100 Ind. 575 | Ind. | 1885
The controlling question in this case arises •upon the ruling on the demurrer to the appellant’s answer. The appellee’s complaint charges that the appellant wrongfully and maliciously destroyed a covering erected over an ice box on the premises of the appellee. The appellant answered by way of justification, alleging that he was the marshal of the city of Huntington; that the appellee was the owner of a lot in that city; that the lot was situated in a part of the city in which the common council had by ordinances prohibited the erection of wooden buildings; that the appellee, in violation of the provisions of the ordinances, did erect .a frame building on the lot; that he was requested to remove the building, and refused to do so, whereupon the appellant notified the mayor, in accordance with the provisions of the •ordinance, and that officer issued to him a warrant, commanding him to remove the building, and acting under this warrant, he did remove it, using all proper care and doing no unnecessary damage. It is also alleged that the appellant .acted without malice in removing the building ; that the removal was necessary, because the building was erected in such •close proximity to other buildings as to greatly endanger their ■safety, and that the danger so created was an imminent one.
Two ordinances of the city, duly enacted and published, are ■set forth. These ordinances contain provisions making it unlawful to erect wooden buildings within the prescribed limits, imposing upon the marshal the duty of notifying the mayor •of a violation of the ordinance, and providing that the mayor, upon the report of the marshal, shall issue his warrant to take ■down and remove the building.
A wooden building is not in itself a nuisance, but when ■erected in a place prohibited by law, and where it endangers the safety of adjoining property, it may become a nuisance. If the locality and character of such a building do endanger the safety of surrounding buildings, then it may be treated as a nuisance, and a governmental body, having authority to legislate upon such subjects, may prohibit its erection in places
Our statute grants very comprehensive powers to municipal corporations respecting the abatement of nuisances, and
These authorities, running back as they do into the early years of the common law, and extending in an unbroken line to the present time, prove that not only may a governmental corporation abate a nuisance by the destruction of the thing constituting.it, but so, also, may a private individual. It is, therefore, not the delegation of a new or an extraordinary power to authorize municipal corporations to abate nuisances by removing or destroying the thing which creates it. A man has no right to build a wooden house in a place prohibited by law, and thus endanger the safety of the person or property of others. He has neither a legal nor a moral right to do an
There is some conflict in the authorities as to whether a municipal corporation possesses the inherent power to prohibit the erection of wooden buildings within prescribed limits and to cause their removal. Judge Dillon’s opinion is that the power does inhere in all municipal corporations, for we find him writing that cities may, “ where this is consistent with the general and special legislation applicable to the municipality, establish fire limits, and prevent erection therein of wooden buildings.” 1 Dillon’s Municipal Corp., 3d ed., sec. 405. The Supreme Court of Michigan, in speaking of ordinances similar to those here under examination, said: “ Of the power of the common council to pass the ordinances in question, we have no doubt. They contravene no provision of the constitution as we read it, and they were made in the exercise of a police power necessary to the safety of the city.” Brady v. Northwestern Ins. Co., 11 Mich. 425. There are other cases sustaining this view. Wadleigh v. Gilman, 12 Me. 403; Mayor, etc., v. Hoffman, 29 La. An. 651. These cases rest on solid principle, for the rule has always been that a municipal corporation has the inherent power to enact ordinances for the protection of the property of its citizens against fire. 2 Bacon’s Abridg. 147; Clark v. City of South Bend, 85 Ind. 276; S. C., 44 Am. R. 13; Fertilizing Co. v. Hyde Park, 97 U. S. 659, see p. 669; 2 Kent Com. 339. The exercise of such a power is not the exercise of a new power, nor of one not connected with the purposes for -which public corporations are organized; on the contrary, it is the exercise of a power long possessed by municipal corporations and closely connected with the purposes for which such corporations are organized. In speaking of ordinances much the same as those here under discussion, it
There are very many provisions in the general act for the incorporation of cities conferring authority upon the common council of cities to enact ordinances to secure protection against fire, and these provisions taken, as they must be, as parts of one uniform system, leave no doubt in our minds that the Legislature meant to invest cities with authority to enact such ordinances as were reasonably necessary to prevent the destruction of property by fire. In the enumeration of the powers of the common council, there, is an express grant of power, and when this provision is read in connection with the other provisions of the act, it is very clear that the whole power of enacting ordinances upon the subject is vested in the common council. It is quite certain that the common council is the only branch of municipal government invested with legislative functions, and it would be unreasonable .to hold that any other than the legislative body could enact ordinances.
