23 Kan. 534 | Kan. | 1880
The. plaintiff in error states the facts of this case, as follows:
On the 21st day of May, 1879, the plaintiff in error, as plaintiff, made and filed in the district court in and for Atchison county, Kansas, his petition against the defendant, in which he charged that he was in possession, under a lease, of the Lindell hotel, located on lot 7, in block 28, in the city of Atchison; that in order to properly carry on the business of said hotel, it was necessary to use the basement of the building for the purpose of a laundry; that he had fitted up the south fifty feet of said basement as a laundry, at an expense of about $500; that his leasehold interest in said building, and the furniture owned by him therein, was of the value of $8,000.
He further alleged that it was necessary, in order to properly use said basement, to have the light and the air from the whole of the east side of such basement, and that plaintiff is entitled to the light and air from the whole of the east side of said basement; and that well knowing the plaintiff’s right in the premises, said defendant wrongfully and illegally, about the month of October, 1878, erected and put up a high board obstruction, greatly injuring plaintiff; that on or about the 31st of May, 1879, said defendant wrongfully and unlawfully threw down the fence along the south part of such basement, and is threatening to put up and maintain along the east side of said basement, for the length of about sixty feet, a board obstruction of the height of about sixteen feet, thereby wrongfully, unlawfully, maliciously and wickedly ■cutting off the air and light from plaintiff’s laundry and basement, as he is rightfully entitled to enjoy.
Said petition also contained a statement that he had been •damaged, and a prayer for relief by injunction, and for damages. The petition was sworn to by plaintiff, and an application made to the Hon. J. J. Locker, judge of the probate court, which was granted on plaintiff’s executing a bond in the sum of one hundred dollars. On the 25th of June, the defendant filed a motion to vacate the temporary injunction, alleging — first, that the allegations in the petition are insufficient; second, that the alleged facts are untrue. And on the same day the defendant filed another motion to vacate and ■dissolve the temporary injunction, setting down as grounds
Defendant also filed a demurrer to plaintiff’s petition, alleging that the said petition does not state facts sufficient -to constitute a cause of action of any kind in favor of plaintiff and against defendant; and does not state sufficient facts upon which to base an order of injunction, either temporary or otherwise.
. Upon the hearing of said motions and demurrer, the court sustained the same, and the plaintiff brings the case here for review.
This statement of the facts of the case is at least fair toward the plaintiff in error.
Did the court below commit any error? We think not. It certainly did not commit any error in dissolving said temporary injunction; for, according to the affidavits, read in evidence on the hearing of the motion to dissolve, the defendant owned the land or lot where said fence was torn down, and where the other fences were erected and about to be erected, and had a perfect right to do just as he did, and as he was about to do. But did the court err in sustaining the defendant’s demurrer to the plaintiff’s petition ? There is more ground for supposing that the court erred in sustaining said demurrer, than there rs for supposing that the court erred in dissolving said injunction, for, in dissolving the injunction, the court had an opportunity to see both sides of the question, but in sustaining the demurrer, the court could know the facts only as they were stated in the plaintiff’s petition. But did the court err in sustaining the demurrer to the petition, even with only this one-sided showing? In the plaintiff’s petition there was a conspicuous absence of important facts, which we would naturally expect to see in such a petition. There was an apparently labored effort to avoid
We suppose that there can be no such thing as “ancient lights” in Kansas; and that the doctrine of “ancient lights”'
The judgment of the court below will be affirmed.