Judges: Wbbn-Eb, Haight
Filed Date: 10/7/1902
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 11/12/2024
[EDITORS' NOTE: THIS PAGE CONTAINS HEADNOTES. HEADNOTES ARE NOT AN OFFICIAL PRODUCT OF THE COURT, THEREFORE THEY ARE NOT DISPLAYED.] *Page 3 The principal question presented on this appeal is, whether a tenant in possession of premises affected by a nuisance, under a lease made during the existence of the nuisance, can maintain an action to abate the same and to recover his damages occasioned thereby. This question cannot be intelligently discussed without a short review of the history of the case.
In 1886 the plaintiff went into occupation of the premises No. 33 West Twenty-sixth street in the city of New York, under a lease which expired May 1st, 1890. In the fall of 1888 the defendant established an electric light plant on the same street and about one hundred and seventy-five feet distant from the plaintiff's dwelling. At the expiration of plaintiff's first lease she took another lease for three years. Then she took leases from year to year until May 1st, 1897, at which time she took a lease from a new owner of the premises for a term of three years. During the terms of all of these leases the defendant operated its electric light station. In December, 1898, which was more than twelve years after plaintiff had taken her first lease, and about ten years after the establishment of defendant's electric light station, this action was commenced. The complaint charged that the electric light station, as operated by the defendant, was a nuisance, and the learned trial court found "that smoke and cinders are emitted from the premises of the defendant and that great quantities of this smoke and cinders fall upon plaintiff's premises; that the jar and vibration caused by the running of the defendant's machinery are of such an extent and nature as to interfere seriously with plaintiff's enjoyment of her premises, and that the plaintiff has been damaged to a considerable extent and is being damaged by the aforesaid acts of the defendant. * * * That the aforesaid acts have prevented the plaintiff from renting the rooms of her house, have injured her furniture and household effects and have caused her an expense for laundry work." Upon these findings the trial court decided that the plaintiff was entitled to $4,000 damages and to an injunction "enjoining and restraining the *Page 5 defendant from so conducting its business on the premises, mentioned and described in the complaint, as to constitute a nuisance in the respects before mentioned as against the plaintiff."
Upon defendant's appeal to the Appellate Division, that learned court modified the judgment entered upon the decision of the trial court by reducing the damage to six cents and vacating the injunction. The plaintiff, who is the appellant in this action, does not complain because the injunction was vacated, for it is conceded that at the time of the argument in the Appellate Division the plaintiff's last lease had expired and she had vacated the premises, so that there was no longer any necessity for an injunction. It is claimed, however, that the modification of the judgment, in respect to the damages awarded, was illegal and erroneous. This claim is met by the defendant's contention that the plaintiff, as tenant under a lease which was made during the existence of the nuisance, is entitled to no damages whatever. If it is true that a tenant who "comes to a nuisance" has no remedy for the damages which he may suffer by reason thereof, then it must be conceded that the plaintiff has no cause for complaint and that the learned Appellate Division has dealt more leniently with her than she deserved, for in that event the judgment of the trial court should have been reversed altogether, and judgment absolute rendered in favor of the defendant.
We are inclined to the view that the learned Appellate Division erred in modifying the judgment as stated. The plaintiff was either entitled to such substantial damages as she had been able to establish by her proofs, or she was not entitled to any thing. This is not a case in which the plaintiff has established a good cause of action but has failed in her proof of damages; on the contrary, it is clearly a case in which the only reason there can be for withholding such actual damages as she may be able to establish, is that she has no cause of action.
