59 Wis. 52 | Wis. | 1883
This trivial controversy — trivial in every respect except in the matter of costs, which the parties are industriously making for one or both of them to pay— ought never to have been brought into court, and never would have been had either of them shown any decent regard for the rights of the other, or exercised even a very moderate degree of neighborly courtesy or forbearance. Tailing these, to avoid the quarrel, if the par-ties could not themselves settle it, they should have invoked the kindly and discreet aid of the excellent priest of the church in which they both worshiped, or of other mutual friends, to adjust the controversy for them. But the cause is here, and this court must determine the questions of law raised by the appeal. In the light of former adjudications of this court the duty is not difficult. It was determined in Larson v. Furlong, 50 Wis., 681, that a private individual has no right to abate a public nuisance' unless the same obstructs his individual right. The shed in question was scarcely a public nuisance, because it did not impede or incommode the lawful use of the highway by the public. It was rather a mere encroachment upon the right of way, as distinguished from an obstruction of the way, which is a nuisance.
The cases of Williams v. Fink, 18 Wis., 265, and State v. Smith, 52 Wis., 134, are not in conflict with the views above expressed. In the first case, it is said that when a highway is unlawfully obstructed, a person who wants to use it may
By the Court.— The judgment of the county court is reversed, and the cause remanded for a new trial.