James M. Biglane v. Under the Hill Corporation ( 2005 )


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  •                     IN THE SUPREME COURT OF MISSISSIPPI
    NO. 2005-CA-01751-SCT
    JAMES M. BIGLANE AND NANCY K. BIGLANE
    v.
    UNDER THE HILL CORPORATION
    DATE OF JUDGMENT:                          06/22/2005
    TRIAL JUDGE:                               HON. GEORGE WARD
    COURT FROM WHICH APPEALED:                 ADAMS COUNTY CHANCERY COURT
    ATTORNEYS FOR APPELLANTS:                  JOHN G. CORLEW
    VIRGINIA T. MUNFORD
    BRUCE M. KUEHNLE, JR.
    PHILIP ELMER CARBY
    ATTORNEY FOR APPELLEE:                     T. MACK BRABHAM
    NATURE OF THE CASE:                        CIVIL - TORTS-OTHER THAN PERSONAL
    INJURY & PROPERTY DAMAGE
    DISPOSITION:                               ON DIRECT APPEAL: REVERSED AND
    RENDERED. ON CROSS-APPEAL:
    AFFIRMED - 02/08/2007
    MOTION FOR REHEARING FILED:
    MANDATE ISSUED:
    BEFORE WALLER, P.J., DIAZ AND DICKINSON, JJ.
    DIAZ, JUSTICE, FOR THE COURT:
    ¶1.    In this case we are asked two questions. First, was the noise coming from a local
    saloon such that it constituted a private nuisance to the residents of an apartment next door?
    Second, were the actions of the neighbor of the saloon a tortious interference with business
    relations? After a review of the case, we conclude there was a nuisance, but no tortious
    interference with business relations.
    FACTS
    ¶2.    “No spot on the American continent ever bore a viler name” wrote one historian about
    the section of Natchez that was closest to the mighty Mississippi River. Edith Wyatt Moore,
    Natchez Under-The-Hill 7 (1958). The spot gained its name from the bluffs of loess which
    the river carved through easily, creating an “upper” Natchez and the one called “under-the-
    Hill.” “Early travelers described it variously as a gambler’s paradise, a sink-hole of iniquity
    and a resort of the damned,” likely because “legitimate business houses and firms lined the
    streets but . . . were far outnumbered by gambling dens, saloons, houses of ill repute,” not
    to mention the presence of pirates and slave-traders—or the possibility that the rule of code
    duello might be invoked at any time. 
    Id. at 7-9. ¶3.
       “For the size of it, there is not, perhaps in the world, a more profligate place,” said one
    visitor, while another called it “hell on earth, with bells attached.” David G. Sansing,
    Natchez: An Illustrated History 65 (1992). At one point “[s]treet brawling in Natchez
    became so prevalent that [Spanish Mayor Manuel] Gayoso issued a ban on knives and other
    metal weapons,” to little effect. 
    Id. at 46. ¶4.
       Straddling the uncertain area between crumbling cliffs and the wild river, Natchez
    Under-the-Hill suffered many natural disasters, and “[s]ome claim that the Great River, in
    revenge against the place that shamed its name, altered its course, widened its banks and
    gobbled up much of that awful place.” 
    Id. at 66. Indeed,
    the “fine mansions and patrician
    elegance” of the upper city “soon eclipsed the fame of Natchez’s lower half, though both
    found an easy journey into lore and legend.” 
    Id. at 48. ¶5.
       Time and great changes in technology eliminated the necessity of Natchez as a port,
    as the riverboats gave way to steam-powered locomotives, which in turn gave way under the
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    advent of automobiles and airplanes. “It was the area’s infamous past, however, that
    eventually saved it and secured its future,” as the growing tourist industry brought those
    persons who “could not resist the pull of the landing’s past, the power of its legends or the
    magic of its name: Natchez Under-the-Hill.” 
    Id. at 164. Tourists
    began to flock to Silver
    Street—the only remaining portion of Under-the-Hill—in much the same way they began
    pilgrimages to sprawling and majestic homes such as Rosalie, the stately mansion used as a
    headquarters for the Union forces in the Civil War; Longwood, the legendarily-unfinished
    octagon house; and the Burn, used as a hospital during the War, with its towering spiral
    staircase.
    ¶6.    Onto this stage strode the two families who take center stage in the case at hand. In
    1967 Nancy and James Biglane purchased a dilapidated building at 27 Silver Street that had
    been built in the 1840s, and opened the lower portion of the building as a gift shop in 1978.
