4 F.2d 48 | 3rd Cir. | 1925
This was a proceeding to close the property operated by Mickewiez and owned by the William Peter Brewing Company, located in block 167, and known as 613 Bergenline avenue, West- Hohsken, N. J. The bill alleged that Mickewiez
At the trial, which took piaee on March 7, 1924, Richard Davis and James Dawson, prohibition agents, testified, over objection, that on March 6, 1924, the day before the trial, 17 months aflef the facts alleged in the bill, they purchased a drink of whisky on the premises in question. Lyons and Smith, however, were not at the trial, and there was no direct testimony to establish the truth of the allegations of the bill as to purchases made by them. The defendants did not offer any testimony, and at the conclusion of the government’s case moved for a direction of a verdict in their favor. This the court denied, and entered a decree adjudging that the place “was on the 27th, 29th, and 30th days of September, 1922, and is, a continuing nuisance.” The injunction against the defendants was made permanent, and the premises were closed for one year. Prom this decree the defendants appealed.
The affidavit of Lyons and Smith justified the learned trial judge in issuing a temporary injunction. The government contends that the allegations of the bill that the place was kept and used as a common nuisance are established by the failure of defendants to take steps to dissolve the temporary injunction, and that the testimony of Davis and Dawson establishes a continuing nuisance. The government relies on the ease of Hall v. Coffin, 108 Iowa, 466, 79 N. W. 274.
It is elementary and conceded that it is necessary to prove the material allegations of a bill in order to support a decree. The material allegation of the hill was that the promises at the time the bill was filed, October 25, 1922, were used as a “public and common nuisance,” and that they were “a continuing nuisance.” This allegation was based on the affidavit of Lyons and Smith that the defendant had sold them intoxicating liquor on September 27, 29, and 30, 1922. These alleged sales were therefore the foundation of the whole case. It was accordingly necessary to establish them by legal proof. The government says the failure of the defendants to take steps to vacate the temporary injunction against them “must be considered in the nature of an admission against interest”; that the testimony of Davis and Dawson was admissible, because the government alleged the maintenance of a continuing nuisance, and their testimony showed the existence of a nuisance on March 6, 1924, which had presumptively continued from the time of the temporary injunction. In other words, the government relies on the maxim that “silence gives consent,” and cites sections 284 and 289 of volume 1, and sections 1071 and 1072, volume 2, Wigmore on Evidence, as sustaining its contention.
In the first place, the record does not disclose whether or not any stops were taken by the defendants to vacate the judgment. There was no testimony given on that subject at the trial. The maxim invoked by the government, and referred to in the first two sections cited from Wigmore, does not apply to such proceedings as are here under consideration. It applies to declarations made in the presence of a person under circumstances which naturally call for serious admission or denial on his part. Moore v. Smith, 14 Serg. & R. (Pa.) 388, 393; Vail v. Strong, 10 Vt. 457, 463. “Silence is not evidence of an admission, unless there are circumstances which render it more reasonably probable that a man would answer the charge made against him than that he would not.” Wiedemann v. Walpole, 2 Q. B. 539. When the circumstances are such that a person ought to speak, and does not, this fact is relevant and admissible in evidence. Section 284 of Wigmore refers to delay in prosecution, and section 289 to failure of a defendant to testify in proceedings against him. But Wigmore states that delay or reluctance in beginning a prosecution is only “a slight” indication “of a consciousness of the weakness of one’s cause.”
The injunction was served' on the defendants October 28, 1922, and they filed their answer in December following; Mickewiez on the Gill, and the corporation on the 30th. The temporary injunction was issued on sworn facts which seemed sufficient. The government does not suggest what steps should have been taken to vacate the injunction. The defendants in their answers denied in tolo the allegations on which the injunction was based. It could hardly be expected that the court would vacate the injunction on counter affidavits alone denying the facts alleged. Anything else would constitute a trial. It appears to us that under
We do not think that failure to take steps to vacate the injunction before the final hearing was an admission that the allegations of the bill were true, and that no direct evidence to establish the sales was necessary. Therefore the nuisance alleged in the bill to have been maintained was not established. This case differs at this crucial point from that of Hall v. Coffin, supra. In 'that ease the existence of a nuisance was established at the time it was alleged to have existed in the petition. Since the petition charged a continuing nuisance, the court said that, evidence of sales made after the commencement of the action was competent. But in the ease at bar there was not a word to sustain the finding that the defendants maintained a nuisance on the premises in question on September 27, 29, and 30, 1922. There was accordingly no nuisance to be continued. Testimony, therefore, tending to establish the maintenance of a continuing nuisance, was inadmissible.
The decree is reversed, and a new trial awarded.