47 Ind. App. 249 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1910
— This is an action brought by appellees against appellants to establish the boundary lines of a certain alley in the town of New Castle, and to enjoin appellants from tearing up or in any way interfering with said alley as established.
The complaint is in one paragraph, and avers, in substance, that appellees own lots five, six, seven and eight in block seventeen of said town; that said town was platted about the year 1823; that at the time said town was platted and said lots laid off there was platted an alley running east and west along the south end of said lots abutting thereon, which was and is the extreme southern limit of the plat of said town; that shortly thereafter there was laid off and platted an addition to said town abutting on the south
The complaint then avers that the true lines of said alley are as they now exist, and as they have existed during the period aforesaid, and that said town, in improving Elm street, is about to and is threatening to extend the south line of said alley four feet north into said alley and the north
To this complaint appellants demurred separately. The demurrers were overruled. Appellants Bunch and Adams then filed separate answers in two paragraphs: the first being a general denial, and the second setting up in detail the various plats and acts of the town.
Bunch and Adams also filed a cross-complaint in two paragraphs, averring substantially the same facts as are set up in the answer. No issue was joined on the cross-complaints. Upon trial the court found for appellees, and fixed the lines for the alley to be as now located and marked by the hedge fence, buildings and improvements along said line, and the monument fixed on the northwest corner of said alley and South Main street by Omar Minnesinger, city engineer, and that appellants be enjoined from encroaching upon said alley as thus fixed.
To declare now that said improvements should be destroyed and said lines changed would be an act of injustice to the abutting property owners disproportionate to the ad
The judgment of the court below is not contrary to the law and is supported by the evidence. Judgment affirmed.