This action is to recover the penalty, under a city ordinance, for the maintenance of an obstruction by the defendant, consisting of a fence in front of lots 11 and 12, in block 10, on the plat made by one Moses Yilas, in 1842, of section 16, — the school section,— as an addition to the village of Racine, on the east side of Wisconsin street. It is claimed that said fence is within the east side of Wisconsin street, two feet at one corner of said lots, and two feet eight inches at the other corner. The defendant has been present with this fence standing substantially where it is now since 1848, so that if this fence is an obstruction to Wisconsin street it is a very ancient one and the defendant has been guilty of maintaining it over forty years. The following seem to be the facts established by the evidence:
This fractional section 16 was surveyed and platted, under an act of the territorial legislature requiring such duty to be performed by the school commissioners of the
On these facts the circuit court found that the survey according to said plan of the city council of 1881 was a correct one and should govern in determining the true east line of Wisconsin street, and held the defendant guilty of obstructing said street by said fence, and judgment was rendered against him for a fine of $10 and costs.
This case d oes not differ materially from Racine v. J. I. Case Plow Co.
In the certificate to the old plat it is stated that a stone monument was set at the southeast corner of lot 12, block 29, in the northwest line of Main street, from which resurveys may be made; and stone monuments were also set at the northeast corner of each of the out lots, or undivided blocks, except those between Main street and the
All the defendant needs to show is that the fence in question is on the line of Wisconsin street according to the plat of 1842. That plat became a part of the deeds executed under and in reference to it. Shufeldt v. Spaulding,
There have been so many cases similar to this in this court, and all the various questions here involved have been so repeatedly settled, that it is supererogation to again repeat them. In addition to the above cases are the following: Hrouska v. Janke,
By the Court.— The judgment of the circuit court is reversed, and the cause remanded with direction to enter judgment in favor of the defendant.
