42 Ind. App. 3 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1908
Suit by appellant against the appellees to enjoin certain alleged improper uses of the Knox county jail, and for damages.
The complaint was in one paragraph. The issues of fact arose upon the separate answer of general 'denial filed by each of the defendants. A trial resulted in a finding in favor of the defendants and a decree that the plaintiff take nothing by her suit. The suit was begun in the Knox Circuit Court, from whence the venue was changed to the Sullivan Circuit Court.
Appellant assigns as error the overruling of her motion for a new trial,
“A county is one of the instrumentalities of government, and exercises delegated governmental functions. * * * It was organized to give effect to the great principle of local self-government which forms such an important element of English and American liberty — which is, indeed, the vitalizing and preserving element of constitutional freedom. * * * The care of the county prison is committed to the county officers in order to enable the county to discharge its duties as a governmental subdivision. A governmental power under which the care and control of prisons fall is the great one commonly called the ‘police power.’ In caring for prisons a county exercises part of this great power by virtue of its delegation to it by the legislature, and it is no more liable for the wrongful or negligent acts of the officers in immediate charge of the prison than is the State for the tor
Where a building itself or a work is lawful of itself, those
The material allegations of the complaint as to location of the premises, the general description of the jail, the uses to which it has been put, the offensive noises and sights, are in a general way, though not in all detail, sustained by evidence ; at least no element of annoyance is understated. The evidence shows further that the building was erected on the -day of-. It fronts on Broadway, with a side entrance for the admission of prisoners on Eighth street. The cost of the building was $47,000. It is provided with an improved system of ventilation and sewerage, and is without architectural fault. The center section of the jail is three stories high, and the jail proper is two stories high. Every' cell connects with what is known as the “exercise corridor,” which is nine feet wide and twenty-eight feet long. On the outside of this exercise corridor is what is known as the “utility corridor,” which is three feet wide and is between the windows and the cells. There are no pipes or valves except in this corridor, and it was not intended that anybody should go through it except the sheriff or some one ordered by him, and was never intended to be used by the prisoners. The exercise and utility corridors are connected by a door. There are no cells on the third floor, and no cell in the building connects directly with the outside walls. The entire cell construction is known as five-ply iron and steel, giving it a greater ring when the metal is brought together than ordinary iron. The cell doors are operated by what is
In 1 Hilliard, Torts (4th ed.), p. 584, it is said: “In general, it may be said, that any injury to lands or houses, which renders them useless or even uncomfortable for habitation, is a nuisance. Thus, in regard to offensive odors, it is said, the neighborhood has a right to pure and fresh air. And a smell need not be unwholesome, if it is offensive, and renders the enjoyment of life and property uncomfortable.” From these definitions, the manner of keeping the jail in question and matters connected therewith, as alleged in the complaint and shown by the evidence, constitute a nuisance.
Objection to the erection of, the jail’was made to the board of county commissioners by appellant, but no complaint has been made to the present board of commissioners of the manner in which it is conducted. The facts in the case of Deaconess, etc., Hospital v. Bontjes, supra, are very analogous to those before us, but in Roberson v. Rochester Folding Box Co. (1902), 171 N. Y. 538, 64 N. E. 442, 59 L. R. A. 478, 89 Am. St. 828, cited by appellee, they are very different.
Judgment reversed, with instructions to sustain appellant’s motion for a new trial.
Roby, J., absent.