Terrell v. Wright

Him,, C. J.

Terrell and Watts brought suit in chancery to enjoin Wright from operating a planing mill situated upon a lot owned by him, near which the plaintiffs had their residences, alleging that it was a nuisance, and rendered their homes uncomfortable by reason of its noise, smoke, soot and cinders. The planing mill was located on the block between Jefferson and Jackson streets in the city of Camden. The Iron Mountain railroad is operated across the block, and the electric light plant is also on the same block, immediately west and adjoining the mill. California Street is west of the electric light plant, and adjoins it. Plaintiff Watts lives on the block north of Jefferson Street; plaintiff Terrell lives on California Street. One is north of the planer, and the other west. The railroad crosses California Street at the electric light plant, and is between the residences of the plaintiffs. Near their residences is a place where locomotives take water from a water tank. There is a spur track from the railroad to the block where the planer is located.

The planing mill is operated with steam furnished from the electric light plant. This suit was one against the owner of the planer, and did not include the electric light plant. The ground upon which the planer was built was used as a lumber yard by Mr. Wright before he built the planer. The mill is a comparatively small one, and the machines were not placed on floors, but upon the ground, upon concrete foundations, so as to make as little noise as possible; no whistle was used, and the machinery was operated not earlier than 7 o’clock in the morning and not later than six in the evening.

'A large number of witnesses testified on behalf of the plaintiffs, tending to support the allegations of the complaint, and quite as many if not more testified on behalf of the defendant, tending to support the answer, which denied the allegations of the injurious effects of the planing mill on plaintiff’s homes, and alleged it was no more noisy or objectionable than .the electric light plant and the water tank where the locomotives frequently made much noise in blowing off steam, cleaning out cinder . boxes, etc. The chancellor refused an injunction, and the plaintiffs appealed.

In Powell v. Bentley & Gerwig Furn. Co., 12 L. R. A. 53, the court said: “According to our settled notions and habits, there are convenient places — one for the home, one for the factory; but, as often happens, the two must be so near each other as to cause some inconvenience. The law can not take notice of such inconvenience, if slight or reasonable, all things considered, but applies the common-sense doctrine that the parties must give and take, live and let live;-for here extreme rights are not enforceable rights — at any rate, not by injunction.”

This defines the situation here. That this planing mill is highly objectionable to plaintiffs and their families is unquestionably true. But that its operation is of such a nature as to deprive a normal person, living where plaintiffs live, of the comforts of home, or render living in such homes a positive discomfort, is not established by a preponderance of the testimony, and this is required before a lawful and useful business can be destroyed by a perpetual injunction. This subject was recently considered here in Durfey v. Thalheimer, 85 Ark. 544. The court approved this statement by Chancellor Zabriskie: “The law takes care that a lawful and useful business shall not be put a stop to on account of every trifling or imaginary annoyance, such as may offend the taste or disturb the nerves of a fastidious or over-refined person. But, on the other hand, it does not allow any one, whatever his circumstances or conditions may be, to be driven from his home, or to be compelled to live in ic in positive discomfort, although caused by a lawful and useful business carried on in his vicinity. The maxim, sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas, expresses the well-established doctrine of the law.” After a review of the authoriri.es upon the subject, he further said: “The law, then, must be regarded as settled that when the prosecution of a business, of itself lawful, in the -neighborhood of -a dwelling house renders the enjoyment of it materially uncomfortable, by the smoke and cinders, or noise, or offensive odors produced by such business, although not in any degree injurious to- health, the -carrying on such business there is a nuisance, and it will be restrained by injunction.” (Ross v. Butler, 19 N. J. Eq. 294.)

Judge Cooley said, in Gilbert v. Showerman, 23 Mich. 448: “We can not shut our eyes to the obvious truth that if the running of this mill can be enjoined, almost any manufactory in any of our cities can be enjoined upon similar reasons. Some resident must be incommoded or. annoyed by almosc any of them. ****** Courts interfere by injunction against establishments such as mills and manufactures with great caution, and only in cases where the facts are weighty and important, and the injury complained of is of a serious and permanent character.”

Numerous witneses testified, with evident sincerity and conviction, that the noises were of such a persistent and unpleasant nature as to bring positive discomfort to persons living in homes situated as those of the plaintiffs, and to material discomfort and inconvenience from smoke and cinders; and, in short, téstified to facts, which, if the true situation as felt by the normal person would render a home situated as those of the plaintiffs uncomfortable and unbearable by reason of the noise and soot and smoke, thereby entitling the plaintiffs to their injunction. On the other hand were as many or more witnesses, apparently of equal sincerity and conviction, who testified that the noise and smoke and cinders would not be more than a mere inconvenience or trivial annoyance, at most, which is too slight a cause for the law to make the basis for abating a useful business. The chancellor found that the latter view of the controversy was sustained by the evidence, and it can not be said that his finding is against the preponderance of the evidence; in fact, it is in accordance therewith, and with the principles announced in Durfey v. Thalheimer, supra. The judgment is affirmed.