82 Mo. 330 | Mo. | 1884
This is an action by which plaintiff’ seeks to recover of defendant the cost and expense of filling two lots owned by him in the city of Hannibal. The work was done by the city on the refusal of defendant to comply with an ordinance, ordering the owners of certain lots to fill them, the health of the city requiring it in the opinion of the city council, as expressed in the preamble to the ordinance. By the city charter whenever, in the opinion of the city council, the health of the city requires it, said council is authorized to order any lot to be filled by the owner thereof. The lots owned by defendant were lot No. 2 and the north third of lot No. 1 in block No. 14. On a trial of the cause plaintiff’ had judgment from which defendant has appealed.
The evidence for plaintiff’ tended to prove the cause of action alleged in the petition, and defendant then offered to prove by witnesses present in court, that Bear Creek had been from time immemorial a natural running stream about fifteen miles in length, with a width as shown on the plat in evidence, with defined and actual banks, with a volume of water sufficient for navigable purposes for a short distance at certain seasons of the year. That in 1849 and '1850 the plaintiff wrongfully cut a new channel across the
Further, the defendant offered to prove by said witnesses that the woz’k actually done on defendant’s lots did not amouzit to more than ninehuzzdred and fifty-four 82-100' cubic yards, and that the reasonable value of doing such work at this tizne was ziot over twenty-five cents per cubic yard; that the plaintiff’s actual cost of the work at the time was not three-fourths of the aznount ehaz’ged in the petition, and that the city unnecessarily azzd wrongfully aggravated its cost of doing such work, that no pez’son’s health was ever injured by said condition of defendant’s lot; that the alleged cost of filling said lots was greater than the value of the property so filled; that the fill made was not on the whole of the parcels described in the petition, but only on the rear end thereof and on the undescribed fraction thez’eof.
To the introduction of this evidence the couz’t sustained plaintiff's objection and thereupon gave such instructions as autln rizod a verdict for plaintiff". Considering as proved, the facts which defendant offered to prove, the construction of the embankment on Second street by the city was subsecpient to defendant’s purchase of the lots and that embankment prevented the flow of the water from the lots and occasioned its accumulation upon them, which, it is alleged injuriously affected the health of the city. It has been repeatedly held by this cozrz’t, that the owners of the lots under szzch circumstances could not maizztain an action against the city for the damage to them but that such injury is damnum absque injuria. Now, we are asked to hold, also, that the city may create a znzisanee upon the lot of an individual and then have it abated at his expense, if he refuse to do it when ordered. As well at once declaz’e that zzo one can acquire any rights to town or city lots which the municipal corporation is bound to respect. The city cannot create a nuisance upon the property of a citizen and ' compel him to abate it. Weeks v. City of Milwaukee, 10