229 N.W. 583 | Minn. | 1930
Plaintiffs seek to recover large damages for the maintenance of a nuisance arising from the noise, smoke, the shaking of their premises by explosions of dynamite, and the throwing thereby of rocks and debris on and about their premises as well as submerging the same in filthy smoke and soot. It is claimed that bad gases were produced and that defendant's conduct was such that plaintiffs' property in day and night was uninhabitable with peace, enjoyment and safety.
All through the unnecessarily long amended complaints reference is made to defendant's said conduct as in part arising out of and consisting of doings in certain and uncertain roads claimed to impair the ingress and egress to plaintiffs' property.
Defendant's alleged conduct is incident to mining iron ore where a portion of the village was once located.
1. The amended complaint covers 19 pages of the printed record. It is complicated, confusing and verbose.
G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9277, reads:
"Two or more consistent causes of action, whether legal or equitable, may be united in one pleading, being separately stated therein * * *."
G. S. 1923 (2 Mason, 1927) § 9267, reads:
"If irrelevant or redundant matter is inserted in a pleading, it may be stricken out on motion; and when a pleading is double, or does not conform to the statute, or when the allegations thereof are so indefinite or uncertain that the precise nature of the charge *477 or defense is not apparent, the court may strike it out on motion, or require it to be amended."
The gist of the present actions is an alleged nuisance. Each plaintiff contends that his complaint contains no more. Defendant asserts that each complaint contains more than one cause of action, not separately stated therein, and that it otherwise offends the statutes above quoted.
The pleader had a right to include more than one cause of action if separately stated in the complaint. No effort was made to state them separately. Indeed, plaintiff insists that the complaint states only the one cause of action. We cannot agree. It is susceptible to a different construction.
The complaint states that in 1910 defendant wrongfully cut the canal-like channel through the north 40 and across the town line road in violation of plaintiff's rights. It alleges that by reason of all of the foregoing facts (including those stated in this paragraph) plaintiff has suffered damages in the sum of $59,000. Such allegations supported by other language in the complaint states a cause of action whether so intended or not. It was not separately stated.
We construe the complaint as sufficient also to state a cause of action based upon a consummated conspiracy to the damage of plaintiff. This apparently relates to "some roads aside from those above," indicating roads other than the town line road and one other. The claim is that this was in violation of G. S. 1923 (1 2 Mason, 1927) §§ 2608, 10419. Perhaps it states other causes of action.
There are other reasons however why the complaint does not conform to the statute. It is indefinite and uncertain and contains irrelevant matter. It charges defendant with being in a conspiracy with persons unnamed. It charges defendant with being in such conspiracy for the purpose of unlawfully destroying certain roads (the identity of which is undisclosed) aside from those roads mentioned. It does not disclose the time when certain things are alleged to have occurred in order that the defendant might demur or plead the statute of limitations. There is an allegation of the *478 destruction at some unnamed time of roads which had not been vacated.
Defendant should not be expected to answer to such a pleading, which might permit the reception of prejudicial evidence which in all probability would be stricken from the record before the termination of the trial. Craig v. Benedictine S. H. Assn.
2. Plaintiffs are located substantially the same as the plaintiffs in Reed v. Village of Hibbing,
The claim is advanced that the two roads now involved were public roads before the village was platted and that the plat put streets upon these roads and that the vacation of the plats left the prior rural roads in existence. Whether this be so we need not determine. The rule of law forbidding a recovery by one who has an injury in common with the public generally would be clearly applicable whether the inconvenience or damage is due to the vacation of the highway or to its unlawful obstruction or destruction. As the complaints now stand the allegations relative to roads have no place therein. Plaintiffs do not disclose a situation wherein they suffer legal injury because of the abuse of the roads. Plaintiffs may allege and prove the acts, conduct and results which constitute the nuisance. A cause of action should be clearly, tersely and briefly stated.
One of the complaints has been amended five times and the other three. Yet our conclusion will be without prejudice to plaintiffs to apply to the trial court for permission again to amend their complaints. If granted no further amendments therefor should be allowed — only a simple pleading is necessary.
Both orders are affirmed. *480