11 F.2d 537 | S.D.N.Y. | 1926
Chesebrough Manufacturing Company .owns the premises No. Ill Washington street. Prior to any of the matters complained of, the street floor and basement of these premises were leased for a term of years expiring May 1, 1927, to the defendant Brumack, who in turn sublet the basement to the defendant Zeona, the latter being in possession thereof when the violations of the Prohibition Act of which the government complains occurred. The owner has appeared and answered. The tenant has appeared, but has not answered, and the subtenant, although served with process, has not appeared. Upon learning of the government’s complaint, the owner immediately took steps to eject the tenant and his subtenant from the basement of the building where the violations occurred. This was accomplished before the ease was reached for trial. In the meantime, however, the tenant signed a stipulation consenting that the basement from which he and his subtenant were about to be ousted by his landlord be closed under the order of this court for a period of six months, and consented that an order to this eflieet might be entered at any time without further notice. The allegations of the complaint being denied by the owner, the case was called for trial, and the foregoing facts were stipulated. Thereupon the owner moved to dismiss the complaint, reserving its right to a trial of the issues if the motion should be denied. The government consents that the bill be dismissed as to the owner, but, upon the stipulation of the tenant, asks an order closing the premises for six months, or in the alternative that the owner be required to give bond under section 22 of the act, and further prays a personal injunction against Tony Zeona under section 23 of the act.
There are two causes of action alleged; The first under section 22 of the act to enjoin or abate the nuisance maintained on the premises in question; the second under section 23 of the act to enjoin the tenant and his subtenant from soliciting or taking or accepting orders for the sale of, and from selling intoxicating liquors for beverage purposes, either on said premises or anywhere else in the Southern district of New York. From the facts stipulated, it appears that the nuisance has been completely abated by the ejectment of the persons concerned in its maintenance, including, not only the offending subtenant, his servants and employees, but the acquiescent landlord as well. The case must be distinguished from one in yhich there has been a colorable change of possession, or even an actual change of possession, with circumstances from which a recurrence of the unlawful use can be inferred. It cannot be said that, by reason of the past conduct or associations of those remaining in control of the property, the extraordinary remedies of the court are in any sense necessary to prevent a recurrence of a nuisance perhaps only temporarily abated. U. S. v. Margolis (D. C.) 289 F. 161. No person even remotely connected with the wrongdoing remains. There has been a complete ouster at the instance of an innocent owner who, it is shown, promptly put a stop to the nuisance when advised of its existence, ejecting all persons concerned in its maintenance from the premises. Repentance under compulsion is very often appropriately reenforced by decree. This is not such a case. No fault attaches to the owner here, and there is nothing in its conduct from which reasonable probability of a recurrence can be rationally apprehended.
The question which arises, therefore, is whether, the nuisance having been completely abated before entry of decree, the court may nevertheless order the premises closed against use and occupation. The nuisance having been abated, the effect of. such a de
“The applicable sections of the National Prohibition Law have a long legal history. The legal concept of extending by legislative flat the definition of a public nuisance to something theretofore legal, and then calling upon equity to abate it, is found in the Kansas statute of 1885, quoted by Harlan, J., in Mugler v. Kansas [8 S. Ct. 273], 123 U. S. 623 [31 L. Ed. 205].”
The extent of the legislative power, of which these sections are merely instances, is to define a public nuisance and to provide for its abatement in a court of equity. Mugler v. Kansas, 8 S. Ct. 273,123 U. S. 623, 31 L. Ed. 205. By construing these sections as merely an exercise of this well-established legislative power to declare what are public nuisances and to provide for their abatement in a court of equity, the courts have successfully met the claim that such statutes are unconstitutional because they fail to provide for trial by jury. Thus in the Mugler Case the objection was disposed of as follows:
“As to the objection that the statute makes no provision for a jury trial in cases like this one, it is sufficient to say that such a mode of trial is not required in suits in equity .brought to abate a public nuisance.”
The same objection was met in precisely the same way in the Reisenweber and Duignan Cases, supra. There can be no doubt, therefore, that in both of those eases the court construed the statute as merely authorizing the exercise of the powers conferred by the statute or inherently possessed, in order to abate an existing nuisance, using that term in the sense that the nuisance exists so long as there is reasonable likelihood of the recurrence of violations upon the premises in question. . Indeed, the statute itself seems to be open to' no other construction, providing as it- does that “an action to enjoin any nuisance 19 ® * may be brought,” etc., and that the action “shall be brought and tried as an action in equity.”
The provision that in such an action it shall not be necessary for the court to find that the property involved is being unlawfully used at the time of the hearing is to be regarded simply as a rule of evidence, leaving it open to the court to infer from prior violations the continued existence of the nuisance. Where abatement before entry of decree is conceded as in this case, this rule of evidence can have no application. In U. S. v. Schwartz (D. C.) 1 F.(2d) 718, Judge Anderson said:
“Nor do the rules of evidence in sections 22 and 23, .to the effect that a finding of violation at the time of trial shall not be neees* sary, seem to me to cause difficulty. These provisions do not require the court to find a nuisance, unless the illegal acts may be found continuous or in reasonable probability recurrent — the necessary elements of a nuisance. They simply authorize the court to draw the inference as to recurrence, from a single act of a kind that Congress deemed of rather unusual significance in that regard. Of course, the inference from the single sale may be controlled by other facts indicating an abatement of the nuisance.”
In this case, the “inference as to recurrence” is controlled by stipulated facts showing complete abatement prior to the entry of decree, and closure of the premises at this time cannot be justified as an exercise of the power to abate the nuisance. It would indeed be nothing short of the exercise of punitive power by a court of equity in order to punish the commission of a past offense. Such a distortion of equitable remedies is not lightly to be imputed to Congress, even if a desire to put teeth in the statute be assumed. If these sections grant any such power, the conclusion that they are" unconstitutional reached by Judge Woodrough in U. S. v. Lot 29, etc., supra, could hardly have been avoided in the Reisenweber and Duignan Cases,
Upon principle and authority, therefore, it must be held in this case that, the nuisance having been completely abated prior to the entry of the decree, there is nothing on which any decree under section 22 can operate. It might well be said that the question has become moot. U. S. v. American-Asiatic S. S. Co., 37 S. Ct. 233, 242 U. S. 537, 61 L. Ed. 479.
There is left for consideration the second cause of action, founded upon section 23, and the government’s prayer for a personal injunction against Zeona, the subtenant. Under the provisions of this section,.the allegations of the second cause of action warranting this relief being necessarily taken as confessed, because of Zeona’s failure to appear, although served with process, the personal injunction prayed for may issue against him. No such relief is sought against the owner, and, by its stipulation with the tenant Brumaek, the government has apparently waived its prayer for a personal injunction against him.
Accordingly the complaint must be dismissed as to all of the parties excepting the defendant Zeona, against whom a decree for personal injunction may be taken pro confesso.