Waggoner v. City of South Gorin

88 Mo. App. 25, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 8
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMarch 4, 1901
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 88 Mo. App. 25 (Waggoner v. City of South Gorin) 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
Waggoner v. City of South Gorin, 88 Mo. App. 25, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 8 (Mo. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

BLAND, P. J.

Omitting caption the petition is as follows:

“Plaintiff for cause of action says that the city of South Gorin is now and for more than one year last past has been a municipal corporation of that name, duly established, organized and incorporated as a city of the fourth class under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Missouri in such case made and provided, and is situated in the county aforesaid. That plaintiff now is and for the past year has been the owner of a certain parcel of ground situated in the said city of South Gorin, upon which was erected a valuable building, built and used for a livery stable for the purpose of keeping horses for hire and for feeding and general livery purposes and was especially adapted to such purposes and for no other. That said lot upon which such stable was erected as aforesaid was and is measured and bounded as follows to-wit: Beginning at a point one hundred and six feet west of the southeast corner of section eight, in township sixty-four, range ten in the county aforesaid, running thence north one hundred and twenty feet, thence west forty-four feet, thence south one hundred and twenty feet, thence east forty-four feet to the point of beginning, all in the county and state aforesaid. That said building at the time of the committing of the grievances hereinafter mentioned, was of the value .of two thousand dollars. That the stable proper, wherein horses were boarded and kept for hire, was in the basement of said building, which basement was thirty feet wide and sixty feet long and about ten feet high. That on or about the first day of June, 1898, the above-named defendants, with force and arms entered upon said premises and wrongfully and without right and against the will of the plaintiff, and wrong[28]*28fully bauled earth to the basement of said building and filled the same up with earth, destroying the basement room of said building and rendering the same wholly worthless.
“Wherefore, plaintiff says by reason of the wrongful acts of said defendants in so filling up the said basement of said stable as aforesaid he is damaged in the sum of one thousand dollars for which he asks judgment.”

The answer, omitting the caption, is as follows:

“Now at this day come the defendants and for their amended answer to plaintiff’s petition admit that the city of South Gorin is now and has been for more than one year last past a municipal corporation of that name, duly established, organized and incorporated as a city of the fourth class, under and by virtue of the laws of the State of Missouri in such cases made and provided and is situated in said county and state.
“Defendants for further answer deny each and every other allegation in plaintiff’s petition not herein admitted to be true.
“Defendants for further answer state that their co-defendant the city of South Gorin, and by virtue of the laws governing such cities of the fourth class have a right to make and pass, and is authorized to make and pass ordinances to regulate and to secure to its inhabitants the general health of the city and to prevent, abate and remove nuisances and in accordance with the aforesaid authority, the said city of South Gorin did prepare and legally pass an ordinance to secure to its inhabitants health and to prevent disease and sickness, to abate and remove all nuisances within the limits of the aforesaid city which- were liable to engender disease and injure the health of the inhabitants of said city.
“Defendants for further answer state that there was located within the limits of the aforesaid city and joining up to one of the thoroughfares or streets of said city and within a thickly populated portion of said city, a building with a base[29]*29ment; wbicb building was and had been used as a livery stable in wbicb was and bad been kept horses wbicb bad been fed and kept therein, and being tbe same building plaintiff refers to in bis petition and that tbe occupants of said building negligently suffered horse manure to accumulate in tbe basement thereof to tbe depth of one foot or more and did carelessly and negligently permit filth to accumulate in said basement and suffered rats to congregate in said filth and manure so accumulated as aforesaid and carelessly and negligently suffered and permitted said basement to become filled up with water to tbe depth of three feet or more wbicb drowned tbe rats so congregated therein and wet said manure and-filth and permitted tbe same to stand in that condition until it stunk and from wbicb an obnoxious odor would arise, wbicb was injurious to tbe health of tbe inhabitants of said city and caused disease to tbe inhabitants thereof and was and became a nuisance and in accordance with tbe aforesaid ordinances of said city, tbe said city ordered said basement filled in with earth to prevent tbe arising of said obnoxious odors and to remove and abate aforesaid nuisance as provided by said ordinances, of all of wbicb facts plaintiff bad bad due notice.
“Defendants for further answer state that there was located within tbe limits of aforesaid city and joining up to one of tbe thoroughfares or streets of said city and within a thickly populated portion of said city, a building with a basement, wbicb building was and had been used as a livery stable and being tbe same building referred to by plaintiff in bis petition and involved in this suit, and that tbe basement of said building was so constructed as to become and was a nuisance per se and that on account of such location and defective construction of said basement and building, filth would necessarily ¿ccumulate ¡therein and on account of such filth so accumulating, obnoxious odors and impure vapors would arise therefrom and [30]*30destroy the comfort of occupants of adjacent property and endanger the health of such occupants and diminish the value of such adjacent property, and that by reason of the location and the construction of said basement as aforesaid, said nuisance as aforesaid could not have been removed without resorting to filling same up in the manner and form as aforesaid and in filling same up, defendants claim, that the city used due care and with a view to preserve said property and to secure to its inhabitants the general health of said city and to preserve and protect the health of occupants of adjacent property and preserve the value thereof.
“Having fully answered, defendants ask to be discharged with costs.”

The undisputed evidence is that the city of Gorin passed the following ordinance: “Ordinance No. 13, presented by A. H. Mackey as follows: Be it ordained by the board of aldermen of the city of South Gorin, Scotland county, Missouri, that as the basement of the barn on the property owned by Bert Waggoner to-wit: forty by ninety feet southeast corner, southeast quarter of section eight, township sixty-four, range ten west, is full of water and filth and not kept in good sanitary condition. It is hereby declared a nuisance and that it shall be drained or moved and the lot filled up within thirty days.” After having been read three times, on motion by J. A. Williams seconded by Henry Beckman ordinance No. 13 was adopted, all members voting yea, and was approved by the mayor, May 3, 1897. In pursuance of the ordinance the appellants filled up the basement of respondent’s stable with dirt at a cost of $100.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
88 Mo. App. 25, 1901 Mo. App. LEXIS 8, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waggoner-v-city-of-south-gorin-moctapp-1901.