Holke v. Herman

87 Mo. App. 125, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 385
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 12, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 87 Mo. App. 125 (Holke v. Herman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Holke v. Herman, 87 Mo. App. 125, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 385 (Mo. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

GOODE, J.

The plaintiffs and the defendant are adjoining proprietors in the village of Holstein in Warren county. The plaintiffs own a tract of land of irregular shape containing five acres or more on which they had resided twenty-eight years, and the defendant a lot about three hundred feet square, bounded on the west and north by plaintiffs’ land. A public road or street runs along the south side of defendant’s lot on which fronts his hotel and saloon building near the southeast corner of the lot. West of the hotel building is another house used for a dance-hall and west of that a brick building designated as a tenement house. North of these structures are two outhouses, one just back of the hotel and the other of the tenement house. Behind the dance-hall is a privy with a vault seven or eight feet deep. A drainpipe leads from this north between eighty and a hundred feet to a cesspool. A short dis: tance behind' the privy is a building used as a woodhouse, hog-pen and for other purposes. North of this stands an ice-house which is east of the cesspool and both are in the part of the inclosure which may be called the barnyard. The bam itself is towards the northeast corner of the tract on a street running north and south. 'An open drain of slight depth extends northwestwardly down the slope of the ground from the woodhouse and hogpen quite a distance. There are three cisterns on the Herman premises: one just west of the main hotel and saloon building, one near the northwest corner of the tenement house and one immediately west of and behind the [130]*130barn. The plaintiffs’ land does not extend to the road which runs along the south side of Herman’s property, but is cut off from it by the residence lot of one Kropp; the front yard of the ITolke place abutting on the rear of Kropp’s yard. Access to plaintiffs’ house is by a passageway twelve or thirteen feet wide between the Herman and the Kropp lots as far back as the latter extends and thence north along the west side of the fence which .runs between Herman’s premises and plaintiffs.’ This fence extends north to the northwest corner of defendant’s property, thence east along its rear line to the street which runs north and south and bounds it on the east. The residence of the respondents’ stands on their lot near the northwest corner of Herman’s, facing the west side of the passageway which gives access to it from the south. It is therefore only twelve or fourteen feet from their dwelling to the line fence. The south part of the house has two stories and the rear or north part, one. A veranda runs along part of the west side which is used by the family in fine weather as a pleasant place to sit or lounge.

This action arose because of the defendant’s beginning to excavate a pond in the northwest corner of his lot, forty feet wide by eighty feet long, or thereabouts, the west bank of which is thrown up against-the division fence, thus forming the pond immediately east of the dining room and kitchen of respondents’ home and perhaps a foot or two north of the veranda. The water would be a distance from the house estimated at thirty-five feet by the defendant and twelve to sixteen other witnesses. Herman’s ground falls off to the north so that about two-thirds of its surface would drain into or towards the proposed pond. It appears that horses, stock, hogs and poultry often run over the defendant’s barnyard; that the cesspool receives the overflow from the privy and that there would be a foul drainage into the pond. The evidence .shows [131]*131that it would not be fed from any pure source of supply, spring or running stream, and would have no outlet. The defendant claims it is his intention to supply it chiafiy by the overflow, conducted through drainpipes, from the cisterns which are filled from the roofs of the different tenements on his premises in order that he may take good ice from it. He also claimed that the wash from his buildings and yards would be kept out of the pond by a trench and embankment just south of it. There was testimony tending to show that Herman had endeavored to sell the ground on which the pond was begun, to Dr. Holke, husband of Mrs. Annie Holke, but the sale failed because Holke thought defendant’s price too high. The testimony also tended to prove that Herman tried to .force Holke to buy by threatening to make a pond on the ground and that his motive for making it was a malicious wish to injure and annoy the respondents. Two women, who had worked in the defendant’s household, testified to his declaring that he would make a summer resort for frogs and mosquitos which would not allow the Holkes to sit on their front porch as they were wont to do. Herman denied making these statements, but the court below, who had the advantage of hearing the witnesses testify, found the fact against him. After considerable excavating had been done, a preliminary restraining order was granted. This was made perpetual on the final hearing and the defendant ordered to fill the excavation and restore the premises to the condition they were in before the work was begun. The case is here on appeal from that judgment.

An objection was interposed at the outset of the trial to the admission of any evidence on two grounds: that the petition stated no cause of action and that there was no denial of the allegations of the answer showing the plaintiffs were not entitled to relief. The court overruled the objection; an ex-[132]*132eeption was duly saved; the ruling is now assigned for error and must be considered. The answer alleges that defendant uses a considerable quantity of ice in his hotel and saloon business, has an icehouse to store it in, was digging the pond in question to take ice from, and, therefore, intended to keep the same filled with pure water chiefly by pipes and drains from the roofs of the buildings on his premises, that it would not be a nuisance, breed disease, cause discomfort to plaintiffs or interfere with their use or enjoyment of their homes, further averring that the water would be fifty or sixty feet from their house. Other averments not necessary to be given were also made. The allegation about the intention to keep the pond filled with fresh, wholesome water from the roofs was new matter constituting a defense to which, in strictness, there should have been a reply. R. S. 1899, sec. 608; State ex rel. v. Rau, 93 Mo. 130; Cordner v. Roberts, 58 Mo. App. 440. However, the point was clearly waived. The defendant filed no motion for judgment on the pleadings but, contenting himself with objecting to the introduction of testimony, proceeded to put in his evidence and support the defense set up in his answer. To avail himself on appeal of an omission like that, the party excepting must stand on the pleadings even when he moves for judgment in the lower court unsuccessfully; he can not introduce his proof as though a reply were in and after defeat on the merits, profit by an erroneous ruling on the motion. Such a practice would be inconsistent with the established rule that the failure to file a replication is of no consequence if the case was tried as though the issues were made up. Nelson v. Wallace, 48 Mo. App. 193.

The objection to the stifficiency of the petition is of more serious import. After charging the ownership of the adjoining premises by plaintiffs and defendant, the progress of the work on the pond and its intended proximity to plaintiffs’ dwelling, [133]

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Bluebook (online)
87 Mo. App. 125, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 385, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holke-v-herman-moctapp-1901.