90 Ga. 390 | Ga. | 1892
Upon a close aud careful examination of the petition, we are of opinion that it should be taken and construed all together as an attempt to set forth one and the same cause of action, and not as a declaration uniting two or more causes of actiou and. attempting to set them forth severally in separate counts. It is manifest that but one grievance is complained of, and that the specific facts and circumstances alleged apply exclusively to it; the petition at the same time drawing certain legal conclusions in favor of the plaintiffs, which conclusions are sought to be stated and used as if they themselves were a part of the facts instead of being deductions therefrom. The material substance of the petition may be fairly stated thus: The plaintiffs having in the city of Augusta a warehouse aud a large quantity of grain stored therein, much of the grain was wet and damaged by a three days flood in the Savannah river, which commenced on September 10th.' Whilst the plaintiffs were engaged successfully in separating the dry'grain from the wet in order to dry the wet and save it from total loss as best they could, they received several notices the last of which, dated the 19th of September, was from the sanitary inspector, and informed them that their damaged grain and other articles must be removed, and requesting them to have it removed to the trash pile where it would be burnt at once. This notice purported to be given by order of the board of health. The plaintiffs refused to comply, on the ground that their property, although damaged by the flood, was still of considerable value and there was no reason why they should be required to throw it away, some being dry and some wet, they having received no notice of time and place of hearing by the board of health when the order was given. In consequence of this refusal they were brought before the recorder’s court of Augusta on
1. Nowhere in the petition is it alleged that the grain condemned and destroyed was not a nuisance or was not dangerous to the public health. The mere narrative statement that the plaintiffs declined to comply with the order of the board of health, or with the notice given by the sanitary inspector, on the ground that their property, although damaged by the flood, was still of considerable value and there was no reason why they should be required to 'throw it away, some being dry and some wet, is certainly not any direct allegation that the damaged grain was not a nuisance or that it did not endanger the public health, nor is it any substitute therefor. Fairly construed it could not be treated as putting in issue, or as offering to put in issue, the fact of the existence of the nuisance. No doubt, on the ordinary principles of pleading, if the petition had not made a prima facie case of justification so far as the city is concerned, the fact of nuisance would have been matter for plea. But the facts set forth, aided as they must be by the presumption that public officers do not violate but perform their duties, make a prima facie case of justification, for it is evident that the board of health did in fact consider and decide that the grain was dangerous to the public health. The chief, if not the suggested against the binding force of that decision is that it was made without nqjice^ojffie owners of the property. But, according^Elrthé'authorities, notice was not essential except for the purpose of rendering the decision conclusive, the nuisance in question, if one at all, beingNTTimsance at common law.
2. But it is said that even if the grain was a nuisance dangerous to the public health, and was legally condemned as such and properly destroyed under the authority of the municipal government, the plaintiffs are entitled to compensation under the provision of the constitution which the petition cites. There can be no doubt that this position is not well taken. To destroy property because it is a dangerous nuisance is not to appropriate it to a public use, but to prevent any use of it by the owner and put an end to its existence because it could not be used consistently with the maxim sic utere tuo ut alienum non laedas. In abating nuisances the public does not exercise the power of eminent domain, but the police power. Manhattan Manufacturing &c. Co. v. Van Keuren, 23 N. J. Eq. 251; Weller v. Snover, 42 N. J. L. 341; City of St. Louis v. Stern, 3 Mo. App. 48; Thilen v. Porter, 14 Lea, 622; Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U. S. 623; Mills, Em. Dom. §§6, 7.
For statutory provisions touching the powers of the board of health of Augusta and touching the recorder’s functions in connection therewith, see Acts of 1877, p. 142; Acts of 1880-1, p. 365. We quite agree with the presiding judge of the superior court in the opinion that no cause of action is in sight.
Judgment affirmed.