29 Ind. App. 592 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1902
This was an action against the appellees, the town of Windfall City and William Minnick, Samuel Gaddis and Samuel Dingle, contractors, to enjoin said contractors from removing a shade tree in front of appellants residence and within the boundaries of the street which said contractors were improving under employment by said city. The complaint was in four paragraphs. The validity of the proceedings leading up to the order of improvement and contract is not attacked. The court made a special finding of facts, and stated conclusions of law thereon. The court’s conclusions of law are made the basis of appellant’s fourth specification of error, and this alleged error is the only one discussed by appellant’s counsel.
The question, then, for this court to determine is, does the findings of fact sustain the theory of the second and third paragraphs of appellant’s complaint? The first and fourth paragraphs of complaint were held insufficient by the trial court. The averments of the second paragraph of complaint are in substance that appellant is the owner of certain real estate fronting on the street which is to be improved, and that by reason thereof he owns the street to the middle line; that in front of his house is a large and beautiful shade tree, which is of inestimable value in protecting his house from the afternoon sun, and that the removal of this tree would be an irreparable damage to appellant; that the board of trustees of said town adopted a plan for the improvement of the street in front of appellant’s property which did not follow the line of the original street as it had existed for many years prior to the establishing of the present improvement; that the plan so adopted departed from the east line of the original street more than two feet toward the east at the point where the shade tree in controversy is situate, thereby bringing .the tree within the line of the street to be improved; that
Without encumbering the reports with a synopsis of the lengthy special finding of facts, we think it sufficient to say of it that two facts are clearly found which are fatal to appellant’s cause of action: (1) It is found that the improvement was laid out upon and within the lines of the original street; (2) that the tree in question stood more than two feet within the sidewalk and was an obstruction to the travel thereon. The tree, as we gather from the special findings, is not “along the curb and between the roadway and sidewalk” (City of Richmond v. Smith, 148 Ind. 294), but is twenty-six inches within the sidewalk and is twenty-four inches in diameter. Appellant’s neighbor would have as much right to maintain a stone post of equal size within- the sidewalk, as appellant has to maintain the tree in question. The evidence is not before us, and the finding of the trial court that the tree was an obstruction to the free use of the street in conclusive. That
The sidewalk for the use of pedestrians is a part of the public street. The proper authorities of incorporated towns and cities have complete control of the streets and their sidewalks for all lawful purposes. They can not lawfully permit the streets, or any part of them, to be permanently obstructed, or temporarily obstructed for an unreasonably long time. What amounts to an obstruction is a question of fact. In the case at bar the trial court has found that the tree in question is a permanent obstruction to the public use and travel of a part of the street, and that its roots will render the sidewalk uneven, dangerous, and unsafe for public travel. The authorities cited by counsel for appellant are not controlling because based upon dissimilar facts.
Judgment is affirmed.