69 Mo. 102 | Mo. | 1878
As the only question in this case arises on a demurrer to the petition which was sustained, we insert the petition at large :
Plaintiff states that defendant is a municipal corporation, created by the laws of the State of Missouri, and that defendant is, and was, at the time of the hereinafter grievance, a populous city; that, by its charter, defendant is empowered to abate all nuisances within the city, that are dangerous to the public, and that the defendant has the
Plaintiff says, that at the time of the hereinafter mentioned grievance, she was, and now is, a widow, her husband being dead, and that at said time she resided in the town of Harlem, Clay county, Missouri, and that her daughter, Maggie Kiley, whose death occurred as hereinafter stated, lived with plaintiff, and that her said daughter, Maggie, was a minor, of the age of fourteen years ; that from and after the 19th day of December, 1872, and continuously from that date until the 9th day of February, 1873, defendant negligently and carelessly permitted and suffered an insecure and dangerous wall, the same being about forty feet high, the remains of a brick building, to stand and remain on part of lot No. 86, in Swope’s addition to said city, being at or near the corner of 12th street and Grand Avenue, streets of defendant, and the same being a locality much frequented by the public; that said brick wall was liable at any time, during the pei’iod aforesaid, to fall down on, over and upon, persons passing along the west side of Grand Avenue street, and thereby injure them; and that during all of said time defendant well knew the dangerous condition of said wall; that said brick wall, so permitted to stand and remain as aforesaid, was, at the time plaintiff’s said daughter was killed as hereinbefore stated, and for some time prior thereto, a dangerous public nuisance, the same being liable to fall down and upon persons passing on said street, but that the same was negligently and carelessly permitted to remain in that situation by defendant, and that on the 9th day of February,
It seems from this petition that the charter gave the city legislative power to prevent, abate and remove nuisances, and also to define and declare, by ordinance, what should be deemed 'nuisances, and it is averred that by an ordinance passed in 1871, it was. ordered, among other things, that all buildings and structures in a situation or manner dangerous to the public, should be deemed nuisances. The duty of the city to abate such nuisances as were thus declared dangerous to the public, is averred. The nuisance in this case was a decayed brick wall forty feet high, the remains of a burned building, which had been at the time of its fall’standing for two years, at the intersection of two streets. It is alleged that it was a dangerous nuisance to the public, and that plaintiff’s daughter was standing within a foot of the sidewalk when the wall fell and killed her.
It is not very easy to perceive upon what grounds this demurrer was sustained. Two objections have been suggested in the argument submitted to this court by the city counselor, which I will proceed to notice. The first is, that this wall was upon a private lot over which the city had no control. But could this fact alter the character of the nuisance and deprive the city of a power expressly conceded to it by its charter? In Wood on Nuisances, § 744, it is said that when a municipal corporation has ample power to remove a nuisance which is injurious to the health, endangers the safety or impairs the convenience of its citizens, or when, in the prosecution of a public work, it creates
Reversed.