10 S.D. 516 | S.D. | 1898
To recover alleged damages occasioned by an excavation by th@ defendant, a miwicipal corporation, on the
The ruling of the court in sustaining this objection was assigned as error, and although, upon application of appellant’s counsel, the amendment was allowed, a decision of the point is requested. A complaint may be once amended of course, before the period for answering it expires, or at any time within twenty days after service thereof or within twenty days after the service of an answer or demurrer to such pleading (Comp. Laws, § 4937); but no right or authority is given for any further amendments as of course without leave first obtained. The absolute right to amend without notice, costs or prejudice, when once exercised within the statute, ceases to exist, and all further amendments are addressed to the sound
The object of the first cause of action stated in the complaint is to perpetually restrain the city from selling the premises described, on account of the special tax levied for a sidewalk constructed in June, 1896; and the sixth paragraph thereof, added by way of amendment, relates to damages sustained in the alleged sum of $200, occasioned by changing the surface of the ground on the west side of the property from its original state to its present grade, two and one-half feet below the natural condition, with reference to which appellant’s dwelling house and other improvements upon the premises were made or constructed. The second cause of action is to recover for further injury to the premises occasioned by the alleged unlawful acts described in paragraph 6, above noticed; and the third cause of action is for damages sustained in the year 1894, by reason of an excavation two feet deep and eight feet wide made along the south of lot 9 thereof, in front of appellant’s residence, for the purpose of constructing a sidewalk thereon, during the month of June of that year.
It is conceded that the second and third causes of action, severally stated, were for injuries to property, and therefore properly united in the same complaint; but a demurrer on the ground that several causes of action were improperly united was interposed and sustained as to the third cause of action, upon the theory that said claim for damages occasioned to the premises in the year 1894 and the first cause of action did not arise
Assuming, as we probably should, that the first and third causes of action did not arise out of the same transaction, the question, then, is whether the various acts complained of and relied upon as constituting the substantive ingredients of each of such causes of action, respectively, are “transactions connected with the same subject of action.” No construction universal in its application appears to have been given the expression, “transactions connected with the same subject of action,” but- it seems to have been thus indefinitely phrased, to enable courts of equity to interpret its meaning generally in the manner most likely to subserve the ends of justice in particular instances, where more than one cause of action, whether legal, equitable, or both, may well be settled in a single controversy. 1 Enc. PL & Prac. p. 185; Pom. Rem. & Rem. Rights, 475; Phill. Code Pl. 197. The right, as an owner, to occupy without interruption, and continuously maintain, the premises in a con
Independently of the foregoing statute, the practice is well established in courts of equity, having jurisdiction of an action for any purpose, to retain the cause, and administer a complete remedy, rather than require the party to institute another suit in order to obtain that to which he is, according to his complaint, justly entitled. Moreover, injury to real property is effected by that which impairs its value, and the casting of a cloud upon the title, that will ultimately result in the absolute devestment thereof, as described in the first cause of action, is usually denominated “irreparable injury,” and we therefore conclude that the three causes of action under consideration arise out of “injuries to property” occasioned by “transactions connected with the same subject of action.” It follows, if we are right, that the demurrer was improperly sustained, and it is so held.
The third cause of action being thus eliminated, the question of damages for grading done on the west side was sent to a jury, and resulted in a verdict adverse to appellant. By stipulation of counsel, all other issues were tried to the court, who found for respondent; and, adopting the finding of the jury that no damage had been sustained, a decree was entered dis
Appellant maintains that the charter, if otherwise operative, is unconstitutional and void, so far as applicable to this case, in that it makes no provision for notice to property owners, as the right to be heard before an assessment like the one here presented becomes a fixed charge. As the provision expressly authorizing the respective acts now complained of imposes, by necessary implication, and as an incident to lawful procedure, the duty of providing by ordinance for the required notice and an opportunity to be heard, the point is not well taken.
In Evans v. Fall River Co., 68 N. W. 195, this court, in conformity with the universal rule, held that “an opportunity
We deem it unnecessary to copy the ordinances authorizing the acts under consideration, or the resolution of the city council declaring the improvement necessary, and describing the property to be affected, the character of the sidewalk to be built, and prescribing minutely the successive steps to be taken to construct the same and enforce payment therefor, all of
Appellant’s premises are situated upon the corner at the intersection of Fifth and Walnut streets, and, according to the city plat, consist of the west half of lots 7, 8, and 9 of block 50, each half lot being 75 feet in length and 44 feet in width, thereby abutting 132 feet on Walnut street, and 75 feet on Fifth street — all of which have for many years been used together and occupied as one residence property, upon which stands a dwelling house, facing Walnut street, together with certain outbuildings and improvements used in connection therewith. The east half of said lots 7, 8, and 9 are, and for many years have been, owned by a stranger to this suit; “and have been used exclusively as one residence property for more than 20 years last past, the same being 75 feet abutting on Fifth street, and extending back, to the south line of said lot 6, 132 feet; that there is, and has been for more than 20 years last past, a dwelling house erected and standing thereon facing Fifth street; that on the east half of said lots 7, 8, and 9 are outbuildings, and the same, together with the east half of said lots, are all used in connection with said dwelling house.” The cement walk declared necessary, and as constructed, extends across the west side of block 50, along the west end of lots 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, and 9 thereof, connecting at a right angle on the same elevation with a similar walk constructed by appellant in the year 1894 along the south line of said premises, by reason of which, it is claimed, no additional burden should be imposed by way of assessment for sidewalk purposes. The property, being situated upon a corner has a double frontage, and, in a proper case, both sides may be assessed according to frontage, for the purpose of defraying the expense of building a sidewalk for the entire length thereof. Morrison v. Hershire, 32 Iowa 271; Wilbur v. City of Springfield, 123 Ill. 395, 14 N. E. 871; City of Moberly v. Hogan, 131 Mo. 19, 32 S. W. 1014; 2 Desty, Tax’n, 1263; Elliott, Roads and S. 391.
It is further maintained that the grade ordinance, making the threshhold to the corner door of the First National Bank “the bench or initial point from which all grades within the city are computed,” is void for uncertainty; but, from a careful consideration of the entire ordinance and other provisions bearing upon the point, we are convinced that the position is untenable.
• After a careful examination of all the questions presented, our conclusion is that the charter of respondent and the ordinances enacted theretmder, and to which our attention has been called, are not unconstitutional for any of the reasons urged, and that the proceedings of the mayor and city counsel thereunder should be sustained.
As noticed earlier in this opinion, we think it was substantial error to sustain the demurrer to appellant’s complaint, and for that reason the judgment is reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings.