241 N.W. 47 | Minn. | 1932
The appellants attack the legality of the petition which initiated the council's action, and they claim that the establishment of the boulevard unreasonably interferes with their property rights in the street. The petition was apparently drawn under G. S. 1923, § 1815, as amended, 1 Mason, 1927, id. which applies to cities of the fourth class, such as New Ulm, operating under a special law. Broadway is 120 feet wide, and at the point in controversy runs through the residence district. According to the petition here in question and the plans adopted by the city council, a 30-foot roadway for the passage of vehicles is provided on each side of the 20-foot boulevard. The trial court found these facts and that a reservation of the 20-foot center boulevard is reasonable and desirable from the standpoint of safety, especially for pedestrians; that it is convenient for the laying of water and other mains in the street. In this case there is no showing that any assessment was made against abutting property for the construction of the boulevard, and the sole question involved is the legality of its establishment. In the case of McDonald v. City of St. Paul,
The city of New Ulm was created by a special act of the legislature, approved February 24, 1876. It was given general control over its streets by that act. Under the general powers thereby vested in it, it has, in our opinion, the right under the circumstances shown in this case and found by the trial court to establish a center boulevard in the place described in the petition regardless of the validity of that petition under the law which the petition sought to invoke.
Judgment affirmed. *347