45 Ind. App. 623 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1909
Appellee brought this suit in the court below against appellants, to abate a nuisance and recover damages for its maintenance. Appellants severally answered the complaint by general denial. The cause was submitted to thfe court for trial, and there was a finding and judgment in favor of appellee against appellants for $900 damages, and a decree enjoining appellants, among other things, from maintaining a liquor saloon on the premises described in the complaint. Appellants’ joint and several motion for a new trial was overruled, as was also their several motions to modify the decree. By their several assignments of error appellants call in question the sufficiency of the complaint and the correctness of the ruling of the court upon their motion for a new trial and to modify the judgment. The complaint is assailed for the first time in this court. The objections urged to it are that it proceeds upon the theory that the maintenance of a retail liquor saloon constitutes a nuisance per se, and that this theory being groundless the complaint should be held bad.
conducted. The locality in which it was situated was one in which a licensed liquor saloon might be carried on without being amenable to the charge that it was a nuisance, per se.
The only theory upon which the finding and decree of the court below can be sustained, is that the saloon was rendered a nuisance by the unlawful and disorderly manner in which it was conducted.
The judgment is reversed, with instructions to the court below to grant a new trial.