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Spicy problem

Posted: Mon Jul 25, 2016 11:51 pm
by Gob
A woman has launched a legal bid to ban her neighbours from cooking spicy food.

Joanna Louise Cridlin, from Wandsworth is also looking for compensation, as she claims the 'strong overwhelming vapour of hot chillis' from the flat above her home.

She insists the fumes 'constricts her airways and burns her windpipe' and 'permeates her home' for up to eight hours.

She is now suing at London's High Court, hoping to force her neighbours' landlords to take action and to net damages.


In a writ, Miss Cridlin says she has lived in the Victorian house, which has been converted into flats in leafy Geraldine Road, Wandsworth, for almost 40 years.

One-bed flats in the street go for £500,000, while houses have fetched up to £2.85m.

In the writ, Miss Cridlin says that three years ago new neighbours moved in upstairs and, since Christmas 2014, have been 'causing overwhelming pungent toxic fumes from their cooking of hot chillis which permeate her home.'

And she argues that the production of the spicy pong ought to be classifed as 'anti-social behaviour.'

Miss Cridlin says in the writ that she suffers from 'respiratory problems' and that the spicy waft from above her flat is making her life hell.

Because of the 'pungent chillis' enjoyed so much by her neighbours, she says she has 'choked in her sleep on several occasions' and 'staggered to her balcony gasping for air' after the chilli fumes brought on breathing difficulties.

'The pungent smell overwhelms her,' the writ adds, describing her situation as 'torture.'

Re: Spicy problem

Posted: Tue Jul 26, 2016 4:39 pm
by Long Run
If the Sriracha plant could figure out how to get along with its neighbors, these people ought to be able to find a similar path.

Re: Spicy problem

Posted: Tue Jul 26, 2016 4:54 pm
by Bicycle Bill
Long Run wrote:If the Sriracha plant could figure out how to get along with its neighbors, these people ought to be able to find a similar path.
According to recent reports, the Sriracha plant and its home town are still going back-and-forth with one another.  This time, Huy Fong Foods (maker of the popular "rooster sauce", a nickname it has acquired based on the company's widely-recognized logo) is counter-suing the city of Irwindale, claiming harassment and accusing them of what amounts to little more than a politically-motivated legal "shakedown" of the company.
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-"BB"-

Re: Spicy problem

Posted: Tue Jul 26, 2016 5:12 pm
by rubato
I could see requiring ventilation. Anyone who has made hot peanut oil at home might know that a minor temperature control problem can be a major environmental disaster.


And in general no one has the right to make someone else's home stink.


Yrs,
Rubato