Weaver v. Kuchler
Weaver v. Kuchler
Opinion of the Court
Opinion of the court by
It is here contended that the order and judgment of the district court modifying the temporary order of injunction should be set aside and reversed for two reasons: First: That the court committed prejudicial error in not passing on the sufficiency on the part of plaintiff’s petition demurred to by the defendants before the motion to dissolve the temporary writ was heard.
The record shows that the attention of the trial court was never called to the demurrer on file; that both parties announced ready for trial without objection, and the court proceeded to hear the evidence on the motion to dissolve. No objection being raised in the court below, the question can not be raised here for the first time. The general answer of the defendants, however, waived their demurrer, and the party to whose pleading a demurrer is filed, can not complain that ruling was not made on the demurrer. Penn. Co. v. Bond, 99 Ill. App. 535; 6 Pleading and Practice, 38; Cyc. 259, 274, and authorities cited therein.
The remaining error assigned is, that the court-erred in modifying the temporary order of injunction. Plaintiff insists that under sec. 134, art. 10, chap. 13, Wilson’s Statutes, entitled: “An Act to Protect Lands Platted into Residence Tracts and Additions to Townsites from Nuisances,” that the maintenance of the slaughter house by the defendants was a nuisance per se. The sections relied upon, read as follows:
*194 “Section 134: It shall be unlawful for any person to maintain a slaughter house within less than one-half mile of any tract of land platted into lots and blocks as an addition to any town or city within the Territory of Oklahoma, or to maintain such slaughter house within one-half mile of any tract of land platted into acre tracts fox the purposes of being-sold for residence, and in which tracts of land have actually been sold for residence purposes.
“Section 136: The maintaining of any slaughter house, or location and use of any graveyard, or cemetery, in violation of the provisions of this act, are declared to be a nuisance, and any person owning real estate within any such addition to a town or city, or within the lands platted and set apart to be sold for residence purposes, may maintain an action in the courts to abate such nuisance, and to enjoin their continuance, and if it appears that they are being carried on in violation of this act, a perpetual injunction shall be granted against the parties maintaining such nuisance.
“Section 137: It shall be the duty of any sheriff, constable or other police officer to make complaint against such nuisance and hasten its abatement as provided for in this act."
It will be observed that sections 136 and 137 specify the persons authorized to bring an action under section-134:
“Any person owning real estate within any such addition to a town or city, or within lands platted and set apart to be sold for residence purposes, may maintain an action, and it shall be the duty of any sheriff, constable, or other police officer to make complaint."
Uncler chapter 13, article 10 of Wilson's Statutes, the legislature declared the maintaining - of a slaughter house within a certain district to be a nuisance per se, and authorized certain owners of real estate to bring an action in the courts to abate and enjoin its continuance. Whether under *195 that act, the abatement of defendants’ slaughter house (erected long prior to the passage of the act) as a nuisance per se, would be constitutional, we do not determine. We think the scope and purpose of the act is clearly set forth in its title, to be “An Act to Protect Platted Lands and Townsite Additions from Nuisances.” In the absence of any allegation or proof at the hearing that the plaintiff was an owner of real estate as set forth in section 136, he can not invoke the application of this act. The' plaintiff resides outside the city of Newkirk, owns no real estate within its corporate limits, or additions thereto, and it does not appear in the record that this action was brought for the protection of any of the citizens residing within the corporate limits of said city or its additions. On the other hand, it clearly appears from plaintiff’s petition that this action is brought under chapter 56 of Wilson’s Statutes, entitled “Nuisance,” and upon which he must rely in this action. Section one provides:
“A nuisance consists in unlawfully doing an act, or omitting to perform a duty, which act or omission either: First: Annoys, injures or endangers the comfort, repose, health, or safety of others; or (omitting the 2nd and 3rd sub-divisions) Fourth: In any way renders other persons insecure in life, or in the use of property.
“Section 2: A public nuisance is one which affects at the same time an entire community or neighborhood, or any considerable number of persons, although the extent of the annoyance or damage inflicted upon the individual may be unequal.
“Section 3: Every nuisance not included in the definition of the last section is private.
