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Gaskins v. People

Supreme Court of Colorado. En Banc
Nov 26, 1928
84 Colo. 582 (Colo. 1928)

Summary

In Gaskins v. People, 84 Colo. 582, 272 Pac. 662, the doctrine of the present case was foreshadowed by our statement that an innocent owner of a building, which by its use had become a public or common nuisance, is not entitled to notice of proceedings for its abatement, as the action in legal contemplation is against the thing itself, rather than against the individual who owns the thing.

Summary of this case from Lindsley v. Werner

Opinion

No. 12,046.

Decided November 26, 1928.

Action to enjoin maintenance of a nuisance. Judgment for plaintiff.

Modified and Affirmed.

1. NUISANCE — Abatement — No Service on Owner. In an action to enjoin maintenance of a nuisance, personal judgment against the owner of the property who was not served with process and did not appear, held invalid, although her property was bound by the decree.

2. Tenant — Abatement. In an action brought against an occupying tenant of property to abate a nuisance, an injunctive order and decree closing the property would be valid, although the owner was not made a party to the action.

3. Injunction — Bond. The provision of a statute that the owner of property may bond an injunction against its operation as a nuisance by a tenant, affords an ample remedy to the owner, although he is not made a party to the abatement suit.

4. Injunction — Purpose of Action. An action to enjoin the operation of premises as a nuisance is aimed at the unlawful use, irrespective of ownership.

5. Property Rights. A person has no property right in a nuisance or in property that is used in maintaining or conducting the same.

6. Abatement. A city, county or municipality may summarily and without resort to legal proceedings abate a nuisance, as may also a private individual if he has suffered special injury from it.

7. Abatement — Liability. One who abates either a public or private nuisance does so at his peril and assumes all liability for exceeding his legal right.

8. Abatement — Nonresident Defendant — Service. A nonresident defendant in an action to enjoin the operation of a nuisance, being beyond the jurisdiction of the court, may not complain that preliminary notice was not given him before the abatement decree was rendered.

Error to the District Court of Jefferson County, Hon. Samuel W. Johnson, Judge.

Mr. PHILIP S. VAN CISE, Mr. KENNETH W. ROBINSON, for plaintiff in error.

Mr. WILLIAM L. BOATRIGHT, Attorney General, Mr. WILLIAM W. GAUNT, Assistant, for the people.


OUR opinion in a companion case, No. 12,047, Mongone, et al v. People, 84 Colo. 516, 271 Pac. 617, that was prosecuted by an alleged owner and the tenant, and in which we affirmed an abatement decree against them for maintaining a nuisance in a building on premises owned in part by another, who prosecutes the writ in the case now before us, should be read in connection with this opinion. This writ of error, to the same decree affirmed by us in the other case, is prosecuted by Emma Gaskins, who, as the complaint says, is one of the owners of the property which was declared by the district court to be a nuisance. She was not, as were the other alleged owner and the tenant, served with process, either personally or by publication, did not appear, and was not represented by counsel, yet the court rendered an abatement decree against her and the other alleged owner and occupying tenant, who maintained and conducted a nuisance therein. As to the owner, plaintiff in error Gaskins, who was not served with process and did not appear, we think her inclusion in the decree was not proper because the record on its face shows she was not a party to the action. The evidence, however, clearly shows that a nuisance was maintained and conducted by her tenant or tenants and the other alleged owner upon the premises and the decree of the court as to them, as we have already determined in the other case above referred to, was justified and was, and is, valid.

Gaskins, as owner, is relieved only personally from the provisions of the decree, but her property is bound by it. If the action had been brought against the occupying tenant or tenants alone, and the evidence showed that they maintained a nuisance thereon, an injunction order abating the nuisance would be good, and the provisions of the decree closing the premises for one year valid, notwithstanding the owner of the building was not a party to the action. Counsel for Gaskins say, however, that in Gregg v. People, 65 Colo. 390, ( 176 Pac. 483) at page 394, we held that where a tenant maintains a nuisance on the leased premises it is essential to an abatement order that the owner knowingly permitted the premises to be so used, or himself connived therein. The supposed declaration by us was in a case where the only defendant in the abatement action was the owner himself, and he, not a tenant, was charged with maintaining the nuisance, and, of course, the evidence must show his guilt. We did not there say that where a defendant tenant maintains a nuisance the abatement order against him is not binding against the owner's property. The reasoning in the Gregg opinion is to the contrary, and it has been so held repeatedly by the federal courts under the National Prohibition Act, the provisions of which, as to abatement, are quite similar to those in our statute concerning nuisances.

In Schlieder v. United States, 11 F.2d 345, the United States Circuit Court of Appeals of the Fifth Circuit, in considering the contention that the property of an innocent owner cannot be ordered closed after the ejectment of the tenant and the abatement of the nuisance, said that there would be much force in this contention were it not for the provision of the federal statute allowing the owner to bond the injunction and that this provision, although the owner is not made a party to the suit, affords ample protection to him in case his property is adjudged to be a nuisance because of the unlawful acts of his tenants, by giving a bond — which is quite similar to the bond provided for in our statutes — that he would not permit any further unlawful use of the property. Our statute, like the federal statute, provides that after the tenant has been evicted and the nuisance abated, the owner of the building, if he has not been guilty of contempt of court in the proceedings, and appears and pays all costs, fees and allowances which were made a lien on the building, and files a bond in the full value of the property, conditioned that he will immediately abate the nuisance that may exist and prevent the same from being established or kept thereat within a period of one year thereafter, the court or judge may, if satisfied with the owner's good faith, order the premises, which were closed under the order of abatement, to be delivered to the owner and the order of abatement cancelled so far as the same may relate to the property itself. In the Schlieder case, supra, the court said this provision of the statute afforded an ample remedy to the owner of property declared to be a nuisance, conducted or maintained by his tenant, and though the owner is not made a party to the abatement suit itself, his rights are preserved by the provision concerning the bonding of the injunction. We think that decision is applicable here.

