35 S.C. 273 | S.C. | 1892
The opinion of the court was delivered by
This was an indictment charging the defendant with erecting and maintaining a common nuisance by damming a stream of water, forming a pond and causing sickness in the neighborhood of said pond, which came on for trial before his honor, Judge Witherspoon, and a jury at the April term, 1890, of the Court of Sessions for Marion County. While the trial ivas in progress, and after the witnesses for the prosecution had been examined and the testimony for the defence had been commenced, a compromise was agreed upon, whereby a verdict of guilty was entered, and the court granted an order imposing a fine of one dollar upon the defendant, and appointing a board of physicians to “forthwith ascertain, decide, and report in writing to the clerk of this court the proper date and proper manner to abate the nuisance in question.” The order further provided that unless the defendant should within days from the date fixed and named by said physicians, abate the nuisance, that the sheriff of the county be required to proceed to abate said nuisance in such way as to leave said branch entirely unobstructed, and so as to permit a natural flow of water through the same at the cost of said defendant. The order further provided, “that in case, for any cause, the said physicians do fail to reach a decision or to make and file the same, fixing a date within this year, A. D. 1890, for the abatement of said nuisance, that then, unless the said Hugh P. Price do and shall abate said nuisance as above indicated, so as to leave said branch unobstructed by the tenth day of November next (1890), that then said sheriff do, immediately after the said tenth day of November, 1890, proceed to abate the same.”
On the 2nd day of May, 1890, the board of physicians filed their report, in which, without fixing any date for the abatement of the nuisance, as directed by the foregoing order, they “express the opinion that the dam should not be cut.” Thereupon the defendant, on the 1st of October, 1890, served upon the solicitor a notice that at the then ensuing term of the court he would move for an order “modifying the order of Judge Wither-
At the next term the motion was heard by his honor, Judge Fraser, who, regarding the motion as practically an effort to reopen the questions settled by the verdict, and was, in effect, a motion to modify or reverse the judgment of Judge Witherspoon, held that he had no power to do so and therefore refused the defendant’s motion, and rescinded the order of Judge Hudson, staying the order of judgment of Judge Witherspoon, inasmuch as the stay granted by Judge Hudson was, in terms, until the further order of the court. From this ruling and order of Judge Fraser defendant appeals upon the three grounds set out in the record, only two of which raise questions of law, the other raising a mere question of fact, of which this court has no jurisdiction.
The judgment of this court is, that the ruling and order of his honor, Judge Fraser, be affirmed, without* prejudice to the right of the defendant, if he shall be so advised, to move the Circuit Court for a new trial, upon the ground of after-discovered evidence.