There is little, if any, conflict in the decisions upon the question of the validity of ordinances .passed under express legislative authority fixing limits within which wooden buildings shall not be erected; the conflict among the cases is upon the question whether the municipal corporation possesses the power to enact such ordinances without express legislative authority. Even in Pennsylvania, where a narrow view is taken of the general subject, such ordinances have been sustained,
In the case before us the answer avers, and the demurrer admits, that the location of the appellee’s building was such as to put surrounding property in imminent danger, so that the case falls fully within even the narrow rule of the Pennsylvania court. In the early case of Respublica v. Duquet, 2 Yeates, 493, the Legislature authorized the municipal corporation to prevent the erection of wooden buildings, and an ordinance enacted pursuant to this law was held valid. The subject received very full consideration in King v. Davenport, 98 Ill. 305 (38 Am. R. 89), and it was held that an ordinance providing for the summary destruction of a wooden building erected within forbidden territory was valid. In the course of the opinion it was said : “ There can be no doubt, it seems to us, that the ordinance in question was a police regulation, proper, and made in good faith, ‘ for the purpose of guarding against the calamities of fire’ in a populous neighborhood; and we must regard it as an entirely reasonable regulation. There is no more frequent or admittedly proper exercise of the police power, than that of the prohibition of the erection of buildings of combustible materials in the populous part of a town, and the only means of making such prohibition effectual is by a summary abatement. Every moment’s delay in the
We can not take time to quote further'from the adjudged cases upon this phase of the case, but content ourselves with referring to the reasoning in the cases already referred to upon another feature of the case, and to the cases of Corporation of Knoxville v. Bird, 12 Lea (Tenn.) 121; City of Salem v. Maynes, 123 Mass. 372; Field v. City of DesMoines, 39 Iowa, 575; S. C., 18 Am. R. 46.
The case principally relied upon by the appellee is that of Kneedler v. Borough of Norristown, 100 Pa. St. 368; S. C., 45 Am. R. 383. That case concedes that where the Legislature authorizes the municipal corporation to enact ordinances such as those under examination, they are valid; so that, conceding it to be well decided, it does not sustain the judgment below.
The removal of a building, erected in defiance of law in a place where it endangers surrounding buildings, is not the forfeiture of property; it is the exercise of a police power, and is not a declaration of forfeiture. The removal of the building, or its demolition, may cause loss to the owner, but there is no forfeiture of it to the public, or to any one else. We have seen that the rule has been for hundreds of years, that property may be destroyed if it creates a public nuisance in cases where the nuisance can not be effectually abated in any ■other way. A striking illustration of this general doctrine is found in the case of Meeker v. VanRensselaer, 15 Wend. 397, where it was held lawful for an officer acting under a board of health to tear down a tenement house cut up into small apartments, and calculated to breed disease. There are cases
A municipal corporation is composed of the inhabitants of the territory over which its limits extend, and not of the officers. It is an instrumentality of local government, and every voter is a participant in the governmental affairs of the corporation. There, as elsewhere iñ free governments, the majority rule, and the officers elected are the representatives of the citizens, and their official acts are the expressions of the public will. Strosser v. City of Fort Wayne, ante, p. 443; City of Valparaiso v. Gardner, 97 Ind. 1 (49 Am. R. 416); 1 Dillon Mun. Corp. (3d ed.), section 40. -It is, therefore, the citizens themselves who fix the limits within which the erection of wooden buildings shall be prohibited, and if there is any fear of oppression, that fear must be that the people invested with the right of local government will oppress themselves, for the power is in their own hands. But it is not oppressive for the majority of the corporators, acting'through their representatives, to prescribe fire limits. The citizen who denies that right is the one who manifests a spirit of oppression, for he would,.if he could, sacrifice the public safety to his selfish interests. It is more just and more expedient, that the will of the majority of the citizens, lawfully expressed, should govern, than that one man should rule because it promotes his private interest.
The constitutional provisions respecting the titles of acts of the General Assembly, and like matters, do not apply to the by-laws of municipal corporations. Green v. City of Indianapolis, 25 Ind. 490.
The first ordinance defining the fire limits wTas passed on the 31st day of January, 1880, and by an ordinance adopted in March, 1881, it was ordained that in addition to the territory included within the fire limits prescribed by the former ordinance, it should be unlawful to erect a wooden building
Judgment reversed, with instructions to overrule the demurrer to the answer, and to proceed in accordance with this ■opinion.