“Section 8: The remedies against a public nuisance are: First: Indictment: Second: A civil action; or Third: Abatement.
*196 “Section 10: A private person may maintain an action for a public nuisance if it is specially injurious to himself but not otherwise."
From the above sections the maintaining of a slaughter house is not a nuisance per se, unless it would appear from the evidence, independent of the manner in which it was being used and conducted that its location, proximity and relationship to the public made it so.
On the hearing on the motion to dissolve the temporary writ, issued in this case, oral testimony, together with the affidavits of numerous witnesses living in the immediate vicinity was submitted, all of which went to the manner in which the defendants used and conducted the slaughter house, and upon this question the testimony was conflicting. Numerous witnesses testified that its location was some 60 rods from the nearest public highway, in an enclosure of about one acre, and that its usage was not such as, to create a nuisance injmious to the public. W. M. Smith testified that there is no residence nearer to said slaughter house than the one he occupies as a home for himself and family, and that during the present season he cultivated a piece of land close to the slaughter house and abutting the enclosure, and that the odor he detected therefrom was not different from that coming from an ordinary feed lot where stock was kept. A. B. Norton, the owner of a quarter section of land (excepting the SO acres sold the defendants) upon which the slaughter house of the defendants is located, testified substantially that he had resided continuously for more than five years upon that quarter section within less than one-half mile north and east of the slaughter house, and that when he leased the three acre tract to the defendants in the fall of 1900 it was ex *197 pressly stipulated that “Whenever the said slaughter house was conducted in such, manner as to become a nuisance by causing a stench or odor to be noticeable, then, the lease was to be cancelled, and the house removed,” and that during all of that period he was not annoyed in any way by its operation. He further testified that the city of Newkirk practically empties its entire sewerage into the creek or branch called “Spring- Creek” running through and across the lands of the plaintiff and defendants, and that frequently the odors arising from said creek caused by the said sewerage, were extremely annojdng, and that they existed long prior to the time of the erection of the slaughter house, that various farmers living along the banks of the creek have their feed yards and hog lots on the banks, and that the waters of said creek were more or less polluted by reason thereof, and unfit for stock purposes. Jay Haney, another witness living within one-half mile due north, testified that he had not been annoyed by any odor or disagreeable or injurious effects from the operation of said slaughter house. W. W. Apperson, the stock inspector, who visited the slaughter house two or three times each week in his official capacity to inspect the stock to be slaughtered, testified that he had not observed about the slaughter house or in the yards adjacent thereto, any refuse or offal lying around that would occasion any obnoxious odors. A. L. Hazon, a physician residing at Newldrk, and superintendent of the board of health of Kay county, testified that he had made an examination of the slaughter house in his official capacity, and that he found at that time lying upon the ground a small quantity of refuse matter which he ordered the defendant to remove, that in his opinion the waste from the city of Newkirk found its way into “Spring Creek” as well *198 as "the "wash from the various feed lots’along the banks of said creek, and that in his opinion the slaughter house in question ■ could be conductéd in a comparatively cleanly manner and non-’injurious to the public health and unoffensive ■to the smell, by requiring the owners thereof to’ promptly dispose of all refuse matter.
In view of the testimony of' the above witnesses, can it be seriously urged' that there was no evidence reasonably tending to support the finding of the trial judge that the slaughter house of the defendants was not a nuisance per se?
Where a nuisance consists not of a building itself, but in a wrongful use of it, the remedy is to stop such wrongful use, and not to remove the building or to enjoin its rightful > use. Barclay v. Com., 25 Penn. State 503; Brighiman v. Bristol, 65 Me. 426; Welch v. Stowell, 2 Doug. (Mich.) 332; Atty. Gen. v. Steward, 20 N. J. Eq., 415; Cleveland v. Citizens Gas Light Co., 20 N. J. Eq., 201.
In Holt v. Hall, 65 Iowa, 529, where it was determined that a certain hog lot was so kept and used so as to create a nuisance, but not that it was a nuisance, per se, it was held, that:
“The court was not authorized in wholly restraining the use of the lot for the purpose of feeding hogs. It should have ’enjoined only such use of the lot as would amount to a nuisance.” ' '
' Where a liverjr stable which’ was a source of annoyance had'been burned down, the court refused to enjoin the rebuilding of the same, since it might be so modified as not .to' be a nuisance. Shiras v. Olinger, 50 Iowa, 571.
