Theilan v. Porter

82 Tenn. 622
CourtTennessee Supreme Court
DecidedApril 15, 1885
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 82 Tenn. 622 (Theilan v. Porter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Tennessee Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Theilan v. Porter, 82 Tenn. 622 (Tenn. 1885).

Opinion

Deaderick, C. J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiff brought an action of trespass on April 27, 1880, against the Taxing District of Shelby county [623]*623and its legislative council and officers for damages for-destroying his dwelling-house in Memphis.

About, thirty pages of demurrers, pleas and demurrers, and replications thereto, ■ resulted in issues, upon the material questions arising in the cause, upon the record.

The defendants justified the pulling down of the house under the acts of 1879, conferring the power to remove all buildings, etc.,, found to be unhealthy.

Allowing the objection by demurrer to defendants’’ pleas to have been improperly overruled, the objection was cured by pleas subsequently filed by leave, in which the justification is placed solely on the ground that the house was a nuisance because unhealthy, and not because of its dilapidation and danger on this account. So, as before stated, it is not necessary to follow and dispose of the various questions raised by-demurrers, as the issue rests upon the right of defendants to do the act complained of, and this they-rely upon by their plea of justification, which their amended or additional pleas fully and formally set up. The circuit judge, who tried the ease without a. jury, does not recite the facts upon which he rend--ered his judgment, but recites, in his judgment, that “having heard the evidence the court finds for the-defendants,” etc., and renders judgment against plaintiff for costs, etc.

The plaintiff appealed, and the Referees have recommended an affirmance of the judgment, and plaintiff has excepted to their report, and his exceptions, go -to the error in overruling his demurrer to the-[624]*624first batch of pleas, and in' failing to ■ sustain it, to the additional pleas, and to the right of the Legislature to authorize the acts complained of to be done, ■and to the failure of the Beferees to report the facts.

No action was taken to the demurrer to the additional pleas, and in such a case the demurrer is •regarded as waived: 3 Head, 602; 4 Heis., 236. And issue thereon was taken.

The most material exception is that which denies the .power of the Legislature to authorize the taxing district to do the act complained of. The authority claimed is found in two acts of the Legislature, one passed January 29, 1879, entitled, A bill to establish Taxing Districts in this State, and to provide the means of local government for the same”: Acts of 1879, p. 15; and an amendment thereto passed March 12, 1879: Ibid, p. 98. Both acts have this provision : The city government shall have power, and it shall be their duty to condemn as nuisances all buildings, cisterns, wells, privies and other erections in the Taxing District, which, on inspection, shall be found to be unhealthy, and cause the same to be abated, unless the owners thereof, at their own expense, upon notice, shall reconstruct the same in such manner as shall be prescribed by the laws of the Taxing District.” They are also required to have buildings, etc., so constructed in future as not to interfere with the health of the citizens; and other powers are given and duties imposed in respect to the cleanly and healthy condition of the houses, etc., of the city.

In the bill of exceptions it is recited that on the [625]*625trial there was evidence on behalf of plaintiff tending to prove that the destruction and removal of the house was attended with great oppression to him personally, and with unnecessary loss of his property,, and that the house had been the home of the plaintiff for many years before the Taxing District was created; and on behalf of the defendants evidence was introduced tending to prove that said house was unsafe by reason of its rotten and tumble-down condition, and unsanitary by reason of its filthiness and-its rotten condition;' and was for both of these reasons a nuisance, and that no unnecessary force or oppression was used to accomplished its destruction,, etc., and that defendants pursued the District law in its condemnation and destruction, and that defendants were the officers of the Taxing District, intrusted , with the duties imposed by said statutes.

It is also recited in said bill of exceptions, that the court found that defendants did destroy said house, or cause it to be destroyed and removed, with no-more force than was necessary, and that it was not oppressively, but carefully, done without loss or unnecessary injury to its contents; that said house was unsanitary and unsafe to a degree that made it a nuisance; and that defendants were protected under the acts of 1879, above referred to, and acted in discharge of their duties as .public officers.

It is argued that the acts in question are in violation of that clause in our State Constitution which declares that no man’s property shall be taken or applied to public use without the consent of his repre[626]*626sentatives, or without just compensation being made therefor.

But this inhibition has no application as a limitation of the exercise of those police powers which are necessary to the safety and tranquility of every well ordered community, nor of that general power over private property which is necessary for the orderly existence of all governments: Sedg. Const. Law, 434-5; and in a note on page 435-6, it is said: “ In very many instances summary proceedings, without the usual forms of a regular judicial trial,' have been held valid as falling within the police powers of the State,” because the necessities of society and good government demand a certain amount of summary and repressive measures which would be ineffectual if delayed by ordinary machinery of more regular judicial trial; and numerous examples and cases are given in which such summary proceedings were held valid; and it is added, abating a nuisance does not take away property without due process of law, for the common law recog.nized the power to abate a nuisance in a summary manner.

Chief Justice Shaw said: “Every holder of property, however absolute his title, holds it under the implied liability that his use of it shall not be injurious to others, nor to the rights of the community. If it be hurtful he is restrained, not because the public makes any use of it, or takes any benefit or profit from it, but because his own use would be a noxious use, contrary to the maxim, sio utere tuo ut ■alienum non Icedas. It is not an appropriation of [627]*627the property to a public use, but the restraint of an injurious private use by the owner”: Sedg. on Stat. & Const. Law,. 438-9, citing 7 Cush., 53. So that the summary abatement of a nuisance is not in violation of the Constitution, as taking private property for public use without compensation, or depriving one ■of his property without giving him his day in court.

The further objection is made that the law is partial, because it applies only to the Taxing District of Shelby county; even if the Legislature had not the authority to confer on different municipal corporations different powers according to their several circumstances and necessities, by its first section the act applies to

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Bluebook (online)
82 Tenn. 622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/theilan-v-porter-tenn-1885.