211 N.W. 721 | Iowa | 1927
The defendants are husband and wife, and at the time of the commencement of this action occupied certain described real estate in Polk County, Iowa, as their residence. The title to said property rested in the appellant Jennie. On 1. INTOXICATING March 14, 1925, two police officers of the city LIQUORS: of Des Moines searched the said premises, and in nuisance: the basement of said house found a complete involuntary still in operation, and also four barrels of abatement. mash, five pounds of yeast, a hundred pounds of corn sugar, a stove, seven one-gallon jugs containing whisky, and about two dozen empty jugs. All of the articles were found in a room off the basement of the house. All of the paraphernalia and the liquor were seized by the officers and taken from the premises to the police station. This action was instituted on the 10th day of April, 1925, and was tried on the 25th day of May, 1925.
I. Appellants filed a motion to dismiss the action, and now *1219
contend that said motion should have been sustained, upon the ground that it affirmatively appeared that the nuisance had been in fact abated before the commencement of this action, and that, therefore, injunction will not lie. It is to be noted that the search of appellants' premises was made by the officers on the 14th of March, 1925, at which time the illicit property was seized and removed from the premises by the officers. The action for an injunction was not instituted until the 10th of April. Appellants argue that the injunctive remedy looks solely to the future, and that, the nuisance having in fact been abated before the institution of the action, no remedy by injunction could be granted. In this state, the granting of an injunction against the maintenance of a liquor nuisance is the subject of special legislative enactment. The injunction granted in such a case looks not only to the present, but to the future as well, and by virtue of the statute, Section 2020, Code of 1924, is binding on the defendant throughout the state, as well as against the maintenance of a nuisance in the specific premises that may be involved in the case. The statute is broad and comprehensive in its terms and in its intendment, and should be so construed as to effectuate its obvious purpose. We cannot acquiesce in the appellants' contention that, no matter by whom or in what manner the existing nuisance has been "abated," if it has in fact ceased to exist prior to the commencement of the action for injunction, this fact alone, as a matter of law, defeats the action, and that in every such instance the injunction must be denied as a matter of legal right. It is to be noticed that the so-called "abatement" of the nuisance was not by any voluntary act of the defendants'. The property was seized and removed from the premises by the officers, and was still subject to a final order of abatement, under Code Section 2032. The liquor and paraphernalia seized by the officers were proper evidence to be used in the trial of the injunction suit. We are not prepared to hold that the removal of the illegal liquor and property from the appellants' premises shortly prior to the institution of the action for an injunction was such an "abatement" of the existing nuisance as to prevent the court from granting an injunction against the premises and against the defendants throughout the state. The action for injunction in the instant case was brought within a reasonable time after the *1220
evidence of the existence of the nuisance had been discovered by the search of the premises by the officers. The original notice in the injunction proceeding might well have been served contemporaneously with the search and seizure of the property. The contention of the appellants that the action for injunction would not lie because, at the time the suit was commenced, the nuisance had been abated by the action of the officers in removing the illegal property from the premises, cannot be sustained. We have recognized the rule that, where a defendant has, in good faith, abated a nuisance after the commencement of the suit for injunction, it rests within the discretion of the court to determine whether or not an injunction shall be granted.Davidson v. Benevolent P.O.E.,
II. The title to the property in which the nuisance was maintained was in the appellant Jennie. It is admitted that "she knew of the existence of the nuisance some days before the officers came to the house, but she in no way 2. INTOXICATING participated in her husband's wrongful acts." It LIQUORS: is contended that the appellant Jennie is nuisance: presumed to have been under the coercion of her injunction: husband, and that her property should not be presumption held subject to the penalties provided for the of coercion maintenance of a nuisance, because it was of wife. impossible for her to have prevented her husband from maintaining the nuisance upon her premises. We cannot sustain the contention of the appellant Jennie in this regard. There is no evidence whatever in the record of any attempt made on her part to do any act or thing to prevent the maintenance of a nuisance in the premises, except that she claims to have objected to her husband for maintaining it. The appellant Jennie comes clearly within the express terms and provisions of the statute. Sections 2032 and 2051, Code of 1924. She knew that her codefendant was maintaining a nuisance upon her premises, and had been for a considerable length of time. She offers no legal reason whatever why the decree of injunction, the order of abatement, and the assessment of a mulct tax and costs against the premises should not have been ordered by the court. We find no basis in the record to disturb the decree of the trial court in any respect, and it must be, and it therefore is, — Affirmed.
EVANS, C.J., and STEVENS, De GRAFF, and VERMILION, JJ., concur.