Young v. Rothrock

96 N.W. 1105, 121 Iowa 588
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedOctober 29, 1903
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 96 N.W. 1105 (Young v. Rothrock) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Young v. Rothrock, 96 N.W. 1105, 121 Iowa 588 (iowa 1903).

Opinion

Deeher J.

On the 23d day of December, 3901, there was issued out of (he district court of Linn county, Iowa,, in an action wherein F. M. Young was plaintiff and J. T* Ohadima was defendant, a writ of injunction restraining-the said Ohadima from maintaining, using, or operating-an obstruction in First Street West, in the city of Cedar Eapids, more particularly described as an ice chute or tramway, which ran across the street. December 28th of the same year a motion'to dissolve the injunction was heard, and it was ordered that the motion -be overruled,, and that the temporary writ be made perpetual. It was-further ordered that defendant be allowed to use the ice chutes until Monday, December 30, 1901, at twelve o’clock noon of said day, and that such use should not be a violation of said writ; and it was further ordered that at said time,, to wit, December 30, 1901, twelve noon, the defendant-should remove said obstruction from said street and sidewalk., On January 12, 1902, plaintiff filed an application charging Ohadima with violation of the- order. An attachment issued, which was duly served, and thereupon Ohadima appeared, and filed a written excuse for his alleged violation of the writ, in which he stated, in substance, that he had made application to the district court-of Linn county for a modification of the injunotional order, and asked that the proceedings for contempt be suspended. He also pleaded that he be permitted toproQeed with the operation of his ice chute until his motion could be heard. He further pleaded that the proceedings for violation of the injunction were without jurisdiction; that-he acted in good faith in operating the chute, under the authority and permission of the city council of the city of Cedar Eapids, and with the least possible obstruction to travel. On January 14, 1903, plaintiff commenced the second, action above entitled for an injunction against Chadima Bros., restraining them from operating an ice [590]*590chute across the aforesaid First street. A temporary writ "of injunction was issued on this petition as prayed, and thereafter the defendants filed an answer to the petition, denying the alleged nuisance, pleading municipal authority,'and other matters to which we shall hereafter refer; and thereafter a motion to dissolve the temporary writ of in j unction issued in the second case as above entitled. The contempt proceedings and the motion to dissolve in the second case seem to have been tried together, resulting in the discharge of J. T. Ohadima and the sustaining of the motion to dissolve. The original certiorari proceeding is to review the action of the defendant judge in making the order for discharge, and the appeal in the second case is. from the ruling dissolving the temporary writ of injunction issued in that proceeding.

1. violation tiorK ^justification. There is no doubt that J. T. Ohadima violated the terms of the original writ of injunction issued by the district court of Linn county, and that he should have been punished therefor, unless it be for some matter of excuse presented by him. He says' that at the time he violated the writ he had filed a motion to modify the terms of the original order. But this is manifestly no excuse. If it were, then all that one need do who has been enjoined from the performance of a particular act is to file a motion to modify the order, and from that hour he may proceed with impunity to violate the terms of the writ. The statement of the proposition is all that-is necessary to demonstrate its unsoundness.

2. Same, Next, he contends that he complied with the injunc-tional order by changing the method of the constructon of the chutes; not that he removed them, but that he so altered their construction as that they did not interfere with public travel on the street. This view overlooks the form of the in junctional order, which restrained defendant from using or operating an ice chute in the street after December 30, 1901, and further [591]*591■directed that the same should be removed from the street and sidewalk. A mere change in the construction of the ■chute did not amount to a removal, nor did it authorize ■Ohadima to operate it in its changed condition. He was restrained from using or operating the same on the street. The change made in the construction did not entirely obviate the dangers to be apprehended from its use, and "there is no doubt that its use, under ■ the circumtsances ■disclosed in evidence, was in violation of the' terms of the injunction.

■3. modifica-order°mitigation. Lastly, it is insisted that the district judge who ■ordered the original writ gave Ohadima verbal permission to make use of the street in the manner he did. All that is claimed in this connection is that the judge said that the use made of the street, if with permission 0f fjje city council, would not be contrary to the terms of the writ. No claim is made that Judge Thompson ever in fact made an order modifying his direction and order for the writ, or that he was ■even asked to do so, before Ohadima proceeded with the ■use of the ice chuté.' He was simply asked for a construction of an order which had passed beyond his control, and, •as we understand it, said that, if the city council gave ■Ohadima permission to use an ice chute across the street, it would not be a violation of the terms of the injunction. Manifestly, this would not be a legal excuse for the violation of the injunction. Such fact might, no doubt, be considered in mitigation, but it did "not amount to a dissolution or modification of the injunction, and until there was some such order it was the duty of Ohadima to obey the commands of the writ. This is fundamental. Lanworthy v. McKelvey, 25 Iowa, 55; Lake v. Wolfe, 108 Iowa, 187. Chadima’s good faith is no excuse, but no doubt may be considered in fixing the penalty to be imposed for violation of the writ. Hawkins v. State, 126 Ind. 294 (26 N. E. Rep. 43); Cartwright’s Case, 114 Mass. 230; Des [592]*592Moines Co. v. Des Moines Co., 74 Iowa, 585. The order' discharging J. T. Chadima was dearly erroneous, and the-proceedings resulting in his discharge will be annulled, and the trial court is directed to proceed as if no such order-had been made. J. T. Chadima will pay one-half of the-costs of this proceeding.

4 nuisance* authority of Clty' II. As to the second case two questions arise: First-,, was defendant maintaining a nuisance on the street by the-construction and operation of its ice chute? and, second,, plaintiff entitled to have the same en~ joined? Defendants have an icehouse oh one side of First street, and the river from which they procure their ice is on the other. To get the ice from the river into the icehouse, they constructed a chute-which ran from the river to the street line up a steep incline, from the street line across the street ón a level, and. from the icehouse side of the street to the icehouse on an incline which varied in steepness as the icehouse was; filled. As it crossed the street and sidewalk, the bottom, of the chute was sunk so that the tops of the- sides, which were about two inches deep, were practically on a level with the street and sidewalk. When the time came for-filling the icehouse, pulleys and other apparatus were-used for taking the cakes of ice from the river, where they were cut, up this chute to the house. Horses furnished the motive power, and the work was quite rapidly done. Ice was taken up as fast as possible.

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Bluebook (online)
96 N.W. 1105, 121 Iowa 588, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/young-v-rothrock-iowa-1903.