Martinowsky v. City of Hannibal

35 Mo. App. 70, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 142
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 19, 1889
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 35 Mo. App. 70 (Martinowsky v. City of Hannibal) 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
Martinowsky v. City of Hannibal, 35 Mo. App. 70, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 142 (Mo. Ct. App. 1889).

Opinion

Rombauee, P. J.,

delivered the opinion of the

The plaintiff, a resident householder of the city of Hannibal, seeks in this action to recover damages caused to him by a nuisance which is alleged to have been created in the vicinity of his residence, by the city and other real estate owners in said city. Upon the trial of the cause the jury found a verdict for three hundred dollars against the city of Hannibal, and found in favor of the defendants, Aronson and McCann. The plaintiff having prior thereto dismissed his suit against the defendants, Archdeacon, Boughton and Bacon, judgment was entered upon the verdict against the city of Hannibal. Hence this appeal.

The errors assigned by the city are that the verdict is unsupported by any evidence, and that the court’s instructions to the jury are erroneous.

The plaintiff’s petition, after stating the fact that the city of Hannibal is a municipal corporation and that he is a resident honselioldei’, occupying a certain house and lot in the city with his family for residence purposes, proceeds to state his cause of action in substance as follows :

That the city of Hannibal is now, and has been since 1883, the owner of certain real estate in said city (describing it), on which it has erected and maintained since 1883, a large brick building, used for a public market house. That the other defendants, Archdeacon, [74]*74Aronson, Boughton, Bacon and McCann, are owners of various lots (describing them), containing various buildings used for the purposes of a saloon, curing hides, storerooms and dwellings. That at the date of filing the petition, there was, and that there was on the-day of April, 1883, “and for a long time prior thereto, a natural stream running contiguous to and on the east side of plaintiff’s said property;” “that on and after the- day of April, 1883, as aforesaid, said defendants have respectively constructed and have continuously used divers sewers and drains that empty and flow into said natural stream and thence down said stream and by the plaintiff’s property; that through and into said sewers and drains aforesaid, the defendants empty the contents of privy vaults and sinks, slop water, decaying vegetables and other offal in such quantity from said buildings and premises as aforesaid, as create an unbearable nuisance, and emitting obnoxious smells and vapors from said stream in close proximity to the plaintiff’s property to such an extent as to render his property unfit for habitation as his dwelling as aforesaid, and to endanger the plaintiff’s health and the health of his family; and that the plaintiff has been greatly damaged in the sum of one thousand dollars, for which he asks judgment.”

The defendant, the city of Hannibal, filed a separate answer in which it admitted its corporate existence and its ownership of the property, whereon the market house was erected, but denied all other allegations of plaintiff’s petition. The defendants, Aronson and McCann, filed a joint answer, admitting their title to the lands as stated in the plaintiff’s petition, but denied all other allegations therein.

Upon the issues thus framed the cause was submitted to the jury under evidence showing substantially the following facts:

The plaintiff was the owner of the real estate described in the petition as his, and resided thereon with [75]*75his family. At the date of filing the petition, and on the-day of April, 1883, and for a long time prior thereto, there was a ditch or water-way extending through out-lot sixty-three in which plaintiff’s property was located, and contiguous to and on the east side of plaintiff’s said property. Said water-way throughout its entire length, from a point about three-quarters of a mile above plaintiff’s said property to the mouth of said water-way, and particularly that portion of the same near plaintiff’s said property, had been most of the time for a number of years, in a very filthy, noisome, and unhealthy condition. Large quantities of manure, filth of all kinds, dead animals and decaying vegetables were thrown into it by unknown parties; and tramps and others used it as a place for fecal deposits. Said water-way was covered at various places along its route and was covered by a stone arched culvert extending south from the north line of Broadway, and under said street and along and adjacent on the west to the Aronson property, and under said alley as far as the south line of the same, but was open near plaintiff ’s property. The defendant McCann, since the year 1883, constructed a pipe sewer extending from his building to and emptying into a sewer known as the Archdeacon sewer, which emptied into said water-way. McCann’s sewer carried the water away from his building. The defendant Aronson had also constructed a pipe sewer one hundred and twenty-five feet long from his building to his said water-way, the opening of the same being three or four feet south of the south opening of the stone culvert, and on the east side of said water-way. Prom the time Aronson constructed his said drain he has continuously used the same; and the defendants, McCann and Aronson, through and into their respective sewers and drains emptied slop waters and other offensive matters from their said respective buildings and premises, and into said water-way. At the [76]*76various times mentioned in the petition, said water-way had become, and was, so far as plaintiff was concerned, “an unbearable nuisance,” and thereby plaintiff's property was rendered less desirable for habitation as his dwelling; his health and that of his family was endangered and his wife and daughter made sick, and the employment of physicians rendered necessary. The city of Hannibal granted permission to A. Aronson to lay a sewer pipe on block 63, and on May 29, 1883, said city granted permission to Loudon & Wisdom to lay down and maintain a-tile-drain sewer from their stable on Broadway to connect with the Archdeacon sewer, and on May 29, 1883 said city granted permission to Daniel Archdeacon to construct a ten-inch tile sewer from the premises to the public sewer.

There was no substantial evidence of the fact, that the privy on the market-house lot of the city of Hannibal, was connected by any drain with this water-way. The plaintiff in his examination in chief did state that it was so connected, but, on his cross examination, admitted that all that he knew on that subject was not based on any knowledge, but on mere surmise. The defendant’s evidence was overwhelming in establishing the fact that no such connection existed, and that the only drain, the city itself had ever built, was one near the top of the culvert, for the purpose of giving outlet to the surface water on the other side.

The instructions which the court gave at the instance of the plaintiff, and the city of Hannibal, are contradictory and entirely irreconcilable, and such fact alone would necessitate a reversal of the judgment. As the instructions are very lengthy, we will not set them out in detail. We will state, however, that at plaintiff’s instance the court instructed the jury in substance that if they found from the evidence that the city, Aronson and McCann, or either of them, were guilty of contributing to the erection of this nuisance, that then their [77]*77verdict should be for the plaintiff in such an amount, as the jury believes the defendants ought to pay in view of the discomfort, annoyance or endangered health of the plaintiff, or any member of his family.

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Bluebook (online)
35 Mo. App. 70, 1889 Mo. App. LEXIS 142, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/martinowsky-v-city-of-hannibal-moctapp-1889.