Grantham v. Gibson

Washington Supreme Court
Grantham v. Gibson, 41 Wash. 125 (Wash. 1905)
83 P. 14; 1905 Wash. LEXIS 1077
Fullerton

Grantham v. Gibson

Opinion of the Court

Fullerton, J.

The respondent brought this action against the appellants to enjoin them from operating, in connection with their business, a shooting gallery and two certain musical instruments known respectively as a “tonophone” and an “orchestrion!,” alleging that their operation constituted a public nuisance specially injurious to himself. At the commencement of his action, the respondent applied for a temporary injunction restraining the appellants from operating the shooting gallery and the musical instruments until the rights of the parties could be-determined by a trial upon the merits. FTotice of the application was duly given and a hearing was had thereon, at which hearing the court granted the temporary injunction applied for. This appeal is from that order.

The appellants first attack the sufficiency of the complaint. It is contended that because the respondent neither alleged that he had suffered damages in any specific sum, nor de>manded judgment for damages in any specific sum, in his complaint, the same is fatally defective, and insufficient to support a judgment or order of any kind. But we think the complaint sufficient to sustain an order for a temporary injunction. Aside from the fact that an injunction may be sued out to restrain the erection or creation of a merely threatened nuisance, there is in this complaint an allegation of substantial injuries, as well as a showing that the continuance of the acts complained of will work serious and irreparable injury to the respondent’s business. It is alleged that the appellants and respondent are tenants in the same building; that the appellants exhibit pictorial views, enlarged and made attractive by electrical devices; that the respondent conducts a hotel and lodging house, and was first in the order of time, that the installation of these musical instruments and the shooting gallery by the appellants have already driven away some fourteen of his patrons, and will, if not abated, drive away the remainder and prevent him from obtaining others, to the ruin of his theretofore profit*127able business. These allegations, we think, show not only substantial damages already suffered, but that the respondent will continue to suffer substantial damages so long as these mechanisms are operated by the appellants.

It is next said that because the respondent has only a leasehold interest in the property his remedy lies in an action of damages for the wrongs done him, as no one but the owner of the fee can maintain a suit to enjoin the continuance of a nuisance. Were the nuisance complained of merely an injury to the freehold, it may be that this contention could be maintained, but here the nuisance alleged is one that works an. injury to the business of the lessee, not an injury to the freehold, and his right to maintain an injunction must be determined by the character of the injury done him, and the effectiveness of his remedies at law, not upon the title by which he holds the property in which he conducts the businesss injured. The allegations of the complaint show that an action of damages would afford inadequate relief, and this is the measure of the complainant’s right to maintain an action of injunction.

It is next complained that the injunction is too sweeping, in that it enjoins the appellants from operating the shooting gallery and musical instruments at all times, while it does not appear that the operation in certain parts of the day would seriously interfere with the respondent’s business. But this question seems not to have been suggested in the trial court. There the contest was over the right of the respondent to an injunction at all, and the court was not asked to limit the. operation of the injunction to certain parts of the day. Bor the reason that it was not suggested below, it will not be determined here.

Lastly, the appellants contend that the evidence was insufficient to justify the order. On this question we think there can be but little doubt. Manifestly the operation of the contrivances complained of at the place where the apipellants operated them constituted a nuisance specially in*128jurious to the respondent. He was therefore entitled to have their operation enjoined, and the court did uot err iu so holding.

The order appealed from is affirmed.

Mount, C. J., Hadley, Rudkin, Crow, Root, and Dunbar, JJ.j concur.

Reference

Full Case Name
John Grantham v. A. S. Gibson
Cited By
4 cases
Status
Published
Syllabus
Nuisance — Abatement — Injunction — Pleading—Allegation of Damages. A complaint for the abatement of a nuisance by the maintenance of a shooting gallery and. musical instruments sufficiently alleges substantial damages without stating any amount, where it appears that patrons of the plaintiffs rooming house have been driven away by the nuisance which, if not abated, will destroy the plaintiffs business. Same — Injury to Business — Action by Tenant. An action to abate a nuisance can be maintained by the owner of a leasehold interest, where the injury done does not affect the freehold but works an injury to the business of the lessee, and where the complaint shows that the plaintiff has no adequate remedy at law. Appeal — Review—Objections Not Ubged Below. Upon appeal from a temporary injunction restraining the operation of a shooting gallery and certain musical instruments, it cannot be claimed that the injunction unnecessarily restrains the operation at all times of the day, where no request was made below to limit the injunction to certain parts of the day. Nuisance — Abatement—'Tempoeaky Injunction — Sufficiency of Showing. The evidence sufficiently shows that the operation of a shooting gallery and musical instruments in the lower story of a building was specially injurious to the plaintiff, a tenant who used the upper stories as a hotel and rooming house, and amounted to a nuisance warranting a temporary injunction, where it appears that the operation of the defendants’ business drove away the patrons of the plaintiff and kept him from obtaining others.