35 Mo. App. 70 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1889
delivered the opinion of the
The plaintiff, a resident householder of the city of Hannibal, seeks in this action to recover damages caused to him by a nuisance which is alleged to have been created in the vicinity of his residence, by the city and other real estate owners in said city. Upon the trial of the cause the jury found a verdict for three hundred dollars against the city of Hannibal, and found in favor of the defendants, Aronson and McCann. The plaintiff having prior thereto dismissed his suit against the defendants, Archdeacon, Boughton and Bacon, judgment was entered upon the verdict against the city of Hannibal. Hence this appeal.
The errors assigned by the city are that the verdict is unsupported by any evidence, and that the court’s instructions to the jury are erroneous.
The plaintiff’s petition, after stating the fact that the city of Hannibal is a municipal corporation and that he is a resident honselioldei’, occupying a certain house and lot in the city with his family for residence purposes, proceeds to state his cause of action in substance as follows :
That the city of Hannibal is now, and has been since 1883, the owner of certain real estate in said city (describing it), on which it has erected and maintained since 1883, a large brick building, used for a public market house. That the other defendants, Archdeacon,
The defendant, the city of Hannibal, filed a separate answer in which it admitted its corporate existence and its ownership of the property, whereon the market house was erected, but denied all other allegations of plaintiff’s petition. The defendants, Aronson and McCann, filed a joint answer, admitting their title to the lands as stated in the plaintiff’s petition, but denied all other allegations therein.
Upon the issues thus framed the cause was submitted to the jury under evidence showing substantially the following facts:
The plaintiff was the owner of the real estate described in the petition as his, and resided thereon with
There was no substantial evidence of the fact, that the privy on the market-house lot of the city of Hannibal, was connected by any drain with this water-way. The plaintiff in his examination in chief did state that it was so connected, but, on his cross examination, admitted that all that he knew on that subject was not based on any knowledge, but on mere surmise. The defendant’s evidence was overwhelming in establishing the fact that no such connection existed, and that the only drain, the city itself had ever built, was one near the top of the culvert, for the purpose of giving outlet to the surface water on the other side.
The instructions which the court gave at the instance of the plaintiff, and the city of Hannibal, are contradictory and entirely irreconcilable, and such fact alone would necessitate a reversal of the judgment. As the instructions are very lengthy, we will not set them out in detail. We will state, however, that at plaintiff’s instance the court instructed the jury in substance that if they found from the evidence that the city, Aronson and McCann, or either of them, were guilty of contributing to the erection of this nuisance, that then their
These instructions were erroneous in principle, even had there been evidence connecting the city of Hannibal, as a private owner, with the creation of the nuisance complained of. They seem to have been framed on the theory that in an action on the case for nuisance, each participator becomes liable for the entire damage done, regardless of the fact whether the acts creating the nuisance were joint, provided they were concurrent. Such is not the law.
A person, who contributes to the production of a nuisance, may be made chargeable therewith in a separate action, although many others contributed thereto, and his act alone would not constitute a nuisance, if the combined effect is to create an actionable injury. So if several persons drain their premises in the same ditch, the waters from which are discharged near the premises of another, and produce an injury to his person or his comfortable enjoyment, each of the persons so using the drain is liable, in separate actions for the damage occasioned to him. Moon on Nuisance, sec. 831. But in such a case the defendant is chargeable only to the extent of the injury done by himself. Chipman v. Palmer, 77 N. Y. 51; Keys v. Gold Co., 53 Cal. 724. When the act producing the injtiry is not joint, the party can be held responsible only to the extent of injuries inflicted by his own wrong, and a joint action against the parties, whose separate acts produced the
There was no demurrer for misjoinder of parties or causes of action in this case, hence if the plaintiff under evidence warranting it, and proper applicatory instructions, had recovered a verdict against the city, for injuries caused to him by the combined acts of the city and others in creating a nuisance, to the extent of the city’s share in producing the nuisance, we would not be at liberty to disturb the verdict. As it is the verdict cannot stand, since there is no substantial evidence to support it, and even if there were, the instructions, determining the plaintiff ’s measure of damages against the city, are as above seen wholly unwarranted.
Nor could the verdict be supported on the theory, that the city was liable for injuries caused by this nuisance, because it was guilty of some misfeasance in regard to this drain, as a municipal corporation. The petition lacks every essential element to justify a recovery, on the theory of a negligent or careless execution of a municipal duty. It fails to state any duty on part of the city, or even any control whatever in the premises. A municipal corporation has no control over nuisances existing within its corporate limits, except such as are conferred upon it by its charter or the general law, and its duty in the nature of things cannot exceed its powers. The cases of Barton v. Syracuse, 36 N. Y. 54, and Hardy v. Brooklyn, 90 N. Y. 436, which are cited and relied on by respondent, are cases of the negligent exercise of a municipal duty, and have no application whatever to the case at bar under the pleadings and the theory on which the cause was tried. A
It results that the judgment must be reversed. Reversed and remanded.