or ground floor fronting on the street and the office immediately in the rear as a law office and for literary work, he being a historical writer of note. The remainder of the first floor being also used for law offices.

At the- time of the construction of the plaintiff’s building the defendant was doing the lettering of monuments and the cutting of granite bases at the same place, but was doing the work with hand tools. In 1914 in keeping with the progress made in conducting such business, he installed a small surfacing machine for finishing the granite bases which is operated by compressed air supplied by another machine commonly known as a compressor.

The operation of both these machines of necessity causes considerable noise and dust especially the surfacing machine, which by. reason of the dust resulting and its effect upon the workmen must be operated in an open shed or with open doors and windows.

The plaintiff contends that the operation of these machines in such close proximity to his building, the compressor being within [355]*355thirty-six feet and the surfacing machine within fifty-five feet, and being operated in a shed or building with the doors and windows open, with the attendant noise and dust, materially and unreasonably interferes with the reasonable use of his property and the “physical comfort of his existence,” and is therefore a nuisance.

The case was submitted to a jury which found for the defendant. The case is now before this court on a motion for a new trial on the usual grounds and on plaintiff’s bill of exceptions.

Four exceptions are presented for consideration: (1) to the admission of evidence as to the effect or absence of any effect from the noise and dust upon adjoining property and occupants other than that of the plaintiff; (2) to the admission of a statement by the defendant in reply to a question whether he had investigated to determine whether there was any device on the market for lessening the noise and dust from such machines, that he had learned there is nothing: (3) to certain remarks of counsel for defendant in his argument before the jury; and (4) to certain instructions to the jury in response to a question by one of the jurymen.

The last exception does not appear to be properly before us. No exception was taken to the instruction of the presiding Justice before the jury retired as required by Rule XVIII of this court. The bill of exceptions show that only such exceptions as were seasonably taken under this rule were allowed by the presiding Justice, hence the exception is not before this court for consideration; Poland v. McDowell, 114 Maine, 511.

The third exception must be overruled. Exceptions can only be taken to a ruling by the court. Improper remarks by counsel before the jury are not the subject of exceptions, and can only be taken advantage of by motion for a new trial by the party claiming to be prejudiced. In this case the court immediately instructed the jury to disregard the alleged improper remarks and no further requests in relation thereto were made by the plaintiff. Clearly there was here no ruling by the court to which exceptions would lie. Sherman v. M. C. R. R., 86 Maine, 422, 424; State v. Martel, 103 Maine, 63; Webster v. Calden, 55 Maine, 165.

As to the first and second exceptions which are the only ones we may properly consider, the first should be overruled. The evidence as to the effect of the noise and dust on the adjoining property and occupants, or rather the absence of any effect from it was properly [356]*356admitted, not upon the question of whether the plaintiff and his property was affected, but upon the question of whether the use of such machines in the defendant’s business under all the circumstances was a reasonable one, to which purpose it was limited by the presiding Justice.

The second exception, however, we think must be sustained. The question of whether there were devices on the market to lessen the noise and dust caused by such machines and whether the defendant had made all reasonable efforts to investigate this question was early raised in the trial of the case. If there were no such devices, the use of such machines, even with the noise and dust necessarily resulting, might be reasonable in the conduct of the defendant’s business under the circumstances which the jury found to exist in the case, but if there were practical devices on the market which would lessen the annoyance to the occupants of adjoining property, the use of such machines without such devices might under the same circumstances be an unreasonable use and the noise and dust therefrom constitute a nuisance.

The defendant was properly allowed to testify that he had made inquiries whether any such devices existed, but in response to a question as to what he learned, said: “I learned there is nothing.”

He might properly have been allowed to testify that he learned of nothing, since the failure to gain any information would have been a fact within his knowledge, and the only question then would be whether he had used reasonable diligence in prosecuting his inquiries. His answer, however, went farther and involved a conclusion based on hearsay, which is just as objectionable as hearsay itself; Mason v. Tallman, 34 Maine, 476; State v. Butler, 113 Maine, 1, 3. To permit evidence to go to the jury that there was no such device may have removed entirely from their minds the question as to whether the defendant’s conduct of his business by the use of these machines in the manner in which they were used, if there was some practical means by which the noise and dust could be materially lessened, was a reasonable one, or as to whether the defendant had taken all reasonable steps to determine whether such a device was on the market, there being evidence in the case that a device was in use for removing the dust at least in larger plants.

It is urged that his testimony on this point was in the nature of expert testimony, but the defendant, if skilled in any trade, so far as [357]*357the evidence shows can only be regarded as a marble worker or granite cutter. He at least did not qualify as an expert in the operation of such machines and especially as to devices for the lessening of the noise or dust caused thereby. His testimony on this point must stand or fall on the same basis as that of any witness and if his statement appears to have been based on hearsay it should not have been allowed to stand.

The sustaining of this exception renders it unnecessary to consider the motion.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
114 A. 305, 120 Me. 353, 1921 Me. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sprague-v-sampson-me-1921.