72 Iowa 377 | Iowa | 1887
I. Defendant, in her answer, admits that she owns the property described in the petition, but denies that a nuisance was maintained in it. The evidence presented in the record before us sufficiently establishes the allegations of the petition. We cannot, therefore, interfere with the decree on the ground that the evidence fails to establish it.
_._. amfofstaí-’ ute. III. It is insisted that the statute is in conflict with the constitution of the United States, for the reason that it denies defendant the right of trial by jury, deprives her of property without due process of law, and authorizes punishment without indictment by a grand jury. It is sufficient to say, in reply to these objections, that the action is brought in chancery to restrain the maintenance of a nuisance, — a subject of equitable cognizance before the statute was enacted, — and that the right to trial by jury in chancery cases is not secured by any constitutional provision. If defendant should, through the exercise of the power of chancery in abating the nuisance which she maintained, be deprived of property, it will be by
In our opinion the decree of the circuit court ought to be
Aefiemed.