The case was heard on 20 April 1864, and non-suited after a greater number of witnesses claimed not to have been inconvenienced, and to the fact that the smell was not injurious to health.
Angas had purchased from his father the fine residence "Prospect Hall" on nearby Torrens Road at the corner overlooking the Park Lands (not to be confused with J.
Speakers decried the ability of the well-heeled to control where and how tradesmen could pursue their trades, and considered this case the "thin end of the wedge".
[7] By 1867 F. H. Champion had re-established the factory on River Street Hindmarsh, where other businesses of a similar nature, such as Peacock and Son, and Bean Brothers, were already established.
The business operated until 1882, when it closed,[8] hastened perhaps by the appearance on nearby Adam Street of the Apollo Soap and Stearine Company,[9] a large interstate competitor.