Joyce v. Village of Janesville

155 N.W. 1067, 132 Minn. 121, 1916 Minn. LEXIS 736
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJanuary 21, 1916
DocketNos. 19,582—(208)
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 155 N.W. 1067 (Joyce v. Village of Janesville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Joyce v. Village of Janesville, 155 N.W. 1067, 132 Minn. 121, 1916 Minn. LEXIS 736 (Mich. 1916).

Opinion

Holt, J.

The action is brought to enjoin the defendant village and its officers from discharging sewage and filth upon plaintiff’s lands. Some damages are also claimed. The court made findings and directed judgment in favor of defendant. The appeal is from the order denying a new trial.

It appears that the village of Janesville contains about 1,200 inhabitants and is located on high ground east of the valley which serves as an outlet to Lake Elysian. This valley used to be an extensive bog often submerged, but the whole is now in a fair way of being reclaimed because of the public drainage put through there a few years ago, and the land is now adapted for pasturage, hay and even for field crops. Some six months before this suit was brought plaintiff bought 1% acres of land on the edge of the bog. This piece of land adjoins a highway on the westerly boundary line of the village. When plaintiff made the purchase he knew that the drain herein referred to discharged offensive matters upon the land.

The complaint proceeds on the theory that the village commits a continuous trespass by discharging through and by means of a ditch and tile drain sewage and filth upon plaintiff’s property. At the trial plaintiff admitted that it was not claimed that any injury resulted from the mere surface water cast upon his land by means of this drainage system of the village. From the court’s findings it appears that in 1910 the village constructed a tile drain from block 13 in a northwesterly direction, thence west along First street, thence across such street down to Second street and westerly on said street to within a féw feet of plaintiff’s land; that prior to the construction of the drain large quantities of surface water accumulated on block 13 and adjacent blocks; that the natural drainage from the village and these blocks is west toward and upon plaintiff’s land, and that this tile drain does not increase but merely accelerates the flow of such surface water. We now [123]*123quote the part from the findings which will adequately disclose the matters which must control this decision, viz.:

“That said tile drain connects at its place of beginning with an open ditch and that in blocks eleven and fourteen of the said original town some private individuals have constructed cesspools and that the’ overflow from said cesspools is conducted by natural and artificial drains and empties into the said open ditch and thence into said tile drain and that in blocks eleven, fourteen and thirty-two some private individuals allow and permit considerable filth to discharge from said blocks to the alleys and streets adjacent and to be conducted by natural and artificial drains into said open ditch and thence into said tile drain.
“That said open ditch and said tile drain were constructed solely for the purpose of taking care of the surface waters and are necessary for the protection of the health and well-being of the inhabitants of the defendant village, and that the said acts of said private individuals in permitting their cesspools to overflow and said filth to discharge from said blocks eleven, fourteen and thirty-two into said open ditch and tile drain, were wholly without the knowledge, consent or permission of these defendants or any of them.
“That the overflow from said cesspools and said filth from said blocks eleven, fourteen and thirty-two pass through said tile drain and to and upon the plaintiff’s said lands but the same does so without the knowledge, consent, sanction or permission of these defendants or any of them.
“That the flow of the surface waters upon the plaintiff’s said land has not in any manner been increased by said tile drain, but has only been accelerated and the plaintiff’s said land has not in any manner been damaged by the flow of said surface waters or by any acts of these defendants or any of them.
“That the overflow from said cesspools and the discharge of said filth upon the plaintiff’s said land through said tile drain are injurious and detrimental to said lands and are damaging to the plaintiff, but that said defendants are not responsible therefor.
“That the said lands and premises of said plaintiff are valuable, but that said defendant village is solvent and amply able to pay for any damages done to the plaintiff’s said property.”

[124]*124It is thus seen that the open ditch is permitted' to collect a quantity of filth and'sewage which, with the surface water, is discharged upon plaintiff’s land to its detriment. In fact a nuisance is created thereon within the definition of section 8085, G. S. 1913. True, the court finds that this is not done with the knowledge, sanction or permission of the village or its officers, and that neither the village nor its officers are responsible therefor; but the assignments of error challenge the correctness of these findings. The conclusion of law denying relief to plaintiff is also questioned.

We are unable to reconcile the finding, that there was discharged from the tile drain upon plaintiff’s property to its detriment a quantity of polluted matter, with the finding that this occurred without the knowledge or sanction of defendants. The evidence is conclusive that upon plaintiff’s complaint all the officers of the defendant village did investigate the matter, some of them going repeatedly for that purpose to the outlet of the drain. It is apparent that the village furnishes its inhabitants with a water supply, for the evidence discloses that several homes and business buildings are equipped with modern water and toilet conveniences, and that the overflow or discharge from sinks, cesspools and septic tanks necessarily must reach and gather in the open ditch dug and kept in repair by the village. Indeed, the men who cleaned it out testified to tile drains from these private cesspools or septic tanks opening directly into the ditch. We think it clear that, prior to the institution of this action, the village through its officers had full knowledge of the situation — knew that the filth from the private cesspools collected in the ditch, as found by the court, and that the same was cast by means of the tile drain upon plaintiff’s land, there creating a nuisance. However that may be, we do not think that a municipality which, by some construction or means under its control, invades the premises of a person or creates a nuisance thereon, can defeat an action to enjoin or abate the trespass or nuisance, by allegation or proof that it or its officers had no knowledge thereof. This may not always hold true in actions at law for damages. But, in this ease, a complete answer to defendant’s contention is that no attempt was made by pleading or proof to oppose the injunction sought on the ground that there had been no notice or request to abate the nuisance prior to suit. Even a continuer of a nuisance waives [125]*125the defense of want of notice to abate, if he bases his defense upon other grounds than want of notice. Bartlett v. Siman, 24 Minn. 448.

Defendant’s counsel contends that no nuisance was created. It is undoubtedly true that the court could properly have so found, but the finding is to the contrary. This court can neither disregard a material finding of the trial court, nor substitute another for the one made.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
155 N.W. 1067, 132 Minn. 121, 1916 Minn. LEXIS 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/joyce-v-village-of-janesville-minn-1916.