30 Ind. App. 182 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1902
This was an action commenced by appellant against the town of Whiting for damages, and for an order enjoining it from unlawfully taking, holding, and occupying for a public street a strip of land owned by appellant and used for a right of way. The strip of land was eighty feet long and sixty feet wide, and was within .the corporate limits of the town of Whiting in Lake county, Indiana.
The complaint was in one paragraph, and avers that the appellant is the owner in fee of the land in controversy; that the town of Whiting is an incorporated town, having been incorporated in the year 1895; that said town was claiming the right to open a street across appellant’s right of way, and across the land in question; that the land in controversy, and which was claimed by the said town as a street, had been continuously in appellant’s possession, and used by it as a part of its right of way for more than twenty years; that there never had been any street on appellant’s said right of way and said land, and that the street as claimed by said town had never been laid out by resolution or ordinance, or opened or worked as a street of said town; that the said town, through its trustees and marshal, did on the 15th day of June, 1901, tear down appellant’s fences and enter upon its said land, and did then and there unlawfully dig up the said land, and are threatening to level and grade a permanent street through appellant’s right of way, and thereby deprive appellant of the ownership of said land, and do irreparable damage to its said real estate.
Appellees answered the general denial. The- court made a special finding of facts and stated its conclusions of law thereon, to each of which appellant excepted. The exception to each conclusion of law furnishes the question to be decided in this appeal. The special finding of facts shows that the board of commissioners of Lake county, oh the 10th day of June, 1892, after the proper proceedings had been taken leading up to it, ordered and established a highway
The special finding sets out in full the proceedings before the board of commissioners by which the highway was established. It was further found that the town of Whiting was on the 8th day of October, 1896, incorporated under the general laws for the incorporation of town's, and that the land described in appellant’s complaint is within the corporate limits of said town; that at the time of the filing of the petition for said highway appellant was the owner of the fee by purchase of a strip of its right of way sixty' feet long, and included within the limits of said highway as established; that no other proceedings were ever taken or had before the said board of commissioners for the establishment of a highway on said land, except as set out in the finding aforesaid, and that no action was ever taken or proceedings had by the t'own of Whiting to locate and establish the street on the lines included within said description in the petition for a highway, as prayed for before the board of commissioners of said county; that no highway was ever opened or used by the public under said petition and order before said board of commissioners before the incorporation of said town of Whiting; that during the -year 1899, said town, claiming a right to said strip by virtue of the record of said board of .commissioners, opened a street to. the south line of the right of way of appellant and called the same Sheridan avenue, the lines of said avenue up 'to said appellant’s right' of way coinciding with the lines of the highway established by said board of commissioners; that the town of Whiting has never by any proceeding, resolution, ordinance, or otherwise, attempted to open said highway upon the right of way of appellant and makes no claim of any right thereon, except through said proceedings before the board of commissioners hertofore set out; that the highway north of the south line of appellant’s right of way and covering appel
The question in the case depends upon the construction to be given to §6759 Burns 1901, which is as follows: “Every public highway already laid out, or which may hereafter be laid out, and which shall not be opened and used within six years from the time of its being so laid out, shall cease to be a highway for any purpose whatever; but if any distinct' part thereof shall have been opened and used within six years, such part shall not be affected by the provisions of
In Decker v. Washburn, 8 Ind. App. 673, this court, in speaking of the above statute, said: “We think the provisions of this statute are too plain to be misunderstood. The words ‘laid out’ doubtless mean established, surveyed, declared a road. * * * A highway has been ‘laid out,’— that is to say, it has been established and declared to be a highway by the judgment of the court. But it has not been opened or used within six years from the time it was laid out. It has therefore ceased to be a highway altogether, and the former judgment of the court, by virtue" of which it was laid out, at the expiration of six years from the date of its rendition, became functus officio
A highway which has been established by a judgment of the board of commissioners of a county remains a highway, whether opened or not, during the life of the judgment establishing it. The limitation is fixed by the statute at six years. Such was the condition of the highway, in the case at bar. It was an established highway, although unopened, when the land over which it was laid was included in the corporate limits of the town of Whiting. It at once became one of the streets of the town, as fully as-if it had been at the time of the incorporation a much used highway. The town took the highway from the operation of the limitation of the statute when it was yet alive, and made it a street; and it thereby came within the exception, “nor shall this section be applied to streets and alleys in any town.”
There is no error. Judgment affirmed.