Before proceeding to discuss the question whether the plaintiff has a cause of action let us first fix the point of view *Page 6
from which it must be considered, and to that end we will briefly state a few propositions from which there can be no dissent. 1. The trial court has found that defendant's electric light station, as operated during the time set forth in the complaint, was a nuisance as to the plaintiff. The decision was in the short form and was, therefore, in effect a general verdict. (AmherstCollege v. Ritch,
In the light of these preliminary considerations we come to the real question in the case. If the plaintiff could have maintained an action under her first lease which antedated the nuisance, why can she not maintain an action under leases made during the existence of the nuisance? The acts complained of are no less a nuisance in the one case than in the other, nor are they any more excusable or justifiable by the character of the defendant's business. It is contended by the defendant that the difference between the two cases lies in the fact that in the former the rent paid by the tenant is supposed to represent the value of the premises free from the nuisance, while in the latter it is presumed to have been fixed according to their diminished value on account of the existing nuisance. This view was *Page 7
adopted by the learned Appellate Division on the authority ofKernochan v. N.Y.E.R.R. Co. (supra). We think theKernochan case has no application to a case like the one at bar, and this without reference to the fact that it appears affirmatively that the rental paid by the plaintiff was the same during the existence of the nuisance as it was before. The elevated railroad cases, to which class the Kernochan case belongs, are sui generis. They are governed by principles which apply to no other class of cases. The wrongful acts for which the elevated railroad companies, operating in the city of New York, have been held liable, are technically neither nuisances nor trespasses. They may more correctly be described as wrongful appropriations of the easements which are an integral part of the property of adjoining owners. These wrongful acts, although an invasion of the rights of such owners, were not trespasses, because there was no physical entry or intrusion upon their lands, and this for the reason that the ownership of the fee in the streets upon which the elevated railroads were built was in the municipality and not in the adjoining owners. There was no nuisance, in the legal signification of that term, because the railroad companies were expressly authorized by legislative enactment to occupy the streets for that purpose. This express right was coupled with the power of eminent domain so that these corporations could acquire, in condemnation proceedings, the easements of adjoining owners which it might be necessary to destroy or appropriate. The appropriation and destruction of such easements by said corporations, without resort to condemnation proceedings, led to the so-called elevated railroad litigation, which for immensity of volume and variety and difficulty of questions involved, has no parallel in our jurisprudence. The principal question in the Kernochan Case (
Here we have a different situation than was presented in that case. The defendant is a corporation organized for the purpose of producing and selling electric light. While it serves the public in that way it is none the less a strictly private corporation. The trial court has decided that the defendant has so operated its electric light station as to constitute a nuisance against the plaintiff. And what is a nuisance? It is an unreasonable, unwarrantable or unlawful use of one's own property to the annoyance, inconvenience, discomfort or damage of another. It is not, as in the Kernochan case, a technical wrong which can be transformed into a right by the proper legal procedure, but a positive, naked wrong, each repetition of which constitutes a fresh offense with its separate legal remedy. In theory of law a nuisance is not only never presumed to be permanent, but, on the contrary, each repetition thereof is deemed a new nuisance, to redress which the aggrieved party may institute as many actions at law as may be necessary for that purpose. As there are various degrees of nuisances, so there are different kinds. Some may permanently injure the real property contiguous thereto; others may affect the present right of occupancy *Page 10
and the reversion together; still others may curtail or destroy the right of occupancy alone. In the case at bar we are not advised as to the effect of the nuisance upon the owner's reversion, but there is evidence from which the trial court has found that the plaintiff's right of occupancy has been impaired, and that her own personal effects have been injured to her substantial damage. This was not an injury for which the owner of the reversion could sue. If there was any right of action it belonged to the plaintiff. The injury to her right of occupancy was as separate and distinct from any injury to the reversion as the injury to her furniture and household belongings. During the term of the lease the premises belonged to the plaintiff, and the owner had no rights therein except such as were expressly reserved in the lease, or such as reverted to him after its expiration. It goes without saying that if the nuisance created by the defendant had permanently injured the premises occupied by the plaintiff the owner would have a right of action. In such a case the defendant could not be heard to urge the public and permanent character of its business or buildings as a defense, for that would be simply pleading its own wrong in justification of the destruction of the property of others without compensation. Since the defendant is not vested with the power of eminent domain, it is equally clear that it has no right to take or destroy the property of adjoining owners at all. As affecting the rights of owners whose property is injured by a nuisance, all this is as true of titles which are acquired during the continuance of the nuisance as of those which antedate it. (Befwick v. Cunden, Cro. Eliz. 402; Penruddock's Case, 3 Coke, pt. 5, 101; Tipping v. St. Helen's Smelting Co., L.R. [1 Ch. App.] 66; Alexander v. Kerr, 2 Rawle, 83; SusquehannaFertilizer Co. v. Malone, [Md.] 9 L.R.A. 737; Van Fossen v.Clark, [Iowa] 52 L.R.A. 279; Vedder v. Vedder, 1 Denio, 257; Campbell v. Seaman,
Let us now see what the authorities have to say upon the subject. The English cases cited in the opinion in the KernochanCase (supra) are all cases in which there was an injury *Page 12 to the reversion, and this is the principle upon which the owners of the premises affected by the nuisance were held to be entitled to maintain actions. (Jesser v. Gifford, 4 Burr. 2141;Leader v. Moxon, 3 Wils. 461; Bedingfield v. Onslow, 3 Lev. 209; Clowes v. Staffordshire Potteries W.W. Co., L.R. [8 Ch. App.] 125; Kidgill v. Moor, 9 C.B. 364; Bell v.Midland Ry. Co., 10 C.B. [N.S.] 287.) In the following English cases it was held that only the tenant can sue for a casual or temporary nuisance which is an injury to his right of possession but not to the reversion: Mumford v. Oxford W. W. Ry. Co. (1 H. N. [N.S.] 34); Simpson v. Savage (1 C.B. [N.S.] 347);Jones v. Chappell (L.R. [20 Eq.] 539); Shelfer v. City ofLondon Electric Lighting Co., and Meux's Brewery Co. v. Same (L.R. [1 Ch. 1895] 287.)
