Talbot v. Stiles

189 So. 469, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 277
CourtLouisiana Court of Appeal
DecidedApril 28, 1939
DocketNo. 5865.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 189 So. 469 (Talbot v. Stiles) 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
Talbot v. Stiles, 189 So. 469, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 277 (La. Ct. App. 1939).

Opinion

TALIAFERRO, Judge.

Defendant appealed from a judgment ordering the issuance of a preliminary injunction commanding him to abate a nuisance complained of by plaintiff. The nuisance complained of, so far as presented by this appeal, is the howling, barking, whining and yelping, particularly at night, of dogs kept on defendant’s premises and in kennels thereon, brought there for observation and treatment, to such an extent and of such frequency as to disturb and interrupt the sleep and rest of plaintiff, his wife and tenants in his apartments.

The residence properties of the litigants adjoin and front easterly on Jones street in the town of Ruston, Louisiana.

Plaintiff’s residence, a two story frame building, is 78 feet north of defendant’s property line and 108 feet from the kennels referred to. His front porch is about on a line with the rear side of defendant’s residence.

Plaintiff is a retired physician, 68 years old, and is somewhat sensitive to noises. Defendant is a young graduate Veterinary Surgeon. Pie has a very active practice. It extends over a radius of 150 'miles. He is absent from home a large part, of the time and frequently returns at early morning hours. Dogs in large numbers, mostly well bred, are brought to him for treatment. These ofttimes are kept under observation for a while before being administered to an'd thereafter detained to await developments. Kennels are used for detention purposes. The number of dogs detained varies from time to time. It is shown that on one occasion there were 15 housed in the kennels, and we are constrained to believe, as is alleged by plaintiff, “that the dogs so kept there, either from loneliness, sickness or inattention, or for no reason at all, bark, howl, growl, whine and yelp, night and day,”. intermittently, so noisily as to disturb plaintiff and his household in the manner and to the extent alleged by him.

Defendant established residence next to plaintiff’s home about eighteen months before this suit was filed. Before doing so he made considerable inquiry of the authorities to know if there existed any law, rule or regulation to prohibit the establishment and conduct of the sort of business he is now engaged in, within the limits of the town of Ruston. Before he had enclosed his premises and erected the kennels, plaintiff, in a most friendly manner, counseled with him concerning £he conduct of his business in his back yard in view of and so close to plaintiff’s home and at that time offered to sell or give to him the free use of land farther removed on which to erect his office, kennels, etc., needful to the conduct of his business of veterinary surgeon but the proffer was refused.

Over the entire period of eighteen months the dogs have been the source of much discomfort and disturbance to plaintiff. Time and again he complained to defendant and his wife and on several occasions he sought the aid of the Police Department of Ruston. This department took the position that it had no jurisdiction in the matter, and, therefore, was reluctant to touch it. Before plaintiff made his first complaint to the police, a tenant of one of his apartments, being so disturbed in her sleep by the barking of these dogs, did so. Defendant was absent. A policeman found a fretting, howling dog tied to some object in the back yard and removed him.

We are convinced from the testimony that defendant’s dog patients are more noisy when he is absent and, as said before, he is away quite often, perhaps daily, including a goodly portion of nights. Naturally, he has the ability to relieve their discomfort, suffering and restlessness when among them. He says that he has arranged with a boy who sleeps in his home to attend the dogs’ needs when he is absent. The police found this boy dead asleep on their visits to the place, at plaintiff’s request, and wholly unaffected by the din about him.

Defendant elicited some testimony tending to prove that the greater part of the noise, so disturbing to plaintiff, emanated from dogs owned by his many negro tenants west and south of his residence. We are not convinced of the truth of this. We rather incline to believe, in view of our own knowledge of the nature of these animals, that most probably the dogs of the tenants, out of curiosity, or a belligerent spirit, or through characteristic canine propensity, inciting them to roam,. *471 were attracted to defendant’s premises by the howls and barks of their imprisoned kinsmen; and, perhaps, in whole or part, joined them in nocturnal howling and barking.

Several of the litigants’ neighbors testified that the noises from these -dogs did not disturb them. All of these, with one exception, lived a block or more from the kennels. The excepted one lived across the street from defendant’s home. He and his wife slept on a porch at the extreme east end of the home, which put the balance of the building, the yard, the street, defendant’s front lawn and his residence between them and the kennels. In addition, the residence of this witness is on a lot sloping easterly from Jones street, the sleeping porch being on a level lower than defendant’s kennels. It is but natural that, in view of these conditions, the nightly rest of this witness and his wife was not interrupted by the noises which bothered plaintiff.

Not one of these witnesses was even nearly situated with regard to the kennels, as is plaintiff. His bedroom faces the locus squarely and his front porch is in full view thereof.

Dr. Talbot has resolved that.he or the dogs must move. He has evinced patience, reasonableness, and a commendable amicable attitude towards defendant throughout his unpleasant experience, and we agree with him in the position that he is entitled to relief from the nuisance complained of. The dogs should go rather than he.

Not only does the howling and barking of these dogs hard by materially disturb the rest and quietude of himself, his wife and apartment tenants at night, but from the very nature thereof, if it has not already done so, a continuance of it will materially affect the value of his home, reduce its desirableness as a residence and act as a deterrent to those who wish to lease apartments from him. In this way it is easy to see that the intrinsic value of his investment will be substantially affected.

A private nuisance is defined to be, “Anything done to the hurt or annoyance of the lands, tenements or heredita-ments of another. It produces damages to but one or a few persons, and cannot be said to be public.” Bouvier’s Law Dictionary.

In Cunningham v. Wilmington Ice Mfg. Co., 2 W.W.Harr., 32 Del. 229, 121 A. 654, it is said that, “A ‘nuisance’ is anything from which results harm, inconvenience, or damage, or which materially interferes with the enjoyment of rights or property.”

In City of New Orleans v. Lenfant, 126 La. 455, 52 So. 575, 29 L.R.A.,N.S., 642, the court having before it a criminal case falling under the provisions of a municipal ordinance denouncing certain acts as a nuisance, as is reflected from the syllabus, said, “A ‘nuisance’ is anything which incommodes, annoys, or produces inconvenience or damage. A ‘nuisance per se’ is one which is always a nuisance in certain localities. A ‘nuisance in fact’ is one which becomes a nuisance by reason of circumstances and surroundings.”

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189 So. 469, 1939 La. App. LEXIS 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/talbot-v-stiles-lactapp-1939.