    In 1973, Andre Farish, Sr., and Paul O’Malley purchased the building directly next door, at
    25 Silver Street, which had been built in the 1830s; in 1975 they opened the Natchez Under
    the Hill Saloon. Eventually the Saloon would come to be run by the children of Mr. Farish,
    Melissa and Andre, Jr.
    ¶7.    The Saloon would establish itself proudly as a welcoming haven for locals and visitors
    alike, and maintained its presence on 25 Silver Street as other businesses came and went.
    The Biglanes began converting the upper floors of 27 Silver Street into a large apartment,
    which they moved into in 2002.
    ¶8.    Despite installing insulated walls and windows, locating their bedroom on the side of
    the building away from the Saloon, and placing their air conditioner unit on the side nearest
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    the Saloon, the Biglanes quickly realized they had a problem: the raucous nature of the
    Saloon kept them wide awake at night.
    ¶9.      Specifically, it was live music, a hallmark of the Saloon. During the summertime the
    un-air conditioned Under the Hill opened its windows and doors to lessen the heat inside, and
    music echoed up and down Silver Street. While the music was easier on Mr. Biglane, who
    had lost his hearing over the years, it was particularly difficult on Mrs. Biglane, who was
    frustrated by the constant rock and roll, conversation, and the clack of pool balls.
    ¶10.     The Biglanes contacted the Saloon and asked that the music be turned down, and it
    was: Mr. Farish got rid of Groove Line, the band that seemed to trouble the Biglanes the
    most, and installed thick windows to block noise. He also purchased a sound meter by which
    bands could measure their output in decibels, and forbade them from going over a certain
    point.
    ¶11.     Still dissatisfied, the Biglanes blocked off two nearby parking lots that served the
    Saloon, using a cable over the entrance of one and crafting a metal gate over another.
    Ultimately this classic neighborly dispute spilled into the Chancery Court of Adams County,
    prompted by a complaint from the Biglanes.
    ¶12.     The couple alleged private nuisance, among other causes of action, and Under the Hill
    counterclaimed, alleging that the Biglanes had tortiously interfered in its business (by
    blocking the nearby parking lots) and defamed them (by sending a letter of complaint to the
    City Attorney).
    ¶13.     The trial court heard multiple witnesses who testified to a dazzling array of subjects,
    including a historian who described the origins and evolution of under-the-Hill and a doctor
    4
    with an expertise in sound who played loud music in court to replicate the alleged decibel
    levels of Under the Hill. The trial court ultimately rendered a highly detailed and intricately
    reasoned opinion and order than ran to 17 pages.
    ¶14.   The chancellor determined that Under the Hill was a private nuisance to the Biglanes,
    and enjoined the Saloon from leaving open any doors or windows when music was playing,
    and ordered it to prevent patrons from loitering in the streets. The trial court also found that
    the Biglanes had tortiously interfered with the business relations of Under the Hill. Although
    no damages were actually shown, the trial court assessed nominal and punitive damages
    because of the intentional character of the conduct.
    ¶15.   In lieu of setting an amount for damages, the trial court attempted to bring the parties
    together for “the opportunity to reach some type of an agreement which will allow the Under
    the Hill Saloon employees and patrons to park in the Water Street area.” This attempt to
    reconcile the parties failed, and the Biglanes quickly filed a motion that the trial court
    reconsider its ruling regarding punitive damages. It did so, voiding the award of punitive
    damages and setting nominal damages at $500.
    ¶16.   Aggrieved, the Biglanes appealed, arguing that damages were improperly awarded,
    and Under the Hill cross-appealed, arguing that its business was not a private nuisance.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    ¶17.   In this case we are presented with questions of law and fact arising from the
    determination of a chancery court. We “always review a chancellor’s findings of fact, but
    . . . will not disturb the factual findings of a chancellor when supported by substantial
    evidence unless [we] can say with reasonable certainty that the chancellor abused his
    5
    discretion, was manifestly wrong, clearly erroneous or applied an erroneous legal standard.”
    Cummings v. Benderman, 
    681 So. 2d 97
    , 100 (Miss. 1996). We use a de novo standard
    when analyzing questions of law. 
    Id. DISCUSSION I. Is
    the Under the Hill Saloon a Private Nuisance to the Biglanes?
    ¶18.   The Biglanes asserted that the Saloon was a private nuisance. “A private nuisance is
    a nontrespassory invasion of another’s interest in the use and enjoyment of his property.”