There are other English cases in which it has been held that the lessee and reversioner may each have an action for injuries resulting from the same wrong, each with respect to his particular estate, of which Bedingfield v. Onslow (3 Lev. 209) is an example, cited with approval in Kernochan's Case
(supra), and there is a dictum to the same effect in Hine v.N.Y.E.R.R. Co. (
Several propositions seem to be quite satisfactorily established, therefore, both upon principle and by authority. 1. That an owner of property affected by a nuisance may maintain an action to recover his damages, or to abate the nuisance, or both, no matter whether he takes his title before or after the introduction of the nuisance. 2. That a landlord and his tenant have separate estates for injuries to which each may have his appropriate remedy. If then, an owner, who "comes to a nuisance," can maintain an action to redress his wrongs, why should a tenant who "comes to a nuisance" be denied any remedy? The last owner or occupant, when he acquires his property or possession, acquires with it all the rights which by law belong to it, and exemption from wrongful injury by a contiguous proprietor is one of them. A man may, by an uninterrupted user of twenty years, acquire, as against individuals, rights which he cannot acquire against the public. He may, as against individuals, acquire during that period of time a right to use the air, the earth or the water in a manner which, without such long use, would be inconsistent with the rights of his neighbors, and subject to immediate correction by process of law. By the kindly aid of a legal fiction a grant will be presumed, after so great a lapse of time, *Page 14
from all who had any right to challenge his proceedings. But no user for any shorter period will give him more right against a new comer than he had against an old one. The substance of this doctrine was distinctly held in Howell v. M'Coy (3 Rawle, 256), where the defendant's lease was six years older than the plaintiff's; in Bliss v. Hall (4 Bing. N.C. 183), where defendant, a tallow chandler, pleaded the priority of his business, and where the plea was met by the court's suggestion that "the plaintiff came to the house he occupies with all the rights which the common law affords, and one of them is the right to wholesome air;" in Elliotson v. Feetham (2 Bing. N.C. 134), where a noisy nuisance, which was ten years older than the plaintiff's term, was still held to be a nuisance. The same rule has been applied in favor of subsequent purchasers in a number of English cases above cited, and in Brady v. Weeks (3 Barb. 157); Blunt v. Aikin (15 Wend. 526); Vedder v. Vedder (1 Denio, 257); Campbell v. Seaman (
It is apparent that the rule in Kernochan's Case (supra) would be an extremely convenient one in all cases and, probably, a just one in many cases arising out of nuisances; but we think it cannot be adopted as a general rule applicable to the law of nuisances without overturning the fundamental principles upon which that law is based. If an ordinary nuisance is to be hallowed by the presumption of permanence we may well pause to inquire — whither are we drifting? This inquiry is as pertinent in the case at bar, where the nuisance is created in the processes of a work of great public utility, as it would be in a case where the nuisance is not sought to be cloaked beneath the plea of "pro bono publico." If there is a nuisance, there is a wrong, which the court will neither shield by presumption nor encourage with its protection. We conclude, therefore, that the doctrine of *Page 16 Kernochan's case was not intended to be applied to the general law of nuisances but to a condition created by the construction and operation of the elevated railroads which has no exact parallel in any other department of our jurisprudence.
This, of course, leads to the further conclusion that the modification of the judgment herein as to damages, upon the authority of the Kernochan case, was erroneous and this would require a reversal of the judgment of the Appellate Division and an affirmance of the judgment entered upon the decree of the trial court, but for an oversight of the latter court as to the period for which the plaintiff was entitled to recover damages. It is familiar law that the damages which may be recovered in actions of this character are limited to the period of six years immediately preceding the commencement of the action. (Code Civ. Pro. sec. 382; Matter of Neilley,
The judgment herein should be reversed and a new trial had, with costs to abide the event. *Page 17