Summary
suggesting that a statute could "denominate [an] activity a nuisance per se"
Summary of this case from John R. Sand Gravel Company v. U.S.Opinion
Docket No. 70, Calendar No. 46,875.
Decided May 17, 1957.
Appeal from Grand Traverse; Pugsley (Earl C.), J., presiding. Submitted October 9, 1956. (Docket No. 70, Calendar No. 46,875.) Decided May 17, 1957.
Bill by the Township of Garfield against Sol H. Young, doing business as Sol H. Young Iron Metal Company, to enjoin operation of a junk yard under township zoning ordinance and as public nuisance. Bill dismissed. Plaintiff appeals. Affirmed.
Harry T. Running, for plaintiff.
Charles H. Menmuir, for defendant.
This is a junk yard case. The defendant is conducting the enterprise without the license required by a resolution of the township adopted in 1945. The township seeks to enjoin the operation, not only as a violation of the ordinance, but also as a public nuisance. The circuit court dismissed the bill on its merits and the controversy is before us on general appeal.
This is the second appeal involving this matter. In Township of Garfield v. Young, 340 Mich. 616, we held that the ordinance in question, providing for the licensing of junk yards operated within the township, was constitutional under the authority of People v. Gottlieb, 337 Mich. 276. We said that it was not an unconstitutional delegation of legislative power for the ordinance to require that the petition for a license be accompanied by written consents from a percentage of certain adjoining property owners. Those questions are now foreclosed. The case was then sent back for trial on the merits to determine whether there was sufficient factual basis for the issuance of an injunction, restraining the defendant from further operation of his business.
Enacted by the township under PA 1929, No 12, as amended by PA 1935, No 34 (CL 1948, § 445.451 et seq. [Stat Ann § 19.731 et seq.]).
The court below found the resolution invalid and illegal because of defects in its enactment. It found, further, after taking testimony and viewing the premises, that this was no public nuisance, that there was "no showing of any health problem or other facts in the proofs which would justify the court in issuing a writ of injunction." We will first consider the matter of the alleged nuisance.
The business of the defendant — that of operating a junk yard — is not a public nuisance per se at the common law. Township of Warren v. Raymond, 291 Mich. 426, and cases there cited. No attempt is made to denominate this activity a nuisance per se under any statute, or the resolution before us. We note that a penalty, only, is imposed for failure to comply with its provisions. The plaintiff township, however, would have us enjoin the violation on the theory that the resolution regulates a business affecting public health, welfare and morals, and therefore its violation is a nuisance per se. In support thereof, certain of the cases collected in 166 ALR 659-666 are cited to us. The law of this jurisdiction does not, however, support this theory. Our holding in Village of St. Johns v. McFarlan, 33 Mich. 72 (20 Am Rep 671), expresses the Michigan, and we think, upon principle, the preferable, view:
"A court in chancery has no jurisdiction to restrain the threatened violation of a village ordinance, unless the act threatened to be done, if carried out, would be a nuisance. If it were otherwise, the court might be called upon in all classes of cases to restrain the doing of acts prohibited by statute. Mayor of Hudson v. Thorne, 7 Paige Ch (NY) 261; Attorney General v. Utica Insurance Co., 2 Johns Ch (NY) 370.
"The erection of a wooden building within the limits of a city or village is not in and of itself a nuisance. Neither does the fact that the erection of such is prohibited by ordinance make it a nuisance. If this were so, then the doing of any act prohibited by law would, upon the same reasoning, be a nuisance. The act, if prohibited, would be illegal; but something more than mere illegality is required to give this court jurisdiction. It was, however, insisted that the erection of a wooden building in a thickly settled portion of a village increases the danger in case of fire, and thereby injures adjoining property. There are, however, many kinds of trades and occupations, some of them prohibited by law, which, when carried on, equally tend to injure adjoining property, yet no one would contend that a court of chancery should interfere by injunction."
See, also, Conway v. Gampel, 235 Mich. 511.
The cases of Portage Township v. Full Salvation Union, 318 Mich. 693; and People v. Kelly, 295 Mich. 632, are distinguishable, the Court pointing out in the former case (p 703) that "under the specific terms of the statute the use made by defendants of the premises in question, and the buildings erected, in violation of the terms of the ordinance, constitute a nuisance per se. Such result was recognized by the Court in People v. Kelly, 295 Mich. 632."