In Grosfield, et al. v. United States, 48 Sup. Ct. Rep. 329, the Supreme Court of the United States in an opinion by Mr. Justice Sutherland, held that: "The purpose of the provision of the (National Prohibition) statute authorizing an injunction against occupancy and use is not punitive but preventive, Murphy v. United States, 272 U.S. 630, and it is no answer to the suit to say that the owner did not participate in the criminal act of the tenant." The learned judge further said: "That the tenant may have been ousted and the illegal use of the premises ended before the decree is not conclusive, if the evidence furnish reasonable ground for apprehending a repetition of such use," citing authorities. And the court in further answer to the contention of the owner, said that it is "still within the power of the district court to permit the premises to be occupied or used upon the giving of a bond with sufficient surety in the amount and upon the conditions prescribed by the statute," citing with approval the Schlieder case, supra. In the Grosfield case, supra, the action was brought against both the tenants and the owner but dismissed as to the tenant and the decree passed against the owner. In United States v. Marhold, et al., 18 F.2d 779, which was a case against the tenant of a building, in which the owner was not a party, and was innocent of the wrongdoing, it was held that the existence of such a state of facts would not preclude the government's right to pursue to a conclusion the remedy sought, which is directed primarily against the premises, because the owner had a sufficient remedy under the provisions of the act by protecting his interests by bonding the injunction.

In Denapolis v. United States, 3 F.2d 722, 723, it was said: "It is of no concern to the lessees that the owner of the premises was not made a party defendant. The suit is aimed at the unlawful use irrespective of ownership. At the same time the statute confers upon the owner the right to procure possession of his property by giving bond that intoxicating liquors will not be manufactured, kept, or sold thereon." This principle is applicable here. Emma Gaskins, although she was not made a party, is presumed in law to know what use her tenant is making of her property. It was in fact being used by her tenants for an illegal purpose and, therefore, subject to abatement as a nuisance, but the owner, notwithstanding that fact, may repossess herself of the premises by giving a bond that they will not thereafter be devoted to an unlawful use; hence the abatement order as to her is binding though she was not a party to the suit in which it was made. In Farrell v. United States, Circuit Court of Appeals, Third Circuit, 21 F.2d 318, it was held that, as stated in the syllabus: "Knowledge of the owner that premises are used for illegal purpose is not essential to their abatement as nuisance."

It should be borne in mind that one has no property right in a nuisance, or in property that is used in maintaining or conducting the same. A nuisance may be both public and private. The state under, or by direction of, its chief magistrate, a county by its sheriff, a municipal corporation by its police, may summarily, and without resort to legal proceedings, by their own act abate a nuisance. And a private individual may do so, if he has suffered special injury from it. 29 Cyc. p. 1143, et seq. Denver v. Mullen, 7 Colo. 345, 3 Pac. 693. Of course, one who abates either a public or private nuisance does so at his peril, and assumes all liability for exceeding his legal right. But if the thing abated is, in fact and in law, a nuisance, he is justified in abating it without resort to a legal proceeding. If such be the law, and we find no case to the contrary, then cases like Windsor v. McVeigh, 93 U.S. 274, which hold that notice to a party with opportunity to defend is necessary, are not applicable or controlling as to judgments or decrees of abatement of a nuisance against a defendant who permits his property to become a nuisance and used as such. Grosfield, et al v. United States, supra. But if this were not the law, the defendant here, under the facts of this case, may not complain that preliminary notice was not given to her before the abatement decree was rendered, for the alleged owner Mrs. Gaskins was beyond the jurisdiction of the court at the time the action was begun and the abatement order entered, and the district attorney was not obliged to wait indefinitely for her return when she might be personally served before proceeding against the tenants who were making an illegal use of her property of which she was supposed to know. At all events, she has her remedy now by bonding this injunction and repossessing herself of her property.

The effect of our decision in this case as to the owner who, though named in the complaint as a party defendant and one of the owners, was not served, and did not appear at the trial and was, therefore, not a party, is to relieve her personally from the decree. The abatement order, however, stands against her property. The owner is at liberty to avail herself, if she sees fit, of her right to bond the injunction and repossess herself of the premises, if she can convince the district court of her good faith and that she will carry out the court's order.

The judgment of abatement is therefore affirmed, but it shall not be construed as affecting the defendant Gaskins personally, but only as above stated, as to her property. Modified and, as modified, affirmed.

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE DENISON, MR. JUSTICE BUTLER and MR. JUSTICE WALKER dissent.


Summaries of

Gaskins v. People

Supreme Court of Colorado. En Banc
Nov 26, 1928
84 Colo. 582 (Colo. 1928)

In Gaskins v. People, 84 Colo. 582, 272 Pac. 662, the doctrine of the present case was foreshadowed by our statement that an innocent owner of a building, which by its use had become a public or common nuisance, is not entitled to notice of proceedings for its abatement, as the action in legal contemplation is against the thing itself, rather than against the individual who owns the thing.

Summary of this case from Lindsley v. Werner
Case details for

Gaskins v. People

Case Details

Full title:GASKINS v. THE PEOPLE

Court:Supreme Court of Colorado. En Banc

Date published: Nov 26, 1928

Citations

84 Colo. 582 (Colo. 1928)
272 P. 662

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