78 So. 50 | Ala. | 1918
The bill is by an abutting property owner against the city of Troy, and seeks to enjoin the city or municipality from obstructing or vacating a certain street, or a part of a certain street, of that city, whereon complainant's property abuts. The bill therefore of necessity shows that complainant's ingress and egress is by such obstruction interfered with, and that consequently he suffers injuries different in degree and kind from those of the public on account of the alleged nuisance. The bill was demurred to by the city for want of equity and of proper parties complainant. The trial court overruled the demurrers, and the city prosecutes this appeal.
The bill presents as clear and certain a case for relief by an abutting owner against a municipality for obstructing and wrongfully vacating a public street, as we find reported in the books, and there are many such reported cases. It not only shows an unauthorized vacation and abandonment by the municipality of one of its streets upon which abuts complainant's property, but shows that it has without authority of law converted the part of the street so vacated into another and different public use, viz. that as a public cemetery. The complainant is thus shown not only to be wrongfully deprived of the use of the street abutting his property as a way of ingress and egress, but to be injured in the fact that a public cemetery is thus without lawful authority put next to his property, being platted and sold as cemetery lots to the public and dead bodies being interred therein; and it is further shown that drastic ordinances have been passed to prevent the removal of such bodies from the street so abandoned and wrongfully converted to this use.
It is first insisted by the city that as complainant's property is bounded on other sides by other streets his ingress and egress is not destroyed, and, consequently, that his injury is not different in kind from that of the public, with the result that he cannot maintain this bill.
The case is quite different from that of Jackson v. B. F.
M. Co.,
It was held in Albes v. Southern Railway Co.,
A public highway "cannot be used in a manner foreign to its dedication, and any encroachment thereon or use thereof which is inconsistent with such purpose will constitute a nuisance which may be enjoined." Joyce on Nuisances, pp. 261, 263; 2 Elliott on Roads and Streets (3d Ed.) pp. 259, 261. "The obstruction or encroachment may consist in anything which renders the highway less commodious." 37 Cyc. 247; State v. Mobile, 5 Port. 279, 311, 312, 30 Am. Dec. 564; Pratt v. Cohasset,
A property owner has the right to require the municipality to restore a street to its former condition, and he may enjoin acts of damage to his property by the municipality where there is an attempt to take or injure his property for public use without compensation in advance. New Decatur v. Scharfenberg,
A citizen may enjoin a municipality from taking or injuring his property by changing the grade of a street without first making compensation; injunction in such cases will be awarded without regard to the solvency or insolvency of the parties, or to the fact that adequate damages at law could be recovered. New Decatur v. Scharfenberg, supra. What was said by this court in the case of State ex rel., etc., v. Louisville Nashville Railroad Co.,
"The question received consideration at our hands in the case of Douglass v. City Council of Montgomery,
"It is not pretended that the city council had any authority in its character [charter] to dispose of this street in the manner it did, or to abolish it, and under the authorities, its attempt to do so was unauthorized and void."
It results that the trial judge ruled correctly in overruling the demurrers to the bill. If the city had any authority to do what it is alleged in the bill to have done, it does not appear in the bill, and should be set up in the answer.
Affirmed.
ANDERSON, C. J., and SOMERVILLE and THOMAS, JJ., concur.