116 Mo. 375 | Mo. | 1893
This is an action for trespass to certain real estate, of which the plaintiff in his petition alleges he is the owner, situate in the city of Brookfield in Linn county, against the defendants, who are the mayor, aldermen and street commissioner of said city, who, he alleges, entered upon plaintiff’s said ground, and without any authority and against his will tore up, plowed, ditched, guttered, dug up and subverted the soil thereof to his damage.
The substance of the answer is, that Brookfield at the time of the injuries complained of was a city of the fourth class; that the strip of ground thirty feet wide upon which the alleged trespasses were committed was a part of Mallory street in Clark’s addition to said city; that plaintiff long before the grievance complained of had dedicated said strip of ground to public use as a part of said street and that the acts
It was not alleged, and there was no evidence-tending to prove, a statutory dedication. But the acts'of the plaintiff alleged in the answer, and which were-shown in evidence, tended to prove -a common law dedication. That issue was fairly submitted to the jury upon instructions (which were excepted to), but. in which, taken as a whole, we find no reversible error,, and found for the defendants. ■
But the plaintiff insists that in the absence of any ordinance of said city authorizing the improvement of said street, the court committed error in admitting the evidence of a common law dedication, and in holding-such dedication a justification of- the acts of the commissioner ; that such a dedication leaves the dedicator the owner of the fee subject to the public easement, and as to such owner in the absence of an ordinance-authorizing the work done on the street the defendants were trespassers.
It may be conceded that the plaintiff is the owner-in fee of the thirty feet between his property abutting -on said street and the centre of said street, and as such owner is entitled “to get out of or take from the-land whatever he can, so long as he does no injury to the way. He is entitled to the grass and all else that-grows on it. The minerals under it are his, and he may work the mines, yet not to interfere with the public use. Any private person who takes away earth -from the highway, or for his individual benefit occupies any part of it, or ploughs it or removes from it trees or herbage not amounting to a nuisance, or places anything upon it, or erects any structure-overhanging it, commits a trespass” on his land*
It is impossible to see wherein the plaintiff has been damaged or upon what principle he ought to recover even nominal damages against these defendants —ordinance or no ordinance. The judgment is for the right party and is affirmed.