The plaintiffs, R. D. Rich and Della Rich, who are husband and wife, own, as tenants in common, a house and lot in the city of Bessemer, which is now, and for many years has been, occupied by them as a home. After the above parties had begun to occupy said property as a home, the defendant, the Jefferson Fertilizer Company, bought a lot several hundred yards from said home, erected a fertilizer plant thereon, and, since said plaint was erected, has continuously manufactured fertilizers for. commercial purposes there.
Mr. and Mrs. Rich maintain that, in the manufacture of fertilizers, the defendant has constantly permitted offensive and noxious gases, which have a deadly effect upon plant life and a deleterious effect upon the roofs of wooden buildings (their home seems to be of wood and to be covered with wooden shingles), to escape into the atmosphere; that such gases have constantly permeated their home, filling it with pungent, unwholesome, and disagreeable odors, greatly injuring the property in its use as a home, destroying the vegetables in its garden, killing some of the fruit trees, and rendering those not actually killed barren. Say the plaintiffs in their complaint as amended: “Before the location of the fertilizer factory of the defendant, the plaintiffs enjoyed their home with their family free from and *636undisturbed by fumes or odors of any kind, and their said home was reasonably healthy and enjoyable; that since the location of defendant’s said plant near their home, the defendant, in the operation and maintenance of its said plant, discharges into the air from its said plant nauseous, penetrating, irritating, and pungent odors or fumes; that defendant, in the operation of and maintaining of its said fertilizer factory, discharges into the air irritating and pungent gases, fumes, or oclors; that said fumes, odors, or gases contaminate the air and pollute the atmosphere to a great distance from said plant, including the property where plaintiffs live and reside; that the plaintiffs are compelled to breathe and inhale the nauseous, pungent, penetrating, and irritating odors, fumes, or gases, and they are thereby greatly physically discomforted and inconvenienced; that they are thereby made to sneeze and cough and compelled .to shut themselves within their house to avoid said fumes, gases, or odors; that said fumes, gases, or odors are deleterious to plant life and have caused plaintiffs to lose their trees, vegetables, vines, and flowers or to greatly injure the same; that said gases, fumes, or odors have greatly injured the plaintiffs’ said property and depreciated value thereof.”
1. As this suit was brought jointly by Mr. and Mrs. Rich, they were entitled to recover in this suit only that damage which they jointly suffered. The damage which they jointly suffered was the injury which occurred to them jointly in the tose and enjoyment of the property as a home, in the injury which was done to' their fruit trees on the property and otherwise to the property itself during the 12 months, next preceding the bringing of the suit. They were not entitled to recover for any damages which accrued to them jointly, in the use and enjoyment of the property as a home, or which *637was done to their fruit trees or otherwise to the property itself more than 12 months before the bringing of the suit. All such damages were barred by the statute of limitations of one year. The nuisance complained of was a continuing one, and the plaintiffs were entitled to recover in this action any damages which they jointly suffered within 12 months before the suit was brought. —Bigbee Fertilizer Co. v. Scott, 3 Ala. App. 333, 56 South. 834; Huss v. C. R. & B. Co., 66 Ala. 472.
In making out their case it was, of course, proper for the plaintiffs to introduce evidence tending to show that the noxious fumes from the defendant’s plant destroyed their garden, injured their fruit trees, and created disagreeable odors on their premises and in their home during the 12 months next preceding the bringing of the suit. All the evidence was admissible as aids to the jury, if they found that the plaintiffs were entitled to recover, in ascertaining the amount of the plaintiffs’ joint damages. — Birmingham Water Works Co. v. Martini, 2 Ala. App. 652, 56 South. 830; Baltimore & P. R. Co. v. Fifth Baptist Church, 108 U. S. 317, 2 Sup. Ct. 719, 27 L. Ed. 739.
