61 Tex. 173 | Tex. | 1884
There are sixteen assignments of error, of which only one is presented in brief of counsel.
This action was brought to recover damages from the appellant for permitting certain houses which he owned, contiguous to the house owned and occupied by the appellee as a home for his family, to be used as places of prostitution, by which he alleged his property was diminished in value, and rendered unfit for a home for himself and family. An injunction was also sought to prevent the continuance of such use of the houses of appellant.
The proof was ample to show that for a long time the appellant had rented his houses to persons under such circumstances that he must have known the purposes for w'hich his houses were used and for which they were rented; in fact he was notified of the fact; for the plaintiff requested him not to permit his houses to be so used, nearly a year before this suit was brought.
The evidence shows that the houses which belonged to the appellant, by reason of their use, became and were for a long time notorious as of the most disreputable houses of prostitution; that their occupants were repeatedly prosecuted and convicted for there keeping houses of ill-fame; and that the appellant himself, long before the institution of this suit, was prosecuted for renting his houses to-be kept as houses of prostitution, to which prosecution he made no defense, and yet that he from month to month permitted persons who were known to be common prostitutes to occupy his houses and there to ply their avocations; that they were so kept, and openly kept, the evidence makes clear.
Under this state of facts it is urged that the court erred in instructing the jury, in effect, that if the appellant knew with reasonable certainty the use to which his property was put, and continued to rent it from month to month to persons whom he knew, with reasonable certainty, would so continue to use it, then, if so used, its use would constitute a nuisance for which the appellant would, be responsible.
The charge of the court was not incorrect; and, that it might not possibly be misconceived, at the request of appellant the court gave the following charge: “Under the law of this state the owner of property, houses and lots, has the right to rent the same to a person whom he may know to be a prostitute or lewd woman, and such character of person has the right to rent such property; and before the plaintiff can recover, it must be proved to your satisfaction that the defendant in this case not only rented the premises on lot Ho. 1, block 384, to prostitutes, knowing them to be such at the time of renting, but he must have rented said premises to such persons for the purpose of their being used as houses of prostitution, or after having rented them to such persons, not knowing their characters at the time, but afterwards having found out that said tenants were prostitutes and that they were using said premises as houses of prostitution instead of legitimate dwellings, and the defendant, being so informed, re-rented and acquiesced in the immoral use of said premises and continued such tenancy in violation of good morals and common decency.”
This charge was more favorable to the appellant than a correct application of the law would justify. >
Such injury was shown to the appellee, and the appellant shown to be so connected with the facts out of which the injury resulted, as entitled the appellee to recover against him. Givens v. Van Studdiford, 4 Mo. App., 499; S. C., 72 Mo., 130; Hamilton v. Whitridge, 11 Md., 128; Commonwealth v. Cobb, 120 Mass., 356; State v. Williams, 30 N. J. Law, 102; The People v. Erwin, 4 Denio, 129; State v. Abrahams, 6 Iowa, 117; Wood’s Law of Nuisance, 40, 822; Fish v. Dodge, 4 Denio, 317.
The rules applied by the court in this case were such as would be applicable in a criminal prosecution for letting premises to be used as a place of prostitution, and it may well be questioned whether rules so stringent should be applied in civil causes, in which questions of knowledge and intent are often of but little or of no importance.
The maxim, “so use your own property as not to injure the rights
However this may be, the rule given by the court below was one of which the appellant cannot complain, and the judgment is affirmed.
Affirmed.
[Opinion delivered February 19, 1884.]