Kingsbury v. Flowers

BRIOKELL, O. J.

— 1. The purpose of the bill is the prevention of future interments, on grounds which are owned in severalty by the appellant, Kingsbury, and the heirs of William H. Thames, deceased. Originally, Kingsbury devoted the premises to the burial of two deceased children; and afterwards, having permitted Thames to bury thereon one of his children, conveyed to him a part of them; and they have since been held for the purposes of burial of deceased members of their respective families. The bill does not unite separate, distinct, independent matters, joining defendants who have not a common interest. The rights and claims of each defendant depend on the same facts, and the right and claim of the complainant is to the same measure of relief against each of them. It may be conceded, for present purposes, that Kingsbury is without legal right as to the prevention of future burials on the part of the ground conveyed to Thames; and that the members of Thames’ family, and his heirs, are without legal right as to the prevention of burials on the part of the ground owned by Kingsbury; though there is probable difficulty in maintaining the proposition. But, in considering whether a bill in equity unites distinct matters, which ought not to be joined, and misjoins parties defendant, the inquiry is not, whether each defendant is connected with, and has an interest in every branch of the case. It is, whether relief is sought in respect to matters which are separate and distinct, and a defendant may say he is in peril of oppression by the confusion of such matters. As was said by Yice-Chaneellor Sir John Leach, in Salvidge v. Hyde, 5 Madd. 133: If the object of the suit be single, but it happens that different persons have separate interests in distinct questions, which arise out of that single object, it necessarily folllows that such different persons must be brought before the court, in order that the suit may conclude the whole subject.” Here, the bill has the single object of the prevention of burials, upon a plot of ground owned in severalty by the defendants, but which, with a common purpose, they have devoted, and are *484devoting to that use; and the use, by the one or the other, is productive of the same injury to ‘the complainant. Suits would be unnecessarily, and capable of being indefinitely, multiplied, if a court of equity should decline to permit the joinder of the defendants who have the same interest, and a decree could not be rendered which would conclude the whole subject, quieting finally the litigation.

2. The statute exempts from liability for the payment of debts “ lots in cemeteries, or elsewhere, set apart and held and used by the owner thereof as a burial-place for himself and family,” — Code of 1876, § 2823. The part of the burial-ground owned fiy Thames, on his death, descended to his heirs, impressed with and subject to the uses, to which he had devoted it in his life-time. The widow, as a member of his family, was entitled to share the use — to burial on the grounds, if such was the choice of whoever at her death was charged with the duty of her sepulture. There was manifest propriety in making her. a party to the bill, that her right may be bound by the decree rendered. The heirs of Thames, in whom the title resides, should also be made parties, that they may be bound by the decree. As the grounds can never become the subject of administration, there was no necessity, and there would have been manifest impropriety, in introducing as a party the personal representative of Thames.

3. The jurisdiction of a court of equity to restrain the commission or continuance of a private nuisance, is not doubted. It is not of the ordinary jurisdiction of the court: the court interferes because of the inadequacy of legal remedies. There are no more frequent instances of the interference of the court, than for the prevention of the commission or continuance of the injuries apprehended by the complainant — the material diminution of the comfortable enjoyment of the dwelling-house, and the diminution or destruction of health, by the pollution of water, or of the atmosphere. When the matter complained of is not, in itself, a nuisance ; when it is not, in its very nature, hurtful to others'; when it does not, of necessity, threaten to impair materially the health and comfort of those who may live near it, and the fact that it is a nuisance has not been established at law ; the court abstains from interference, unless a case of pressing necessity is shown by the bill, and by the proofs. — Rosser v. Randolph, 7 Port. 238. Nor will the court interfere, when the thing complained of is not in existence, but may be called into existence by threatened acts of the defendant, in the exercise of his lawful dominion over his property, and it is uncertain, dependent upon circumstances *485in the future, whether it will or not operate injuriously — St. James Church v. Arrington, 36 Ala. 546.