2. It cannot, however, be successfully maintained that in this joint action the plaintiffs were entitled to recover for the personan injuries suffered by each on account of the alleged nuisance. Any condition Avhich creates annoyance and inconvenience to a man in his home is an offense against his person — a personal injury. “A man who asphyxiates another with gas as surely commits an injury to the person as one who kills another with a bludgeon. One who with foul odors * * * renders a man’s life unendurable in his home — who thus annoys and inconveniences him — as surely does him a personal injury as one who commits a battery upon him. Each is, in its way, a personal injury, and each necessarily is *638accompanied by mental harassment.” — Birmingham Water Works Co. v. Martini, supra. “For an assault, false imprisonment, and generally for all injuries to the person, each person injured must sue separately.”— Dicey. Parties, 381. Where two or more persons suffer a joint damage, and each, also, a sepm~ate damage from the same identical tort, in a joint suit the plaintiffs can only recover the joint damage. — Rhoads v. Booth, 14 Iowa, 576. We are so constituted that no man can share in the personal suffering or physical discomfort of another man. Two men may, from one cause, suffer alike, but the suffering of each is .personal to each. “Thus, if two persons are injured by the same stroke, the act is one, but it is the consequence of that act, and not the act itself, which is redressed, and therefore the injury (to the person) is several. There cannot be a joint action, because one does not share in the suffering of the other.” — Rhoads v. Booth, supra.
3. There was evidence in this case tending to show that Mr. and Mrs. Rich, for the 12 months preceding the bringing of the suit, had each suffered, constantly, in their home, from disagreeable odors and unpleasant gases emitted by the defendant’s plant. This evidence was admissible for- the purpose of aiding the jury in ascertaining the joint damage which- was suffered by Mr. and Mrs. Rich on account of such gases and odors as “necessarily tending to destroy the use of the building for the purposes for which it was erected and dedicated.” — Bal. & P. R. R. Co. v. Fifth Bap. Church, supra.
The right to the comfortable enjoyment by the plaintiffs of their home was a joint right, and anything which tended to a material disturbance of that joint right was a joint injury. The inconvenience and discomfort caused to the plaintiffs by the gases and vapors in their *639home, if caused by the defendant under such circumstances as to create an actionable wrong in the plaintiffs, were elements which the jury had a right to consider in estimating the plaintiffs’ damages. The plaintiffs, however, in this joint action had no right to recover the damages for the personal suffering, annoyance, or inconvenience which was suffered by each on account of the inhalation of such noxious vapors or gases. — Rhoads v. Booth, supra.
In order that the purposes for which the evidence of the inconveniences and annoyances of plaintiffs (if they suffered any) from the noxious fumes and gases (if there were any) was admissible in evidence may be plainly understood, we desire to say that this evidence was only admissible in this joint action for the purpose of aiding the jury in ascertaining what the difference in value of the plaintiffs’ property was, for a home, for the 12 months preceding the bringing of the suit, with said noxious vapors and odors, and what it would have been without said vapors and gases. In other words, if the defendant created the nuisance as claimed and caused foul and unpleasant odors to permeate plaintiffs’ home at intervals for a year before the bringing of the suit, the character of the annoyance of each plaintiff may be shown as indicating Avhat sort of odors and vapors Avere actually emitted by defendant’s plant and what kind of suffering they would naturally cause a human being. With this information before them it is then for the jury to say what, in money, Avould represent the difference between the value of plaintiffs’ property for said 12 months as a home with and without said odors and vapors. The oral charge of the trial court to the jury was not in accordance with the vieAvs above expressed, and for that reason the judgment of the court beloAv must be reversed.
*6404. This case, in its facts and in the legal questions involved in it, is a simple one. It is governed, in all of its phases, by the principles announced in the following cases: Bal. & P. R. R. Co. v. Fifth Baptist Church, supra; Bigbee Fertilizer Co. v. Scott, 3 Ala. App. 333, 56 South. 834; Bigbee Fertilizer Co. v. Scott, 3 Ala. App. 385, 58 South. 86; Birmingham Water Works Co. v. Martini, supra; Wm. M. Hosmer v. Republic Iron & Steel Co., 179 Ala. 415, 60 South. 801.
While the above is true, the appellant asked the trial judge to give 57 separate written charges to the jury and has placed upon this transcript 132 assignments of error. We presume that this opinion, read in connection with the authorities above cited, will furnish to the court ample precedent for its guidance upon the next trial of the case, and we deem a further discussion of this case as unnecessary.
Reversed and remanded.
All the Justices concur, except Dowdell, C. J., not sitting.