31 Ind. App. 178 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1903
This cause was commenced in 1898, in the Marion Circuit Court, from which the venue was changed to the court below. It was a suit of Zimri O. Lewis, the appellee, against the appellants, William Tron and the Terre Haute Brewing Company.
In the complaint it was shown that the appellee was the .owner of a certain lot in the city of Indianapolis,, on which was a house, Ho. 2520 Horth Capitol avenue, which was occupied, and for thirteen years had been occupied, as a residence by the appellee and his family, consisting of himself and his wife and their four children, two sons and two 'daughters, the oldest a daughter seventeen years of age, and the youngest a son five years old. The house contained nine rooms, and was well furnished and in good condition. It was in a locality thickly settled and devoted
The grounds and buildings were designed to be and, were attractive in appearance, and were constantly kept in that condition. On the west side of the premises, and directly across Capitol avenue from the appellee’s residence, were two entrances for v vehicles, bicycles, and persons on foot, and on the east side- were other entrances used by pedestrians. In May, 1897, after the premises had been so prepared and beautified, they were thrown open by the appellants to the public, and by advertisements and otherwise the public were invited to resort there to buy and drink intoxicating liquors and for amusement; and ever thereafter great crowds of people from all parts of the city and vicinity resorted to and congregated upon the premises, day and night, the greatest crowds being at night and on Sundays. At times more than 5,000 people visited the place in one day. Every night and every Sunday, in pleasant weather, there had been a constant stream of people, in carriages, on bicycles, and on foot, entering and departing. All the carriages, and a large number of bicycles and pedestrians, entered and departed through the entrance directly opposite appellee’s residence. . Many of the visitors remained there until after 12 o’clock at night and until the early hours of the morning. The appellants kept in their employ a band, which furnished music for the entertainment of visitors every evening, until late at night. The appellants sold intoxicating liquors without restraint and in violation of the law at all hours to the persons thus assembled on their premises, which were drunk thereon by such persons,, and were served
The appellants answer separately by general denial. Appellant Tron also separately filed two paragraphs of answer, demurrers to which were sustained.
It is contended that the third paragraph of Tron’s answer contained a good defense. In this paragraph it was alleged that prior to the commencement of this action the appellee and certain other persons entered into an agreement with the copartnership of Ritter & Baker, composed of Eli E. Ritter and Jason E. Baker, -attorneys at law. This agreement was as follows: “We, the undersigned,
The parties to the contract having reduced its terms to writing, signed by them, thereby made it the expression of their intentions in thé premises. Rot only were their oral negotiations merged in the written instrument, but also whatever was contemplated in their minds concerning the purposes of the parties to the contract was evidenced by the terms employed in the writing, by the legal effect of which, interpreted according to their ordinary signification, the purport of their contract must be ascertained. As between themselves, they would not be permitted to say that they or either of them intended an effect different from the meaning of the words employed, nor can such a contrary effect be attributed to the contract by one not a party to the contract, and not alleging the making of any subsequent contract. As to the proper effect of an allegation of fraudulent collusion in the framing of such a contract, the case presents no occasion for deciding.
The attorneys were engaged to bring and manage an action for each of the other parties for damages and for injunction. Rone of the parties were to obtain or recover any part of the amount recovered as damages in any of the contemplated actions, except the plaintiff therein, the real party in interest, though all of them, except the attorneys, were interested in preventing by injunction the continued
If the contract in question were obnoxious to the charge of champerty or maintenance, there would be a question as to whether it might properly be set up as a defense in this action, upon which question the authorities are not in full accord. We need not enter upon an investigation of the subject, for wé are of the opinion that the contract is not thus objectionable. Any interest whatever in the subject of the action, though contingent and remote, or even the possibility of an interest, exempts one who aids the litigant from the charge of illegal maintenance. See 5 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law (2d ed.), 820.
An agreement to contribute to the expenses of litigation in which the person so agreeing is interested, or may reasonably suppose himself to be interested, by reason of having an interest in the question at issue, is not a champertous agreement or one subject to the charge of maintenance. Davies v. Stowell, 78 Wis. 334, 47 N. W. 370, 10 L. R. A. 190; Gilbert-Arnold Land Co. v. O’Hare, 93 Wis. 194, 67 N. W. 38; Williams v. Fowle, 132 Mass. 385.
The court upon the trial found in favor of the appellee;
The separate motions of the appellants for a new trial were overruled, and the other questions presented here relate to matters stated as causes in those motions.
The finding of the court was sustained by sufficient evidence to support it on appeal, and was not contrary to law. There was evidence tending to support all. the material averments necessary to the recovery awarded. Comparing the complaint with the evidence, it may be said that the complaint stated the facts intensely, and perhaps with some degree of exaggeration, but that the evidence bore out the allegations with sufficient certainty on all the material matters. Having taken space for the statement of the substance of the complaint, we need not recite the evidence, which was voluminous. It showed that Tron maintained a public nuisance on the real estate leased to him for such purpose by his codefendant, which was specially injurious to the appellee, injuring and interfering with his comfortable enjoyment of his property as a home for himself and his family, for which special injury the damages were
The liquors were delivered to patrons at tables, of which there were about 100 in the grounds, by waiters, young men, some of them minors. The waiters were supplied at the bar in the house with tickets or tokens, which were paid for by the waiters at such rate that they received tickets of a face value, in the payment for liquors, ten per cent, greater than the amount paid for them by the waiters. When liquors ordered by patrons were received by the waiter at the bar for delivery on the grounds, he gave in exchange therefor such tickets at their face value, being the price paid to the waiter by the patron; the waiter thus receiving compensation for his service for Tron out of the ■moneys received from the patrons by the waiter for the liquors sold. If such sales on the grounds could properly be called sales by the waiters, and not by Tron, as seems to be .claimed, they would still be unlawful sales, knowingly made possible and authorized and promoted by Tron, and he would be chargeable personally for his own unlawful sales at the bar to waiters who were minors. This method of carrying on the establishment was a skilful device for security against dishonesty of the waiters, and for making payment for their services at the rate of ten cents for sales amounting to $1.10, and probably was used in part, if not wholly, for such purposes. If it was supposed to operate also as an evasion of the law, it could only succeed as such with those who were blind to the requirements of the law.
But, without regard to the question as to the persons who made sales in themselves unlawful, the establishment was carried on by Tron in such manner as to constitute a public nuisance specially injurious to the residents of the neighborhood. It was necessary and proper to enjoin the prosecution of this unlawful method of carrying on the business on the grounds outside of the licensed room, in order to terminate the disturbances and annoyances to which the law-abiding neighbors were unlawfully subjected. The injunctive relief granted did not go to the extent authorized hy the decisions in Haggart v. Stehlin, 137 Ind. 43, 22 L. R. A. 577, and Kissel v. Lewis, 156 Ind. 233.
There has been discussion before us of the action of the court in sustaining and in overruling objections in the examination of witnesses on the trial. We have carefully considered these matters, and conclude that there was no available error in any of them, and this is so clearly true that no general interest would be subserved by using the considerable space which would be necessary to discuss these various rulings.
Judgment affirmed.