Laurance v. Tucker

85 P.2d 374, 160 Or. 474, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 132
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 2, 1938
StatusPublished
Cited by33 cases

This text of 85 P.2d 374 (Laurance v. Tucker) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Laurance v. Tucker, 85 P.2d 374, 160 Or. 474, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 132 (Or. 1938).

Opinion

RAND, J.

This is a suit to restrain the defendant from maintaining a drain over plaintiffs’ premises in Prairie City, Oregon, to carry away the overflow of a septic tank and the waste water and sewage from a house on premises adjoining those of the plaintiffs, upon which said premises one of the plaintiffs and the defendant reside respectively.

The complaint was filed on August 5, 1935,.and on November 29, 1935, the defendant filed a motion to make it more definite and certain. The motion was overruled and the defendant was allowed 25 days to answer. The decree appealed from was entered on March 21, 1938, and, in and by its terms, the second amended answer was, on plaintiffs’ motion, struck from the files and a decree was entered holding that the defendant was in default and granting to the plaintiffs the relief prayed for in the complaint but without the allowance of any damages.

*477 During the interim between November 29, 1935, or a few days thereafter, and March 21, 1938, nothing seems to have been done in the suit except the filing of some form of answer against which some form of demurrer or motion was sustained.

The record presented here is so incomplete that it would be impossible for this court to determine the correctness of the rulings made prior to that made at the time when the decree appealed from was entered, as we would have the right to do, if properly presented, under section 7-512, Oregon Code 1930, which provides that, upon appeal, the appellate court may review any intermediate order involving the merits or necessarily affecting the judgment or decree appealed from. Again, our difficulties are augmented by the fact that this record presents three abstracts of record, namely: Appellant’s abstract of record, respondents’ supplemental abstract of record, and appellant’s supplemental abstract of record. Our statute and rules contemplate that in no case upon a single appeal shall more than two abstracts of record be filed. There is also in the record what purports to have been statements made in open court by defendant’s attorney that the defendant was relying only upon proceedings had and an order made in the county court, pursuant to section 34-101 to section 34-111, Oregon Code 1930, as a justification for the maintenance of the drain by defendant over plaintiffs’ premises. These statements, however, if made, were not incorporated in any order of the circuit court or in any other manner sufficient to justify any action upon said statements by us, and, so far as this appeal is concerned, are matters outside the record and, hence, we shall confine our consideration to the second amended answer against which the motion to strike was made and sustained.

*478 Referring now to said second amended answer, it admits that the plaintiffs are the owners of the property alleged in the complaint and occupy the same as a place of abode; that the defendant is the owner of the adjoining premises, and that she resides thereon. Except for these admissions, it denies every other allegation contained in the complaint “except as herein expressly admitted or alleged.” It then sets up three separate affirmative defenses and, in these defenses, it alleges all the facts stated in the complaint except those alleging that the drain was being wrongfully maintained by the defendant and that plaintiffs had been damaged thereby.

The first affirmative defense alleges a right by prescription to maintain the drain and also some facts tending to show that the damage claimed by the plaintiffs in their complaint was caused, in part if not wholly, by the acts of Prairie City in turning water over a part of said premises by an improvement made in one of its streets. This, of course, could afford no justification for the acts complained of in the complaint although it might tend to reduce the damages claimed. However, the court, by its decree, awarded no damages to the plaintiffs; hence, the matter is not material upon this appeal.

In substance, this affirmative answer alleges that in the year 1919, defendant, or her predecessors in interest, installed a pipe line to drain the overflow of a septic tank, bath and the waste waters from the basement of her house and also eonstrtícted a ‘ ‘ sump or sink-box” and a ditch. It then alleges that: “at said time and in order to facilitate a more adequate drainage from said dominent tenement, as well as to accomplish better drainage of said servient tenement defendant or her predecessors in interest constructed from said *479 sump or sink-box and out and along said servient tenement in a general southwesterly direction a ditch sufficient in capacity to carry said drainage and to accomplish said purposes all said work having been accomplished to the knowledge of plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest”. It then alleges that ever since said year 1919, defendant and her predecessors in interest “have employed and used said sump or sink-box and said ditch for the drainage of said dominent tenement in a continuous, exclusive, open, hostile and adverse manner against all of the world and particularly against plaintiffs and their predecessors in interest and have thus acquired by prescription a perpetual easement and right of way over and upon said servient tenement for said purposes.”

It is, of course, unnecessary to point out that no person can justify a trespass upon another person’s property by showing that such trespass resulted in benefit to the owner of the property upon whose property the trespass was committed. We think, however, that the other allegations contained in the answer that the defendant has been in the open, notorious, hostile and exclusive possession of the space occupied by the drain would, if established to have been done under a claim of ownership and continuously for a period of 10 years, be sufficient to create title by prescription. However, that would not be the case if the acts complained of constituted a public nuisance or affected the public, or any considerable part of it, injuriously, since the statute of limitations does not run against a public nuisance no matter how long continued. If, however, the nuisance was a private nuisance and affected only the owner of the premises trespassed upon, it would seem that the open, notorious and exclusive possession of the land covered by the ditch continuously for a *480 period of 10 years under a claim of ownership would be sufficient to constitute adverse user as to the ground so occupied. These questions, however, are not now before us for the reason that there has been no testimony taken in the case, and no stipulation of facts filed, and are pointed out merely because we think that, stripped of its unnecessary verbiage, this affirmative answer, if it can be established by proof, would constitute a good defense in this suit. At most, it was a defective statement of a good defense and the objection, if any, should have been taken by demurrer and not by a motion to strike.

The other two defenses were, we think, properly stricken.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
85 P.2d 374, 160 Or. 474, 1938 Ore. LEXIS 132, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/laurance-v-tucker-or-1938.