    Leaf River Forest Prods., Inc. v. Ferguson, 
    662 So. 2d 648
    , 662 (Miss. 1995). “One
    landowner may not use his land so as to unreasonably annoy, inconvenience, or harm others.”
    
    Id. (internal quotations and
    citation omitted).
    ¶19.   An entity is subject to liability for a private nuisance only when its conduct is a legal
    cause of an invasion of another’s interest in the private use and enjoyment of land and that
    invasion is either (a) intentional and unreasonable, or (b) unintentional but otherwise
    provides the basis for a cause of action for negligent or reckless conduct or for abnormally
    dangerous conditions or activities. 
    Id. ¶20. The trial
    court proceeded under the first path of liability—whether the conduct
    complained of was intentional and unreasonable. After reviewing the evidence presented at
    trial, the chancellor found ample evidence that the Biglanes frequently could not use or enjoy
    their property—significantly, that Mrs. Biglane often slept away from the apartment on
    weekends to avoid the noise and that she could not have her grandchildren over on the
    weekends because of the noise. The audiologist who testified for the Biglanes concluded that
    the noise levels were excessive and unreasonable, although he also conceded that he had
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    never measured the noise levels in the couple’s bedroom. This problem was exacerbated
    during the summer months, when the un-airconditioned Saloon left its doors and windows
    open to defray the oppressive Natchez heat.
    ¶21.   The Saloon did offer a witness who lived in back of the establishment who said he
    never had any problems with the noise, but the chancellor held that he was not an impartial
    witness, since he was testifying for his landlord.
    ¶22.   Ultimately the trial court weighed the fact that the Biglanes knew or should have
    known that there was going to be some sort of noise associated with living “within five feet
    of a well established saloon which provides live music on the weekends.”
    ¶23.   We have examined similar issues before. An important Mississippi case regarding
    private nuisance based on the actions of a neighbor is Alfred Jacobshagen Co. v. Dockery,
    
    243 Miss. 511
    , 
    139 So. 2d 632
    (1962). In that case a group of residents in Byram were
    overwhelmed by the “repulsive” odors of a nearby rendering plant. 
    Id. at 514-15, 139
    So.
    2d at 632-33.
    ¶24.   The general rule is that “[a] business, although in itself lawful, which impregnates the
    atmosphere with disagreeable and offensive odors and stenches, may become a nuisance to
    those occupying property in the vicinity, where such obnoxious smells result in a material
    injury to such owners.” Id. at 517, 
    139 So. 2d
    at 634. This same rule extends to a situation
    where a lawful business injects loud music into the surrounding neighborhoods. For “[a]
    reasonable use of one’s property cannot be construed to include those uses which produce
    obnoxious [noises], which in turn result in a material injury to owners of property in the
    vicinity, causing them to suffer substantial annoyance, inconvenience, and discomfort.” 
    Id. 7 ¶25. Accordingly,
    even a lawful business—which the Under the Hill Saloon certainly
    is1 —“may become . . . a nuisance” by interfering with its neighbors’ enjoyment of their
    property.” 
    Id. We recognize that
    “[e]ach [private nuisance] case must be decided upon its
    own peculiar facts, taking into consideration the location and the surrounding
    circumstances.” 
    Id. Ultimately, “[i]t is
    not necessary that other property owners should be
    driven from their dwellings,” because “[i]t is enough that the enjoyment of life and property
    is rendered materially uncomfortable and annoying.” 
    Id. ¶26. In Dockery
    we deferred greatly to the chancery court and determined that it “had the
    power to enjoin such future operations of the rendering plant as constituted in fact a
    nuisance,” and that it also “had the lesser power to permit continued operation of the plant,
    subject to certain stated conditions and 
    requirements.” 243 Miss. at 517
    , 
    139 So. 2d
    at 634;
    see also Lambert v. Matthews, 
    757 So. 2d 1066
    , 1068 (Miss. Ct. App. 2000) (chancery
    court’s limitation on farmowners “from keeping more than two roosters on their property at
    any time” was affirmed as a proper equitable response to private nuisance caused by the
    crowing of the birds).
    ¶27.   In the case at hand, the trial court exercised its power to permit continued operation
    1
    In 1963 the City of Natchez zoned the area encompassing Silver Street as a “WD
    district,” or a waterfront development district; the ordinance is still in place today. It
    explicitly authorized “as of right” the use of dwelling homes such as the Biglanes’ and
    businesses like Under the Hill. The ordinance noted that “[i]It is intended that [the WD
    district] be reserved for active uses which animate the waterfront and take advantage of their
    proximity to the waterfront. Such uses should be oriented toward the enjoyment of tourists
    and citizens of the community. Primary objectives include visual and limited physical access
    to the water, a pedestrian-friendly environment, limited automobile access and parking, and
    the preservation and enhancement of the distinct character of the historic waterfront.”
