127 Ind. 130 | Ind. | 1891
This was a' suit for injunction by appellees against appellants. The court found the facts specially and stated its conclusions of law thereon. Appellants excepted, and the only questions necessary to be considered here arise on the assignment of error by appellants that the court erred in its conclusions of law.
The facts found by the court are substantially as follows: Appellees own and are in possession of a tract of land situate within the corporate limits of the town of Marion, containing acres, on which is situate a valuable hotel building. This land they and their vendors and predecessors in ownership had owned and occupied for more than twenty years when this suit was commenced and appellees had resided thereon for more than fifteen years prior thereto. No part of this land had ever been platted as an addition to said town, nor had any part of it ever been condemned, nor formally and by record dedicated as a street or part of said town. It was, however, surrounded by lands that had been thus formally platted in lots, streets and alleys. Lying north of and adjoining the land in question is what is known as “Clark Wilcott’s addition” to said town, and south and adjoining the said land is what is known as “Pilcher's addition,” and a certain street known as “ Branson street ” is laid out
■ In March, 1887, one of the appellees, with others, petitioned the board of trustees of the town to cause the sidewalks on said Branson street, including the part thereof along and on said land, to be graded to the width of eight feet, and paved within said eight feet to the width of four feet. The board granted the petition, ordered the improvement made, and caused the engineer of the town to set stakes
The finding is a little obscure as to the location of the curb-line, but as we construe it the curb-line was laid to correspond with the curb-line on other parts of the same side of Branson street.
The walk was then constructed in accordance with the . order of the board of trustees, except that appellees, instead of improving the walk in front of their hotel building so as to conform to the boundaries indicated by the engineer, disregarded the curb-line fixed by him, and so constructed the walk that at the northeast corner of the building it extended six inches east and outside of the curb-line, and at the southeast corner it extended thirty inches outside thereof. In other respects, as to grade, width, material, etc., it conformed to the order made and the stakes set by the engineer.
The court finds this was rendered necessary by reason of the location of the hotel building as above stated, and that in order that the walk might be eight feet wide in front of the hotel building, it was necessary either to thus extend the walk outside the curb-line, or move the building back to that distance. This walk, after its completion, was accepted by the town.
In April, 1888, appellees, with others, petitioned the board of trustees of the town to cause Branson street to be graded and macadamized. The prayer of the petition was granted; and the necessary steps were taken by the board to grade and macadamize the street accordingly.
In order to carry out this work according to the plans and specifications adopted by the board, the court finds that “ It will be necessary to take up and remove a portion of said sidewalk pavement so made by plaintiffs, to wit, a strip off the east side thereof six inches wide at the north end, and regularly increasing in width to thirty inches wide at the south end thereof.”
The town authorities let the contract for the construction
The conclusions of law were in favor of appellees, and it was ordered that a temporary injunction previously granted be made perpetual.
We regret that we are compelled to pass upon the questions presented by this record without the aid of a brief from counsel for appellees.
Their contention, however, as we gather it from the record, seems to be that the town has never acquired the right to treat the strip of land in question as a part of Branson street; or, if their conduct has been such as to amount to a dedication, that the dedication "is only of so much of the strip of land as lies outside the line of the hotel building, which line must be treated as the boundary, and the sidewalk and curb-line be adjusted accordingly; and that the threatened ■ cutting away of a portion of the sidewalk, which they aver will render their property worthless, is an attempt on the part of the town to so widen Branson street at that point as to take a part of the land on which the building stands, which has never been dedicated to the public, and thereby deprive them of it without due process of law.
The statement which we have made of the facts as they were found by the court, is, we think, accurate and full as to all facts found which are necessary to a determination of the questions involved.
That property may be dedicated to a public use is a principle too well established to require any citation of authori
The assent of the owner to the use need not be expressly declared, nor be manifested in any particular manner, but may be implied from the conduct of the owner of the land. Elliott Roads and Streets, 99.
An implied dedication arises by operation of law from the acts of the owner. Williams v. Wiley, 16 Ind. 362; City of Evansville v. Evans, 37 Ind. 229; City of Indianapolis v. Kingsbury, supra; Waltman v. Rund, 109 Ind. 366.
It is considered as in the nature of an estoppel in pais, and once made it is irrevocable. Elliott Roads and Streets, 89 et seq.; Dillon Munic. Corp., section 631, and cases cited ; Haynes v. Thomas, 7 Ind. 38.
While the question of dedication from permissive occupation and use depends upon the intention of the owner, yet evidence of such occupation and use is one of the evidences of an intention to dedicate. No length of time can be fixed as necessary to enable a court or jury to find that there has been in fact a complete common law dedication. The question as to the intention of the owner of the land to dedicate it, is, in the majority of cases, one of mingled law and fact, although there may be cases where the facts are undisputed, and where they admit of but one legal interpretation, or can lead to but one conclusion, and in all such cases the ques
When the use of the easement has continued for more than twenty years the rule as stated by some of the authorities is that the intention of the owner to dedicate will be conclusively presumed. We think, however, that the authors of Roads and Streets, above cited, state the principle more accurately when they say : “ Twenty years’ use by the public, under claim of right evidenced by the use, will give a right to the road or street, of which the owner of the fee can not divest the public, no matter what may have been his intention. * * * This result follows, not because an intention to dedicate is conclusively presumed, but because the statute of limitations has divested the owner of a right by destroying the remedy.” Elliott Roads and Streets, 123. As to so much- of the land in question as is not covered by the hotel, we have no difficulty in holding that the public rights therein are as full and complete as if it had been formally and expressly dedicated by deed or plat. As to that portion covered by the hotel a different question is presented. Upon the facts found we think the permissive use by the public of the strip of land was evidence of an intention of the owners to dedicate to the public a strip thereof corresponding in width to the strip already existing in connection therewith immediately north and south of it. The inference of an intention to dedicate would not be simply to dedicate that portion upon which there was actual travel, but would evidence the intention of the owner that Branson street was to be continued across their land. Bartlett v. Beardmore, 77 Wis. 356; Sprague v. Waite, 17 Pick. 309; Hannum v. Belchertown, 19 Pick. 311; Simmons v. Cornell, 1 R. I. 519; Cleveland v. Cleveland, 12 Wend. 172.
