83 Minn. 246 | Minn. | 1901
This is the second appearance of this case. The facts, as they were stated in the former complaint, will be found set forth in 80 Minn. 101, 82 N. W. 1104. After the case was remanded to the district court, application was made by the plaintiff city to amend the complaint theretofore held insufficient. The application was granted, and thereafter the defendants demurred to the amended complaint upon the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. Other alleged grounds of demurrer were presented, but we need not refer to them specially. The court below overruled the demurrer, and defendants appealed.
It seems unnecessary for us to set out in full the allegations in the present complaint, but it is essential that we state a portion thereof, — those which, in our opinion, are of controlling importance here. After some formal matters, it is alleged that Euble and Hall, between the years 1857 and 1867, by and with the consent of the then owners of the lands and premises involved, and at the special instance and request of said owners, erected and constructed the dam, embankments, and approaches in question, to the height of 7-1 feet above the ordinary stage of water in the river;
There are other allegations as to the performance of public work from time to time by the public authorities; that the dam has been continuously and always maintained at the height of feet, and that it, and the embankments, approaches, bridge, and highway, have been repaired and improved from time to time by the public authorities, with the consent of the defendants and their grantors, and at their instance-and request; that since the spring of 1889 the city has assumed exclusive care
1. We are of opinion that the allegations wherein are set forth the affirmative acts of defendants and their grantors are sufficient to constitute an equitable cause of action. It is averred that the dam, embankments, and approaches were built and erected by Ruble and Hall, not only with the consent of the persons then owning the land which was to be overflowed, but at their special instance and request, for the specified public purpose and with an intent to create a permanent navigable body of water, with a 71-foot height at the dam; that the state, the city, and the public generally then took possession, and have continually since used and occupied said body of water, for the purposes for which it was designed, not only by invitation, but at the request of such owners, the present defendants, and other persons; and that, for good and valuable considerations to them moving, said parties then waived and released all rights to the submerged lands, and all right to assert title or claim whatsoever thereto. There ate other allegations, which need not be repeated, and, taking the complaint as a whole, it seems to embrace and exhibit all that is required in order to establish by proof all the essential elements of a common-law dedication of the property to the public, an acceptance by the latter, and steady, uninterrupted, and continual public use ever
We are of the opinion that in this respect the complaint is brought within the rules' laid down in Village of Buffalo v. Harling, 50 Minn. 551, 52 N. W. 931. If the allegations are supported by competent evidence, the defendants are estopped by their acts and conduct (which, on paper, amount to a complete dedication of the land in controversy to a public use) from asserting that the city has no right to maintain the dam at the height at which it is alleged to- have been maintained for this period of more than twenty years. Certain it is that on the face of the complaint the doctrine of estoppel in pais, or equitably, is applicable, if it can ever be in a case where owners of land have intentionally dedicated it to the public, that it may be overflowed, submerged, and made into a public and navigable body of v&ter, and the intended beneficiary, the interested municipality, and private parties have afterwards acted with reference to such a dedication.
As before stated, it is claimed by counsel for appellants that, on the case as set out against the defendants, the court below had no jurisdiction in an action to quiet the title and enforce the rights of the plaintiff city to maintain the dam and lake, to enjoin the defendants from further prosecuting actions at law for the recovery of damages. A common right is claimed as against each and all of the defendants, based upon acts committed by them, or by their grantors, in respect to the! erection and construction of the obstructions placed in the river by Buble and Hall prior to 1867, the immediate effect of which was to raise the water feet at the obstructing point; the result being that the water was raised at once over all of the submerged lands to the depth at which it has since been maintained. It is sufficiently shown by the pleading that this right may have been acquired, and may rest upon the acts of the defendants or their grantors, performed simultaneously and jointly. Under these allegations, it might well be shown that the persons whose lands were submerged acted to
A common right, or a community of interest in the subject matter of the controversy, or a common title, from which all of the defendants’ separate claims and all questions at issue between the parties have arisen, may be shown at the trial. If so, the action is brought directly into the class called the' “fourth” by a leading text writer upon equity jurisprudence, and squarely within one of his propositions. 1 Pomeroy, Eq. Jur. § 268. See also Sharon v. Tucker, 144 U. S. 533, 542, 12 Sup. Ct. 720.
Again, equity jurisdiction has sometimes been exercised by the courts to prevent a multiplicity of suits where there was merely a community of interests in the questions of law and of fact involved, or in kind and form of remedy demanded and obtained by or against each individual. Mayor v. Pilkington, 1 Atk. 282; Board v. Deyoe, 77 N. Y. 219; Smyth v. Ames, 169 U. S. 466, 18 Sup. Ct. 418; Stockwell v. Fitzgerald, 70 Vt. 468, 41 Atl. 504.
2. After passing upon the demurrer, the court granted an application of plaintiff’s counsel for a temporary writ enjoining and restraining each of the defendants from any further prosecution of the pending actions at law during the pendency of this action, and until a further order of the court. Thereupon, and after appealing from the order overruling the demurrer, defendants’ counsel moved to dissolve this temporary writ. The motion was denied, .and a part of the moving papers stricken out of the record. Defendants’ counsel then appealed from the order made upon this ■denial.
It is unnecessary for us to decide the question of practice raised .here as to the right of defendants to appeal from the last-men
The order overruling the demurrer, as well as the order denying the motion to dissolve the injunction, stand affirmed.
LOVELY, J., took no part.