Nuisance Flashcards
1
Q
Nuisance - General Points
A
- maxim of sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas (use your own property in such a way that you don’t injure other people’s property)
- protects use and enjoyment
- calls for balancing, + must show harm (vs. strict liability for trespass)
2
Q
Trespass vs. Nuisance
A
- largely governed by tangibility requirement in modern times
- also idea that trespass is reserved for situations of substantial harm that constructively deny possession to the plaintiff
- other potential approach - visible to the naked eye for trespass (vs. smoke, odors, etc.)
3
Q
Adams v. Cleveland-Cliffs Iron Co. - Core Significance
A
- sets out various approaches to trespass vs. nuisance divide + adopts traditional position
4
Q
Adams v. Cleveland Cliffs Iron Co. - Facts and Procedural Posture
A
- pls sued mine owners over vibration, dust + noise from mining operation
- jury instruction allowed trespass liability for any invasion, including those from vibrations, dust + noise -> jury unable to agree on nuisance, but gave damages on trespass
5
Q
Adams v. Cleveland Cliffs - Decision + Reasoning
A
- court acknowledges that some jurisdictions have been collapsing trespass + nuisance a bit, but ultimately says trespass doesn’t cover airborne particular, noise or vibrations -> these are all nuisance
6
Q
Nuisance - Second Restatement of Torts
A
Nuisance = substantial, nontrespassory interference w/ use and enjoyment of land cause either by:
- negligent, reckless, or ultrahazardous activities OR
- intentional and unreasonable activities
7
Q
Intentional - Definition for Nuisance Under Second Restatement
A
Intentional = either:
- acting for the purpose of causing the invasion OR
- knowing (or reasonably being supposed to know) the invasion is the result OR
- knowing that it is substantially certain to result
8
Q
Campbell v. Seaman
A
- nuisance case - plaintiff’s trees win out over defendant’s brickmaking
- court says law of nuisance prohibits unreasonable nuisances
- Prof says they use “imprecise invocation of the balancing of harms or equities”
9
Q
Factors Considered by the Campbell v. Seaman Court
A
- sic utere maxim
- locality rule
- standard of reasonable use
- threshold of material harm
- nuisance per se
- injunctive relief for irreparable harm
- coming to the nuisance
- prescription
10
Q
Public Nuisance
A
- unreasonable interference w/ a right common to the public as a whole
- classic example = blocking a public highway or navigable waterway
- public nuisance actions usually brought by public authorities, + relief sought usually injunction
- in order for private parties to bring public nuisance actions, need to show that they’ve suffered “special injury” from the interference w/ the public right
11
Q
General Factors That May Impact Nuisance
A
- invasiveness (aesthetic blight usually not nuisance)
- nature of the locality (is the use common there?)
- temporal priority (courts tend to be more skeptical of newer uses, but also tend to reject “coming to the nuisance”)