275 P. 787 | Cal. | 1929
This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing an action brought to secure a permanent injunction, restraining defendants from continuing to construct, maintain and operate upon property owned by the defendant association tombs, crypts and niches for the interment and burial of bodies of dead human beings and for the recovery of five thousand dollars damages alleged to have been caused to the adjoining property of plaintiff because of the partial erection of a mausoleum upon the property of said defendant association.
Objection was made to the introduction of any evidence on behalf of the plaintiff on the ground that the complaint did not state a cause of action and after this objection was sustained the court dismissed the action.
An examination of the complaint reveals that plaintiff pleads certain ordinances of the county of Los Angeles purporting to establish a residence district in Altadena, where the property of both the plaintiff and defendant, involved here, is situated; that defendants have been convicted in a criminal prosecution against them of violating these ordinances by the erection in such district of the mausoleum referred to and that, notwithstanding such conviction, the defendants intend to continue to violate said ordinances, and that the acts constituting such alleged violation have injured plaintiff by depreciating the value of his property. It thus appears that, primarily, plaintiff is seeking the enforcement of the ordinances referred to by injunctive proceedings. *671
Section
A nuisance is defined by our Civil Code, section
In the case of President etc. of Village of Waupun v.Moore,
"We find the principle stated in several very respectable authorities, that equity will not lend its aid to enforce by injunction the by-laws or ordinances of a municipal corporation, restraining an act, unless the act is shown to be a nuisance perse. (Citing authorities.)
"None of the cases to which we have been referred by the counsel for the plaintiffs holds that an injunction can properly issue under such circumstances, and we have been unable to find a case holding that doctrine. To hold that an injunction can properly issue in this case would be to overturn all of the authorities on the subject, and to interpolate into the law a new rule or principle of equity jurisprudence. This we have no right or authority to do. We may not make the law, but only declare it as we find it. We must hold, therefore, that, under the averments of the complaint no injunction can properly be issued to restrain the defendant from proceeding with the erection of his building, and that the village authorities can only resort to their legal remedies in that behalf."
In the case of Incorporated Town of Rochester v. Walters etal.,
It has been held in this state that a cemetery is not a nuisance per se. In the case of County of Los Angeles v.Hollywood Cemetery Assn.,
In the case of Hume v. Laurel Hill Cemetery, 142 Fed. 552, it was said: "If the cemetery in question has never been and will not become a nuisance and is not dangerous to life or detrimental to the public health, it is not within the constitutional powers of the municipality to suppress it. (Citing authorities.) For the purpose of this hearing, the Laurel Hill Cemetery has not been and is not now indecent *674 to the senses, or offensive, or an obstruction to the free use of property. The offensiveness must as a rule consist in actual physical discomfort or a violation of the sense of decency. Mere undesirableness by reason of social or other prejudices is not sufficient, not even if it leads to a depreciation of the property."
[2] Without going into the controverted question as to whether or not a mausoleum is a cemetery within the meaning of the ordinances pleaded by plaintiff, and assuming for the present purposes that it is, we reach a conclusion that the violation of the ordinances alone would not permit plaintiff to secure the relief prayed for and that the complaint has not stated facts with relation to the operation or conduct of the mausoleum which would constitute it a nuisance per se, nor has it stated facts which would indicate that plaintiff has suffered some exceptional damage, other than that suffered by the public generally in that community due to the depreciation in value of residence property therein.
The judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Waste, C.J., Preston, J., Shenk, J., Richards, J., Seawell, J., and Curtis, J., concurred.