Apart from statute, then, is the case before us a proper case for the issuance of injunction at the prayer of the public authorities upon the theory that a public nuisance must be restrained? If, of course, we have in truth a public nuisance, the fact that it is also a criminal act will not stay the chancellor's hand. Story, Commentaries on Equity Jurisprudence (Randall, 3d ed 1920), §§ 921, 924; 6 McQuillin, Municipal Corporations (3d ed), § 24.58; Prosser, Torts, § 71. We are not here called upon to grasp the thorny nettle. We need not decide the extent to which the chancellor may displace the jury in a criminal proceeding. Mack, The Revival of Criminal Equity, 16 Harv L Rev 389.
Without valid and controlling statute, then, we are remitted to the question of whether or not there is, in fact, a public nuisance.
"No better definition of a public nuisance has been suggested than that of an act or omission `which obstructs or causes inconvenience or damage to the public in the exercise of rights common to all Her Majesty's subjects.' The term comprehends a miscellaneous and diversified group of minor criminal offenses, based on some interference with the interests of the community, or the comfort or convenience of the general public. * * *
"To be considered public, the nuisance must affect an interest common to the general public, rather than peculiar to one individual, or several. * * * It is not necessary, however, that the entire community be affected, so long as the nuisance will interfere with those who come in contact with it in the exercise of a public right." (Prosser, supra, § 71, pp 401, 402.)
As such, the activity must be harmful to the public health, Township of Kalamazoo v. Lee, 228 Mich. 117; or create an interference in the use of a way of travel, Attorney General, ex rel. Muskegon Booming Company, v. Evart Booming Company, 34 Mich. 462; or affect public morals, State, ex rel. Wayne Prosecuting Attorney, v. Martin, 314 Mich. 317; or prevent the public from the peaceful use of their land and the public streets, City of Grand Rapids v. Weiden, 97 Mich. 82. The question in each case is one of fact, and in each case we must consider the facts peculiar to that particular case. People v. Carpenter, 1 Mich. 273; Crippen v. People, 8 Mich. 117.
What, here, are the facts controlling as to nuisance, the facts peculiar to this particular case? Defendant's property is an unrestricted parcel in Garfield township. It is located on Barlow road, immediately north of the Cranston mink farm and about a mile from the city dump, which is also on Barlow. One adjoining owner runs a trucking and bulldozing business from his home. Two junk yards, in addition to defendant's, are in the immediate vicinity. A tractor repair shop is located nearby. Several residences are found in the area, some of which are used in connection with the businesses mentioned. We have here, then, no intrusion of a noxious and objectionable business into an area devoted to the quiet of residential pursuits. Testimony was offered respecting smoke, noise, and odors. Some such there unquestionably was. The defendant admitted that smoke would result from the burning of automobile upholstery but stated that such burning could be accomplished at night, or otherwise. (This is to prevent the sooting-up of washings on the lines.) The operator of the nearby mink farm claimed that he lost a large number of mink during the construction of the metal fence surrounding the defendant's property and a lesser number in the subsequent years due to the noises from the defendant's operations. ("Mink are somewhat sensitive to noise and that is my primary reason for not wanting Sol Young there, and the property.") Further, on the matter of smoke (and odors) the operator of the nearby junk yard, Mr. Ginsburg, testifying for the plaintiff, stated that he could not tell whether or not smoke and odor emanated from the defendant's yard because "so much smell around there by my yard that I don't know which yard it comes from." The township supervisor admitted that "we have had a lot of complaints on the Whitney yard too." (This is one of the other junk yards nearby.)
There was testimony of rat infestation in the area, but it was far from persuasive that defendant was responsible for this condition.
Finally, testimony was offered relative to the depreciation of property values in the area since the commencement of the defendant's operations, but it is not convincing in view of the predominant use of property in the area. Under Plassey v. S. Loewenstein Son, 330 Mich. 525, 530, the "mere fact that doing so may lessen the value of other property in the locality does not constitute the erection of the building a nuisance."
Upon all of the evidence, including the conduct of defendant's business, the character of the area, and the nature of the operations carried on therein, the trial court found, in brief,
"that plaintiff's claim that the defendant was committing a public nuisance was not borne out by the evidence, and that those whose complaints caused the township board to act in seeking the injunction, were either at the time of the trial, or had been, engaged in commercial activities, such as the raising of mink, the raising of foxes, and the operation of a trucking business, and that there was no showing of any public health problem or other facts in the proofs which would justify the court in issuing a writ of injunction."
With these conclusions, after a complete review of the testimony, we are in full accord. There is no need, therefore, to consider the other questions raised by the parties.
Affirmed. Costs to appellee.
DETHMERS, C.J., and SHARPE, EDWARDS, KELLY, CARR, and BLACK, JJ., concurred.
VOELKER, J., took no part in the decision of this case.