Echave v. City of Grand Junction

193 P.2d 277, 118 Colo. 165, 1948 Colo. LEXIS 228
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 26, 1948
DocketNo. 16,014.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 193 P.2d 277 (Echave v. City of Grand Junction) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Echave v. City of Grand Junction, 193 P.2d 277, 118 Colo. 165, 1948 Colo. LEXIS 228 (Colo. 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Alter

delivered the opinion of the court.

The. city of Grand Junction, a municipal corporation, filed an action in the district court against Pedro Echave and Lugarda Echave to have buildings owned by them adjudged and decreed to be a public nuisance; that they be ordered vacated; that the use thereof be enjoined; and that the buildings be demolished. Upon trial to the court judgment was entered in favor of plaintiff and against defendants, to review which this writ of error.

We will refer to the parties herein as plaintiff and defendants as they appeared in the trial court.

In the complaint it is alleged that. defendants are the owners of two lots located in the city of Grand Junction, upon which there is located a certain duplex frame residence, three one-room apartments, one frame house, one brick house, and two wooden sheds or cabins used for human habitation. It is further alleged that the habitations are in a filthy and unsanitary condition, with poor plumbing therein; that the buildings are improperly lighted, have inadequate ventilation and that, by reason of the fact that a great number of people are living in the limited quarters, contagious diseases are likely to originate and spread; that there is defective wiring and improper meter service; that the chimneys in the buildings are improperly constructed; that combustible material is allowed to accumulate; that there are insufficient exits in case of fire; that many minor children live in or in close proximity to the premises; that there is continuous fighting and quarreling, drunkenness, disturbances, liquor violations, prostitution, and *167 other criminal violations of various nature, and' that the use -of the premises induces the spread of veneral disease and contributes to juvenile delinquency.

■ It' is' further alleged that on November 12, 1946, the defendants, after-receiving due notice thereof, attended a hearing before the city council of the city of Grand Junction upon complaint of the health, fire and police departments and the building, electrical and. plumbing inspectors; that since said hearing nothing was done by defendants to improve the condition of the premises nor to alter' or repair the buildings thereon. It is further alleged that the premises cannot be made sanitary and the buildings renovated and repaired “so as not to be the source of disease, immorality, fire hazards and unlawful acts; and that the use and occupancy of the said buildings causes a great financial expense to the plaintiff in its attempt to provide police, fire and health protection.” Also it is set out in the complaint that “said buildings are unfit and .unsafe for human habitation; that they are dangerous to persons and other property by reason of being a fire hazard; that they arte dangerous to the public peace, health, morals and safety; that said buildings and the use and occupancy thereof constitute a public nuisance which should be abated.”

The answer may be treated as a general denial, and in the so-called cross complaint it is alleged, “That the said hearing held on November 12, 1946, by the City Council was the first official hearing the defendants had regarding the said property,” and “That the said City Council did not at the said hearing of November 12, 1946, or any time thereafter, order or instruct the defendants as to what specific improvements, alterations or changes should be made by the defendants regarding the afore-mentioned property.”

It also is asserted in the cross complaint, “The said búildings are not so dilapidated that they cannot be repaired and remodeled so as to comply with the building code of the City of Grand Junction, Colorado,” and that *168 “The defendants are ready, willing, and able to repair the said buildings so as to comply with the building code of the City of Grand Junction, Colorado.” ■

The court found that some of the improvements are within, and some without, the fire limits of plaintiff and are in close proximity to a reputable hotel and other frame buildings in the business section of the city; that the buildings are in a deplorable and neglected condition; that they have faulty chimneys, defective electrical wiring requiring replacement at an excessive cost, and constitute a fire hazard. It further found that there was a faulty s'ewer connection; that garbage and other filth is deposited upon the premises, and that the buildings are, by reason of the unsanitary conditions there existing, unsuitable for human habitation and that they are a menace to the public health. Further, that a number of children live in the property and in the immediate vicinity thereof, and that the existing conditions under which these children live contributes to their delinquency; that a large number of undesirables visit and stay on the premises, and that all of these conditions constitute a serious law enforcement problem and a menace to the good order, health and economy of the community. Also, that the conditions described constitute a continuous public nuisance, and the repair of the premises or the closing of the buildings would not be an adequate or effective remedy, and that the removal thereof was necessary. *

The court stated that various contagious diseases have existed upon the premises; and that syphilis is common among the persons inhabiting them and “That the premises have been operated and used for the lowest kind of a bawdy house; that intoxicating liquors have been sold and consumed upon the premises; and defendants themselves have participated in these unlawful acts.”

The findings of the court to the effect that the premises have been operated and used for the lowest kind of a bawdy house; that intoxicating, liquors have been sold *169 and consumed upon the premises; and that the defendants had participated in these unlawful acts are not based upon competent evidence. There was evidence that, about two years before this action was brought an unsanitary condition existed because of a tuberculosis patient residing there; that about one year before the action was brought there was filth arising because of a patient with dysentery; and that some months before, a patient who had some skin disease resided there, but, although the record reveals that the premises are located in a section of the city where prostitution at one time apparently was rife, there is no evidence of arrests,, or any other evidence of such use of the premises for some considerable time previous to the bringing of this action, and the only arrests for liquor violations on the premises occurred in January, 1946, when defendants both pleaded guilty before a police magistrate and were fined accordingly. This evidence is too remote.

As we have stated, so far as the record reveals, the hearing before the city council on November 12, 1946, did not result in a finding that the properties were unsanitary, and there was no order whatever made for the correction of conditions in and about the premises.

The sanitary inspector of the city testified that only once in five years have defendants been ordered to appear in police court for violation of the, garbage or other sanitary regulations of the city. The electrical inspector testified to defective wiring which could be repaired or° replaced.

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Bluebook (online)
193 P.2d 277, 118 Colo. 165, 1948 Colo. LEXIS 228, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/echave-v-city-of-grand-junction-colo-1948.