Walling v. City of Fremont

293 N.W. 226, 138 Neb. 399, 1940 Neb. LEXIS 137
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 5, 1940
DocketNo. 30835
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 293 N.W. 226 (Walling v. City of Fremont) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Walling v. City of Fremont, 293 N.W. 226, 138 Neb. 399, 1940 Neb. LEXIS 137 (Neb. 1940).

Opinion

Blackledge, District Judge.

In this, an appeal from the district court for Dodge county, the plaintiffs sue to recover damages arising from the claimed creation and operation of a nuisance, alleging in substance that plaintiffs were the owners of certain premises upon which were situated a lumber and coal yard together with a residence and office building combined, which premises were used for the business and residence of the plaintiffs, and that there were - situated thereon buildings and structures used in carrying on a lumber and building material business, and a part of which was used for residence property and business office; that the defendant city, owning and using adjacent property for the purpose of a coal yard, did in December, 1936, install thereon a tipple and [401]*401various machinery for the unloading.and moving of coal, and that the operations carried on by defendant in unloading the. coal from railroad cars and the subsequent handling of’ it caused large quantities of fine penetrating coal dust to fall upon plaintiffs’ premises and as a direct and proximate result thereof their furniture, fittings and the whole interior of the dwelling-house, buildings and office have at all times since the erection of the tipple continued to be covered with coal dust so that incessant cleaning was made necessary, and that because of the coal dust they were forced to keep their doors and windows closed. Plaintiffs further allege that the tipple caused loud, annoying noises at different hours of the day and night and ask damages in respect of the. foregoing matters, but more particularly on the grounds that as a direct and proximate result of the nuisance created by the defendant the lumber and other merchandise of plaintiffs were constantly covered and blackened with coal dust which materially damaged' the salability thereof and rendered the carrying on of the plaintiffs’ lumber business burdensome and unprofitable, rendering the plaintiffs’ premises unfit as a location therefor or for a dwelling-house or office Use. The plaintiffs claim damage by reason of defendant’s acts to plaintiffs’ property and improvements and the stock of lumber, asking a recovery in the total amount of $19,000.

The defendant answered denying plaintiffs’ allegations and claims and alleging that plaintiffs themselves were engaged in the retail coal business, and that coal dust from their own coal and also from the near-by premises of the Fremont Ice and Fuel Company and from railroad trains operated in the vicinity were responsible for conditions complained of by plaintiffs, and that whatever coal dust emanated from defendant’s coal yard was only a small part of the total which settled upon the plaintiffs’ property. Defendant also alleged that plaintiffs lived in a noisy neighborhood near three railroad tracks and the noise from engines and passing trains was of more consequence than any emanating from the machinery of the defendant and denied [402]*402that the operation of the coal yard had at any time constituted a nuisance.

The trial of the case occupied approximately ten days’ time, a large number of witnesses testified on both sides and resulted in a verdict in favor of the plaintiffs in the sum of $3,000, for which amount judgment was entered and this appeal by the defendant city follows.

The property involved and which it is claimed constituted the nuisance is a coal yard and tipple. According to the testimony this coal yard is of irregular shape approximately 150 by 150 feet in area which was “pretty well all covered” by coal and the pile in some places was higher than the near-by lumber sheds or “16 to 18 feet high, perhaps more,” and distributed by means of a drag line arrangement. The “Tipple” is an elevator-like structure some 60 feet in height and used to put coal into the yard when unloaded from railroad cars and to distribute it around therein. The processes in this operation are stated as: Dumping from the car, elevating to the top of the tipple, pouring out through a spout onto the pile, dragging out into the yard, dragging back, raising to the container, dumping again and running out through the spout into a truck. All the coal used at the city plant comes through the tipple. The tonnage purchased by the city from the previous August first to the time of the trial in June, 1939, was in excess of 11,000.

In the presentation of the case in this court in the appellant’s brief, ten propositions are urged. Preliminary to the particular discussion, however, it may be well to call to, mind the principle of law succinctly stated in 20 R. C. L, 463, sec. 80, to wit: “It seems to be undisputed that a person may maintain an action at law foi damages caused by a nuisance; and this, without praying an abatement of the wrong.” It is also stated therein furthermore that in a court of equity where jurisdiction is acquired “of an action to enjoin a nuisance and for damages, the fact that the nuisance has been abated voluntarily since the bringing of the action and that it is not likely to be renewed are held not to deprive the court of jurisdiction to retain the cause [403]*403to award damages for the injury already done.” Id. 483, sec. 96.

Proposition 1 is to the effect that there was error in that the trial court in instructing the jury did not use the terms “reasonable” or “unreasonable” in reference to the annoyances caused or quantity of coal dust distributed, and did not use the words “seriously” or “material” in reference to the damage inflicted. In support thereof are cited Francisco v. Furry, 82 Neb. 754, 118 N. W. 1102; Rush v. Smith-Lockwood Mfg. Co., 95 Neb. 133, 145 N. W. 268 ; Mathews v. Mozer, 111 Neb. 71, 195 N. W. 943; Grzelka v. Chevrolet Motor Car Co., 286 Mich. 141, 281 N. W. 568; Steele v. Rail & River Coal Co., 42 Ohio App. 228, 182 N. E. 552. The Nebraska citations are all of cases wherein injunctions were sought and, although stating propositions applicable in general to this sort of situation, are not particularly applicable to this litigation. Thus, in the Francisco case it is said: “The right to have the air floating over one’s premises free from noxious and unnatural impurities is a right as absolute as the right to the soil itself. * * * A feeding yard is not necessarily a nuisance, and it becomes such only after being improperly maintained or conducted.” In the Rush case we find: “We doubt very much whether the odors which escape therefrom (a tannery) are so noxious and injurious and have so reduced the value of plaintiffs’ property or the comfort of their residence as to warrant the issuance of an injunction.” In the Matheivs case, in which it was sought to obtain an injunction and recover damages, the court found that the plaintiff did not suffer pecuniary damage, but defendant did at times fail to exercise proper care in the conduct of his business, and enjoined defendant from killing animals on the premises or permitting the accumulation of refuse and in any manner maintaining the plant as a nuisance, and the judgment of the trial court was affirmed except in the matter of taxation of costs.

We find nothing in these Nebraska cases to operate against the prosecution of the present action, but rather the contrary; and they in no wise foreclose the situation to [404]*404the plaintiffs so far as concerns the prosecution of an action to recover damages.

An instruction derived from the Grzelka, (Mich.) case was tendered, but in it the facts recited are the reverse of the present situation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
293 N.W. 226, 138 Neb. 399, 1940 Neb. LEXIS 137, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/walling-v-city-of-fremont-neb-1940.