    8
    of the Saloon while setting conditions to its future operation. Namely, it found that the
    Saloon could not “operat[e] its business with its doors and windows opened during any time
    that amplified music is being played inside the saloon.” The chancery court found “that such
    a limitation is reasonable in that it should help contain the noise within the saloon, and should
    discourage the bar patrons from congregating or loitering in the streets outside of the saloon.”
    ¶28.   From a review of the record it is clear that the chancery court balanced the interests
    between the Biglanes and the Saloon in a quest for an equitable remedy that allowed the
    couple to enjoy their private apartment and while protecting a popular business and tourist
    attraction from over-regulation. See also 
    Lambert, 757 So. 2d at 1071
    (“Equity should adjust
    the remedy to the need in a nuisance case”). Accordingly, we agree that the Saloon was a
    private nuisance to the Biglanes and affirm the trial court’s equitable conditions placed upon
    its continued operation.
    II. Was There a Tortious Interference with Business Relations?
    ¶29.   In response to the Biglanes’ assertion that the Saloon was a private nuisance, the bar
    counterclaimed, arguing that its neighbors had interfered with the operation of their business.
    “There are four elements necessary to prove a claim of tortious interference with a business
    relationship: (1) The acts were intentional and willful; (2) The acts were calculated to cause
    damage to the plaintiffs in their lawful business; (3) The acts were done with the unlawful
    purpose of causing damage and loss, without right or justifiable cause on the part of the
    defendant (which constitutes malice); (4) Actual damage and loss resulted.” MBF Corp. v.
    Century Business Comms., Inc., 
    663 So. 2d 595
    , 598 (Miss. 1995). In this case the Biglanes
    essentially concede the presence of the first two prongs, but urge that neither the third nor
    9
    the fourth factors were satisfied. If any of the factors are not met, there cannot be a finding
    of tortious interference with business.
    A. “Without Right or Justifiable Cause.”
    ¶30.   Mr. Biglane, or corporations of which he has substantial control, owns much of the
    property surrounding the Under the Hill Saloon, including multiple parking areas around the
    Saloon. After the tensions escalated between the Biglanes and the Saloon, Mr. Biglane
    caused the two parking areas in his control to be blocked, one with a cable gate after 6:00
    p.m. and the other by an iron gate. It is undisputed that Mr. Biglane controls the former lot
    outright, but the ownership of the second lot—the so-called Water Street area—is more
    complicated.
    ¶31.   Ownership of the property is important because it speaks to the third factor of the
    tort—that the allegedly tortious acts must be performed without right or justifiable cause.
    It is a basic tenet of property law that a landowner or tenant may use the premises they
    control in whatever fashion they desire, so long as the law is obeyed. See generally Ewing
    v. Adams, 
    573 So. 2d 1364
    , 1367-68 (Miss. 1990). This leads to the logical conclusion that
    a landowner or valid tenant may forbid any other persons from using their property. This
    ideal is protected in our law to the point that there are both civil and criminal prohibitions
    against trespassing. See Alexander v. Brown, 
    793 So. 2d 601
    , 605 (Miss. 2001) (definition
    of civil trespass); Miss. Code Ann. § 97-17-87 (Rev. 2006) (criminal trespass).
    ¶32.   Generally speaking, it cannot be malicious for a person to refuse access to others to
    their private property. Accordingly, blocking off the parking lot he owned in whole was not
    tortious conduct by Mr. Biglane.
    10
    ¶33.   The property comprising the area called Water Street is a different matter. There was
    extensive testimony by multiple witnesses regarding the property, its history, nature, and
    various owners–whether Mr. Biglane, the City of Natchez, or others. The Water Street
    property is not a paved street per se, but an area that has been built up on the western bank
    of the Mississippi River by placement of rock and soil.
    ¶34.   Part of Water Street is a parking lot, and the city engineer testified that roughly two
    parking spaces, or portions of the spaces, were owned by the city. Another portion of Water
    Street is a boat ramp owned by Mr. Biglane. The city has a permanent easement to use the
    ramp, but of late it is basically only used by riverboat traffic. Previously the only access to
    the city’s portions of Water Street were through Mr. Biglane’s parcel, and the city engineer
    testified that blocking the city’s right of way was impermissible, as the city no longer had use
    and access to the property they owned or had access to its easement because of the gate.