4. The allegations of the present bill are, that the graves now on the grounds are west of south of complainant’s dwelling; the one nearest is one hundred and eighty-two feet from the well on his loti; the whole burial-ground is on more elevated ground than his lot, and there is a fall of from four to five feet from the surface of the graves, to the surface of the well. The natural course of the surface-water, from the burial-ground, is through the lot of complainant, and near to. the well. He has been compelled to cut a ditch, to turn the surface-water and surface-drainage from his yard and well. There is the further general allegation, that any further interments on these grounds will endanger the health of complainant and his family, by corrupting the water of the well, and polluting the atmosphere. The first burial on the grounds was in 1863, and the last in 1874; and it is not averred that there was, from either, any pernicious consequence to the complainant, or to his family; nor that any harm, thus far, has been suffered from use of the grounds as a burial-place. These averments are too general and indefinite, to authorize the interference of a court of¡,equity. Facts' and circumstances should have been stated distinctly, from which the court could see plainly that, if future interments on these grounds are not prevented, there would be a diminution of the complainant’s enjoyment of his dwelling, and at least probable injury to the health of his family. It is not enough to allege simply that such consequences will result. There must be such a clear, precise statement of facts, that there can be no reasonable doubt, if the acts threatened are completed, grievous injury will result. — Adams v. Michael, 38 Md. 128; Begien v. City of Anderson, 28 Ind. 79.

Burial-places for the dead are indispensable. They may be the property of the public, devoted to the uses of the public ; or the owner of the freehold may devote a part of his premises to the burial of his family or friends. It is but a just exercise of his dominion over his own property. Neither adjoining proprietors, nor the public, can complain, unless it is shown that, from the manner of burial, or some other cause, irreparable injury will result to them. It is quite an error to.suppose, that of itself a burying ground is a nuisance to those living in its immediate vicinity. Much depends upon the mode of interment, whether it can be justly asserted that, in any event, injury will result from it. The particular locality, and its surroundings, must also be considered, Low, damp grounds, percolated by water, will hasten decomposition, and the soil will be saturated with its products, *486Dry, high, well ventilated localities, retard, rather than hasten decomposition; and if in a brief space of time there were numerous burials, there might be great peril of the products of decomposition escaping into, and polluting the atmosphere.

There is not a fact stated in the bill, from which it can be justly inferred, that if the burials on these grounds should Ire made in the usual mode, or in the mode in which the former burials were made, any injury could result to the complainant. The surface-water flowing through his lot is but taking its natural course; and by cutting a ditch, he has diverted it from his well, avoiding all injury from it, if any could reasonably be apprehended. The apprehension of injury from this source, it is evident, could be quieted by but slight labor expended in drainage, — a labor, it may be, if requested, the defendants would have performed, rather than to have been forced into this litigation. — Rosser v. Randolph, supra. It is not such an injury, capable of being remedied so easily, that a court of equity will interfere to restrain ; nor will it interfere to prevent the thing from which it is apprehended. Without the averment of special circumstances, from which the court can be satisfied that future burials on these grounds will most probably result in a nuisance, from which the complainant will suffer special injury, irreparable by the ordinary remedies at law, there should not be interference to restrain them, — Musgrove v. St. Louis Church, 10 La. Ann. Rep. 431; New Orleans v. Wardens, 11 La. Ann. 244; Ellison v. Commissioners, 5 Jones’ Eq. 57; Lake View v. Letz, 44 Ill. 81; Lake View v. Rose Hill, 70 Ill. 191; Begein v. City of Anderson, 28 Ind. 79.

The bill is obnoxious to several of the causes of demurrer assigned ; and the result is, the decree of the chancellor must be reversed, and the demurrer sustained upon all the grounds taken, except so far as we have indicated otherwise; and the cause is remanded, that the complainant may, if he desires, have the opportunity of amendment.