If such use continued long enough before the erection of the hotel to make the dedication complete, the fact of the subsequent erection of the hotel would not affect the public right. A dedication once complete can not be revoked by
In this case, however, there is no finding which shows how long the public use of the land had continued before the erection of the' hotel. The finding is that such use commenced before the hotel was built, and had continued more than twenty years when the suit was commenced, but so far as the finding is concerned the hotel may have been erected within a month or a year after the commencement of such use, and we can not say that the public had prior thereto acquired any rights therein.
So far, then, ás the facts are found in this case, we can only say that except for the strip actually covered by the hotel, the land in question constitutes a part of Branson street, and that the rights of the public therein are as complete, and the power of the board of trustees over the same as ample, as if there had been an express statutory dedication of it by the owners.
While in this State, by statute (section 3367, R. S. 1881), boards of trustees of incorporated towns are given exclusive power over the streets within the corporate limits of their respective towns, and are invested with large discretionary powers in the exercise of the duties thus imposed, there may arise many cases where it becomes the duty of the courts to interfere by injunction to prevent them exceeding their powers or abusing such discretion.
Judge Dillon says: “Generally speaking, equity will interfere in favor of, or against, municipal corporations, on the same principles by which it is guided in cases between other suitors.” Dillon Munic. Corp., section 908.
While this is true, it was well said by the Supreme Court of New Jersey: “The process of injunction has been called the strong arm of the court, and it has been often said that to render its operation useful it must be exercised with great discretion, and only when necessity requires. Nor am I aware
We think it should be shown that there has been a clear invasion of the rights of a party to justify the courts in interfering by injunction with the conduct of municipal authorities in making street improvements of the character here in question.
The acts complained of are, that in the grading and macadamizing of the street they are. proposing to cut away a portion of a sidewalk heretofore constructed by their order. In addition to the general statute heretofore referred to, which gives to boards of trustees of incorporated towns exclusive power over streets, etc., within the corporate limits of their respective towns, certain special powers are given them in relation to the grading and paving of sidewalks, and the grading, paving, gravelling and macadamizing of streets. Section 3357, R. S. 1881, provides that “Whenever in the opinion of the board of trustees of any incorporated town in this.State, public convenience requires that the sidewalks of any street in such town should be graded or paved or planked, such board of trustees may, by an ordinance, compel the owners of lots adjoining such street to grade, pave, or plank the same.” The three sections next succeeding prescribe the manner of doing this.
Section 3363 provides that in certain cases, upon petition of two-thirds of the resident owners of certain real estate) such board of trustees shall make certain improvements or repairs in streets and sidewalks.
Section 3364 provides that in certain cases, upon petition of a majority of the resident owners of certain lots or lands, such board of trustees may cause the grading, paving, gravelling or macadamizing of streets or parts of streets.
These statutes commit to the boards of trustees a wide discretion as to the making of such improvements. In so
As is well said in the work on Roads and Streets from which we have heretofore quoted: “ The right to levy a special assessment is purely statutory and in derogation of common right, whereas, making public improvements demanded by the public good, and to be paid for out of the public treasury, is the exercise of a corporate function that may well be implied from the general words of the act of incorporation.” Elliott Roads and Streets, 343.
Under the statute above referred to, with reference to sidewalks, nothing is a necessary preliminary to action by the board but their opinion that public convenience requires it. They are unrestricted in determining the grade, the material of which it shall be constructed, or its width. While a petition is necessary to authorize them to grade and pave, or gravel or macadamize a street, so as to charge the cost of the improvement on the abutter, the board is unrestricted in determining the grade, the width to which it shall be improved, and in otherwise adopting specifications for the work.
In this case the board had determined that public convenience required the grading and paving of the walk. They had required that it be graded to the width of eight feet, and that four feet of the walk thus graded should be paved. If they had decided that public convenience only required the grading of four feet instead of eight, there would have been
In the case at bar the sidewalk had been graded to the width of eight feet in obedience to the order of the board, and four feet of the graded space had been paved. What part of the graded space was covered by the paving does not appear from the finding. Whether in the outer, the inner, or the central part, the court does not say; it is, however, not material. The land in question formed a part of Branson street, and the board of trustees had the same power to determine the width of the sidewalk at that point that they had to determine the width, of any other sidewalk on any other street, and in the absence of any finding showing such abuse of the discretion with which the law has clothed them as would work great and irreparable injury to the appellees, they should not have been enjoined. If the effect of the work would be to cut off or destroy appellees’ right of ingress or egress, they would doubtless be entitled to enjoin the board from doing it, but no such case is presented.
The record presents another question which is, we think, fatal to appellees’ contention. To entitle them to an injunction it was necessary for them to plead and prove facts showing that the injunction was necessary to prevent the infliction of great and irreparable injury. The complaint does contain averments which, we think, are probably sufficient, but no fact is found by the court covering this averment. The court simply finds that the construction of the work as proposed would involve the taking up and removal of a strip of the sidewalk “six inches wide at the north end, and regularly increasing in width to thirty inches wide at the
Judgment reversed, with instructions to the court below to restate its conclusions of law in accordance with this opinion and to render judgment accordingly.