Court Opinion

ID: 7117283
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-07-24 12:33:54.102214+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:13:57.696021
License: Public Domain

Evans, J.
Appeal and error : abstract of record : evidence: necessity. The petition charged that the defendant Anna Talbott operated the nuisance complained of; that the defendant De Eoos had an interest in the personal property used in the operation of such nuisance; that the defendant Valiquette was the owner of the real estate upon which the same was operated; that De Eoos and Valiquette each had full knowledge of the maintenance of such nuisance. It is further made to appear by the pleadings- that De Eoos held a chattel mortgage on some or all of the personal property in use by the defendant Anna Talbott, and that the same was given to secure the purchase price thereof. Each defendant answered separately with a general denial and a special denial of any knowledge of the existence of a nuisance upon said premises. The constitutionality of the statute was attacked by both De Eoos and Valiquette, on various grounds, which we shall have no occasion to consider.
There was a full hearing of evidence on the merits. The case is triable here in equity, de novo. It does not appear that any of the evidence was preserved, and none is presented in the abstract. The case is presented here by the appellant on the theory that, inasmuch as the court found a decree against the defendant Anna Talbott, it was bound, as a matter of consistency, to find a like decree againsl the other defendants, regardless of their actual participation in the offense, and regardless of their knowledge of the offense by their codefendant.
If such general proposition were conceded, it would not avail the appellant. It would amount only to saying that the decree of the trial court involved an inconsistency, in that it should have been against all of the defendants or against none. This might be a sufficient showing of error, but whether such error was adverse to the plaintiff would depend upon an examination of the evidence. The *222appellant argues the appeal upon the assumption that the decree of guilt against the defendant Talbott is a final adjudication as against all of the defendants, and that it does not need to be sustained on appeal by the presentation of the evidence in its support. The trouble with this position is that the dismissal of the action against these appellees left no adjudication against them. If the adjudication had been against them, they could have appealed. On such appeal, they could have been heard to deny the sufficiency of tl^e evidence to show the guilt of the defendant Talbott. A finding by us of the insufficiency of the evidence to that end would operate as a complete protection to them. The trial court having dismissed the action below as to them, it left them nothing from which they could appeal. They are entitled, however, on this appeal of the plaintiff, to .make precisely the same defense upon the merits of the evidence as they could have made as appellants if they had been beaten below. This is a sufficient indication of the necessity of the preservation of the evidence and of its presentation in the abstract here. Furthermore, one of the questions presented by the pleadings is whether the statute should be construed retroactively, so as to operate upon contracts entered into and continued innocently and in affirmative good faith. This is perhaps the most important question in the case, and is the least argued. If we should hold that good faith might be a material consideration in favor of the appellees, it could noi be ascertained without an examination of the evidence. Upon the state of the record before us, we do not feel justified in making partial pronouncements as to the applicability of the statute in question, because in no. event could the case be reversed upon the merits in the absence of the evidence. We have no argument for appellees. The appeal will be dismissed. — Dismissed.
Gaynor, O. J., Ladd and Salinger, JJ., concur.