2 N.W.2d 253 | Wis. | 1942
This action was begun on March 26, 1940, by the state of Wisconsin ex rel. city of Algoma, plaintiff, against P. M. Peterson, defendant, to enjoin the erection of a gasoline station upon the premises thereinafter described, on the ground that it would when erected constitute a public nuisance. There was a trial by the court. The court found against the plaintiff, and judgment was entered on February 11, 1941, adjudging that the erection of a gasoline station on the premises in question would not constitute a public nuisance; that plaintiff is not entitled to an injunction enjoining the defendant from constructing and operating a filling station at the point in question; that the temporary injunction should be dissolved and that the defendant have his costs and *600
disbursements, and providing also for the assessment of damages. From this judgment the plaintiff appeals. The facts will be stated in the opinion.
One phase of this controversy was before this court in a prior action and is reported in Algoma v.Peterson (1939),
The physical situation is best disclosed by reference to Exhibit 3, reproduced herewith.
The defendant commenced the erection of the filling station the latter part of June, 1938. In the first action an injunction preventing the defendant from proceeding further was issued on July 11, 1938. At the time the injunction was served, the defendant had removed a two-row cedar hedge, four feet high and two or three feet in width, completely fronting the property on both Fourth street and Lake street, excavations had been made and two one-thousand-gallon tanks each ten feet long and five feet in diameter had been buried on the premises, a concrete abutment had been erected and two gasoline pumps ten feet apart had been placed thereon. Piping connecting the tanks with the pumps had been installed and gasoline had been placed in the tanks ready for *601 operation. A building twelve feet by fourteen feet by nine feet high was contemplated but no actual work on its erection had been done.
[EDITORS' NOTE: EXHIBIT 3 IS ELECTRONICALLY NON-TRANSFERRABLE.]
The court found the following facts:
"The property is in the form of a triangle and is formed by the intersection of Fourth and Lake streets. State Trunk Highway 42 passes through the city of Algoma over Fourth street which runs in a northerly and southerly direction. Lake street intersects Fourth street from the northeast forming the triangle in question. The triangle is located in a semi-business and residential district, and will in the future tend more to become a business rather than a residential street, since Fourth street, further north, is a main business street. *602 State Trunk Highway 54 ends with its intersection with Highway 42 at a point about 2 blocks south of the triangle and there is a `Stop' sign at that point compelling the traffic on 54 to stop before entering on 42. At the intersection of these two state highways there are two filling stations. One block further north there is another filling station, and north of the triangle on Fourth street there are four garages and filling stations, one of which, built recently, is directly across the street from the vocational school, a block north of the triangle the High school is located — a block west of the vocational school. Lake street is located between Fourth street and the shore of Lake Michigan, with the municipal park between Lake street and Lake Michigan. The park has a considerable frontage on the lake, both north and south of the triangle.
"A reading of the petition `Exhibit 1' would lead one to believe that the menace to the public to be caused by the erection of the station was a secondary rather than a primary reason for enjoining its erection, and the filing of the request was the easy way out and whatever action taken by the council at that meeting was not done because the erection of a filling station at that location would create a public nuisance. That the particular location of the triangle and a curve in the highway at that point, which curve was exaggerated, the reflection of automobile lights toward the south into the faces of northbound traffic at night would inconvenience the drivers of northbound traffic to some extent.
"That a few minor accidents have occurred in the vicinity of the triangle during the past ten years, but were in no way connected with the lay of the land, so to speak. The location up to now has not seemed sufficiently dangerous to the officials to cause proper `Stop' signs to be placed nor crosswalks to be marked.
"That the testimony of the witnesses on behalf of the plaintiff taken as a whole, without even attempting to offset against them the testimony of the defendant's witnesses, is not, sufficient to show that the erecting of a filling station would result in creating a public nuisance. The testimony offered in behalf of the defendant is more convincing to the court than is the testimony of the plaintiff as to whether or not a public nuisance will result. *603
"That the erection of a filling station, lighted as the stations are at night, would tend to decrease any hazard that may now exist, and would be better and would tend to, ward safety to have a gasoline station on this triangle than some other buildings, since almost any kind of other building would make more of a blind corner of the triangle than would the ordinary modern filling station. There is nothing in the city ordinance prohibiting the erection of another kind of building on this triangle.
"That the triangle property is sufficiently large for proper exits and entrances unto the respective highways."
The court concluded that the proposed gasoline station did not constitute a public nuisance per se. The plaintiff's "contentions," which are really assignments of error, are (1) that the erection of a gas filling station at the point in question will constitute a public nuisance, and (2) that the plaintiff can prevent the erection of a filling station under its general police power or under a zoning ordinance.
The plaintiff cites authority as to the meaning of the term "nuisance." Among other cases Standard Oil Co. v. Cityof Minneapolis (1925),
In the case of Magnolia Petroleum Co. v. Wright (1926),
In Wadhams Oil Co. v. Delavan (1932),
In Wasilewski v. Biedrzycki (1923),
Our conclusion upon this branch of the case makes it unnecessary to consider other questions raised.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed. *605