■Although numerous witnesses testified that the usage by fhe defendants was not such as to create a nuisance, we think *199 the weight of the evidence established that fact, and the trial court very properly interrogated the defendant to ascertain his ability and willingness to conduct his business in such a manner as to avoid the matters complained of by the plaintiff as being specially injurious to him. The evidence upon this phase of the question was not contradictory, but very satisfactory, and clearly showed that the defendant would and could make certain changes whereby the matters complained of could be easily avoided, and under those circumstances, the court would not have been warranted in rendering a judgment wholly restraining the defendants from the use of their slaughter house, but only from such usage as created a nuisance injurious to the plaintiff, and to the public.
“A court of equity is always reluctant to grant a perpetual injunction against the carrying on of a legitimate-business. Where the court finds that such an establishment, as conducted, is a nuisance, it should allow the defendants to show, if they can, that by the use' of proper methods and appliances it is possible to continue the business in the same place without its being a nuisance. Where this can be done, a decree absolutely enjoining the defendant from further conducting such business is too broad. The injunction should be limited to such usage as created the nuisance, leaving the right to carry on the business in the proper manner.” 18 Encl. Pl. & Pr. 1148; Hutchins v. Smith, 63 Barb. (N. Y.) 251; Chamberlain v. Douglas, 24 N. Y. App. Div. 582: Bushnell v. Robeson, 62 Iowa 540; Seifried v. Hayes, 81 Ky. 377; Fresno v. Fresno Canal, etc., Co. 98 Cal. 179.
“When the defendant who has been doing what amounts to a nuisance disclaims the intention to continue it and is proceeding with diligence to remove and abate it, the court will, if satisfied that the cause of complaint will be removed as speedily as practicable, refuse an injunction.” King v. Morris R. Co., 18 N J. Eq. 397.
*200 In view of the evidence in this ease, the trial court properly modified the temporary restraining order, permitting the defendants to conduct and operate their slaughter house, but restraining them from, such usage as to create it a nuisance to the plaintiff and the public; and the judgment of the trial court will therefore be affirmed.
Reference
- Full Case Name
- John F. Weaver v. Amelia Kuchler and Henry Kuchler
- Cited By
- 13 cases
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- Published
- Syllabus
- NUISANCE — Per Alla or Per Se — Injunction. Where a slaughter house has been enjoined as a nuisance, and on the hearing of a motion to dissolve the evidence shown that it is not a nuisance per se, and that it can be carried on so as not to constitute a nuisance,. the injunction will be modified so as to permit its usage in an unobjectionable manner. Chap. 13, art. 10, Wilson’s Statutes, entitled, “An Act to Protect Platted Lands and Townsite Additions from Nuisance,” provides: “Section 134: It shall be unlawful for any person to maintain a slaughter house within less than one-half mile of any tract of land platted into lots and blocks as an addition to any town or city within the Territory of Oklahoma, or to maintain such slaughter house within one-half mile of any tract of land platted into acre tracts for the purposes of being sold for residence and in which tracts of land have actually been sold for residence purposes.” “Section 136: The maintaining of any slaughter house, or location and use of any graveyard or cemetery in violation of the provisions of this act, are declared to be a nuisance, and any person owning real estate within any such addition to a town or city, or within the lands flatted and set apart to be sold for residence purposes, may maintain an action in the courts to abate such nuisance and to enjoin their continuance, and if it appears that they are being carried on in violation of this act, a perpetual injunction shall be granted against the parties maintaining such nuisance.” “Section 137: It shall be the duty of any sheriff, constable or other police officer to make complaint against such nuisance and hasten its abatement as provided for in this act.” Held: That sec. 136 limits the persons authorized to bring an action under the act, to the owners of real estate as described therein, and an action brought by one who is not the owner of real estate as provided under sec. 136, or an officer as provided under sec. 137, must bring himself within the provisions of chap. 56, Wilson’s Statutes, entitled, “Nuisance.” (Syllabus by the Court.)