There is no plat accompanying the bill filed in this •case showing the definite location of the streets of the locus in quo, but from the allegations in the bill itap
Express power to alter streets is conferred upon municipal corporations by the provision of the statute mentioned, and, in our judgment, a municipality can alter a street by abandoning a portion of it when done in the reasonable exercise of the powers conferred for the public benefit. The bill in the present case alleges that the ordinance of August 4, 1891, purports to convey the fee of the land over which Magnolia street had been laid out to appellant, and since that date it had set up an exclusive claim to the portion of said street north of North Sixth street. The ordinance does not undertake to convey to appellant the fee to any portion of Magnolia or North Sixth streets; Portland & W. V. R. R. Co. vs. City of Portland, 14 Oregon, 188, 12 Pac. Rep. 265; nor does it, in terms, undertake to confer any rights or privileges whatever on appellant in the portion of Magnolia street north of North Sixth street. That portion of the street is abandoned, and
In McGee’s appeal, 114 Penn. St. 470, 8 Atl. Rep. 237, it was held that an injunction will not be granted to restrain a railroad company from destroying a bridge, a part of a public street which a municipality, by a contract with said company, under an act of the-Legislature, had agreed to vacate, because the street had not been vacated by a formal ordinance of the-
The propriety of swearing to a bill before the solicitor signing the same is involved by the discussion here, but it is not necessary to decide it now, and it may not arise again.
The decree overruling the demurrer to the bill is reversed, the cause remanded with directions to sustain the demurrer and dissolve the injunction, with leave to appellee to amend, and apply for an injunction, if deemed proper to do so. Order to be entered accordingly.