    There was also testimony that there had been a city-owned sign advertising the area as
    parking for the public that was later taken down. The city ultimately acquiesced to the
    placement of the gate and the blocking of its own property.
    ¶35.   It is undisputed that Mr. Biglane erected an iron gate blocking Water Street. The
    chancellor found that part of the property blocked by the iron gate was owned by the city;
    that the gate itself partially rested upon city property; and that two of the parking spaces
    blocked by Mr. Biglane were city property. In light of this evidence, the trial court found
    that the third factor required for tortious interference with business was present—that Mr.
    Biglane did not have the right to block property which he did not own from public access.
    ¶36.   Substantial evidence provided at trial and in the record supported the detailed and
    11
    extensive findings of fact provided by the trial court.        Accordingly, we defer to the
    chancellor’s findings and conclude that the Biglanes acted without right in blocking the
    Water Street property. Yet our inquiry does not end there.
    B. “Actual Damage and Loss Resulted.”
    ¶37.   Next we must consider whether the Under the Hill Saloon was damaged by the actions
    of the Biglanes. To satisfy this tort, we require “actual” damages, which are synonymous
    with “compensatory” damages; they are substantial, rather than nominal. ACI Chems., Inc.
    v. Metaplex, Inc., 
    615 So. 2d 1192
    , 1202 (Miss. 1993).
    ¶38.   This does not mean that an exact dollar value must be set before we can find actual
    damages. In the case of ACI Chemicals, we affirmed a chancellor’s finding of tortious
    interference with business relations when a company, after suffering interference from a
    competitor, no longer received any new orders from a customer; when its credit line was
    frozen; and it lost the opportunity to solicit business from at least three potential customers.
    
    Id. at 1202. We
    found that this was evidence of actual damages. 
    Id. This is in
    accord with
    the public policy underscoring this tort: to maintain a fair and legal playing field between
    competitors in the business arena.
    ¶39.   In the case at hand, Under the Hill conceded that it could not demonstrate a loss of
    income from the lack of parking. In fact, business had slightly increased after the parking
    lots were blocked by Mr. Biglane, which was attributed by Mr. Farish to more riverboats
    docking in Natchez. There was evidence that one server at the Saloon had worked less than
    she had in years, but no receipts or other evidence was presented by the Saloon to
    demonstrate any sort of a loss. In its amended order the trial court found that punitive
    12
    damages were not warranted under these facts, and accordingly declined to assess attorney’s
    fees against the Biglanes. Compare ACI 
    Chems., 615 So. 2d at 1194
    (attorney’s fees can be
    warranted when trial court assesses punitive damages in tortious interference with business
    case).
    ¶40.     The trial court assessed a damages award of $500 for “nominal damages” because it
    determined the Biglanes’ conduct was intentional. The trial court based this finding upon
    the basic legal concept that nominal damages can be awarded for intentional torts. See
    Williams v. Wiggins, 
    285 So. 2d 163
    , 164-65 (Miss. 1973) (“nominal damages . . . can only
    be granted in the absence of actual injury in cases of intentional tort,” and not in cases
    involving negligence). The situation at hand is different. Unlike intentional torts such as
    trespass or battery, “actual damage and loss” is a required component of the tort of
    interference with business relations. As 
    noted supra
    , this factor can be met in differing ways,
    but it must be met. The Under the Hill Saloon admitted it had suffered no actual damage or
    loss. Nominal damages do not satisfy a finding of the tort of intentional interference with
    business relations. In this type of case, there must be actual damages. Because the fourth
    factor was not met, there cannot be a tortious interference with business and the award of
    nominal damages must be reversed.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶41.     This is a classic case of a dispute between two neighbors. We reaffirm our position
    that a finding of tortious interference with business relations must be based upon a finding
    of actual damages, and also that a landowner may not use its property in such a fashion as
    to unreasonably deprive another of the use or enjoyment of their property. We therefore
    13
    affirm the chancery court’s judgment finding a private nuisance but reverse the award of
    $500 in damages against the Biglanes for tortious interference with business relations.
    ¶42. ON DIRECT APPEAL: REVERSED AND RENDERED. ON CROSS-APPEAL:
    AFFIRMED.
    SMITH, C.J., WALLER AND COBB, PJJ., EASLEY, CARLSON AND
    GRAVES, JJ., CONCUR. DICKINSON, J., CONCURS IN RESULT ONLY.
    RANDOLPH, J., NOT PARTICIPATING.
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