Sec. 1454, Stats. 1898, prohibits the establishment of any ’ cemetery for burial purposes within the platted portion of any city or village in this state so as to approach nearer than one mile to any lot or block in the plat upon which there may be a building; also prohibits the laying' out or establishment of any such cemetery outside the platted portion of any city or village, within 200 rods of an inhabited dwelling standing on any lot or block in such city or village, without first obtaining the consent ■of the municipal authorities thereof, and declares that any violation of the statute shall be deemed a nuisance and subject to abatement at the suit of any person aggrieved.
The complaint states every fact essential to a cause of action in plaintiff’s favor under the statute. It alleges the laying out of a cemetery for burial purposes within prohibited territory and without the consent of the authorities of the municipality; that plaintiff is a party aggrieved; and it states the facts constituting such grievance.
It is urged in support of the demurrer that cemeteries are not nuisances per se. That may be admitted. They are necessary and rightly regarded as sacred places. They ought not to be considered injurious to people of average sensibilities and intellect from the mere fact that they are the resting places of the dead. With the customarily laid out walks and drives, the mounds, the flowers and shrubs, the monuments and inscriptions, and many other incidents that may he mentioned characterizing a modern cemetery, they are in many respects places of beauty as well as of inevitable decay. Nevertheless public welfare requires reasonable reg*107ulations in regard to tbeir location and management. All mere sentimental considerations and individual interests bearing unjustly upon the interests of others ought t'o give way to the necessities of the case, and the police power of the state is ample to secure that result. The prevention of the location of cemeteries in the thickly populated portions of the country, or where such condition is probable, or near dwelling houses actually existing, has generally been considered a proper exercise of police power when regulations in that regard have been challenged on constitutional grounds. Philadelphia, v. Westminster C. Co. 162 Pa. St. 105; Crowell v. Londonderry, 63 N. H. 42; Craig v. First Presbyterian Church, 88 Pa. St. 42; Charleston v. Wentworth St. Baptist Church, 4 Strob. 306; Woodlanjon Cemetery v. Everett, 118 Mass. 354; Humphrey v. Front St. M. F. Church, 109 N. C. 132; 5 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law (2d ed.), 792, and notes.
It is further urged in support of the order appealed from that the complaint shows acquiescence in the acts complained of for some eight years and that such acquiescence should be held sufficient evidence of the consent of the municipality required by the statute. Porch v. St. Bridget's Congregation, 81 Wis. 599, is cited to that point. It was there held in regard to a consent given by a city council, evidenced by a motion, duly entered as carried, upon the minutes, instead of by an ordinance, that it satisfied the statute, as no particular form was required in such matters. That has no application whatever to a case like this where the municipal authorities and the law were disregarded entirely.
It is further suggested that the law of 1893 [ch. 51], now embraced in sec. 1454a, Stats. 1898, providing a method for taking land in inviivm for the enlargement of cemeteries, but limiting the right in that regard, except in cities and villages, to lands that do not approach nearer than twenty rods to a residence owned by the occupant thereof, without his consent, amends sec. 1454 by removing all restrictions *108to the enlargement of cemeteries in cities and villages. The act of 1893 amends sec. 2, oh. 315, Laws of 1887, and relates solely to the subject of taking lands for cemetery purposes by right of eminent domain. It does not deal with or affect in any way the law regulating the location of cemeteries or their enlargement. It provides how land may be acquired for such enlargement when permission shall have been obtained to make it under sec. 1454.
The further point is made that the only injury complained of, constituting plaintiff’s private grievance, is diminution in the value of his land, and that such an injury is not of itself sufficient to sustain an action for equitable relief. The conclusive answer to that is, the statute gives the right to proceed in equity to restrain the conduct complained of as regards a person circumstanced as plaintiff is. The whole subject is regulated by the statute, the validity of which is not and cannot successfully be questioned.
By the Court.— The order appealed from is reversed, and the cause remanded for further proceedings according to law.