Board of Commissioners v. Huff

91 Ind. 333, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 371
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 22, 1883
DocketNo. 8860
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 91 Ind. 333 (Board of Commissioners v. Huff) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Board of Commissioners v. Huff, 91 Ind. 333, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 371 (Ind. 1883).

Opinion

Franklin, C.

— This is a suit by appellees against appellant. The complaint is in two paragraphs.

The first paragraph is for a restraining order and an injunction to prevent appellant from erecting a fence across a public highway and water-way running over the south part of the public square of the town of Bloomfield, in said county, upon which public square is situated the court-house, jail and other public buildings.

The second paragraph alleged that the appellant had erected said fence across and had obstructed said public highway and water-way, and prayed to have the same abated as a nuisance, and that appellant be perpetually enjoined from again obstructing said highway and water-way, and for damages for obstructing the same.

[334]*334A demurrer was overruled to the complaint.

Appellant answered in two paragraphs — a denial and a special defence. The second paragraph was, on motion of appellees, stricken out.

There was a trial by the court, and at the request of both, the parties, a special finding was made and the conclusions of' law stated thereon. Appellant excepted to the conclusions of' law; and judgment was rendered thereon in favor of appellees.

The errors assigned in this court are :

1st. Error in overruling the demurrer to the complaint.

2d. Error in striking out second paragraph of answer.

3d. Error in the conclusions of law.

The second specification of error complained of was harmless. All the facts that could be given in evidence under the second paragraph of the answer were admissible under the general denial, which remained in.

The only questions presented and discussed by the parties are, can a public highway be created over ainy part of a public square, designated by the recorded plat of a town, as a public square ? If so, was such highway established in this case ?

As the same questions arise upon the conclusions of law as upon the demurrer to the complaint, and as the special findings state the facts fully, we think it best to refer to the facts first, which are, substantially, as follows:

In January, 1877, plaintiff Huff was the owner of the lot described in his complaint as being bounded on the south by Spring street, and on the west by Washington street in said town of Bloomfield, fronting twenty-six feet on said Washington street; that during the year 1877, he erected a large two-story brick business house thereon at a cost of $5,000, and that he has ever'since owned and occupied said property and conducted the business of merchandising in the same; that at and ever since said time, plaintiff Hartsell has owned and occupied the lot described in his complaint as belonging to him, bounded on the east by said Washington street, and on the north by said Spring street, fronting sixty-six feet on [335]*335said Spring street, and that there then were and now are erected thereon a large hotel building and stables, and that the said Hartsell ever since has been carrying on the hotel business therein; that the land upon which the said town of Bloomfield is situated was sold to said county on.the 22d day of April, 1824, and conveyed to an agent of said county; that the board of county commissioners caused the town to be then located as the county seat of said county, and the survey and plat thereof to be regularly recorded; that by said plat there was laid off and provided a public square for the erection thereon of a court-house, jail and other public buildings for the use of said county; that said square represented on said plat was and is bounded on the north by Main street, on the east by Washington street, on the south by Spring-street, and on the west by Franklin street, each of said streets-being of the width of sixty feet, and each side of said square 268 feet in length; that said square remained uninclosed until the 9th day of September, 1852, when the board of commissioners made an order of record for its enclosure, by which the fence was to be seventy-five feet from east, north and west sides of the court-house, and thirty-five feet from the south side of said court-house, and during that year the fence-was built accordingly, placing a gate in the center of each-side for an entrance to the court-house; by said fence the-enclosure extended to the line of said public square on the east, north and west sides, and left seventy-five feet on the-south side of said square uninclosed, which fence has so remained and been maintained ever since, up to the 9th day of March, 1880, leaving all of said time the said strip on the south side of said square unenclosed; that the soil of all of said square, and for a long distance south of the same, as well as east and west of the same, including the territory occupied by the said hotel of the plaintiff Hartsell and the said business house of the plaintiff Huff, is composed of loose sand, easily moved by the force of Avater; that the surface drainage of the east and north portions of said town all tends toAvard [336]*336said public square, and a considerable portion of it accelerated by a very considerable inclination of the ground toward said square, so that in heavy rains large quantities of such drainage are brought down said Spring, Washington and Franklin streets; that at the time said town was laid out there was a hollow of considerable depth having its origin in a point near the central portion of the southern boundary of said square in Spring street as said street is represented on said plat of said town, and extending south through the southern boundary of said town, more than a quarter of a mile. This was then, and ever since has been, of such depth as to render said Spring street impassable at said point, and to prevent travel upon all cross streets between Washington and Franklin streets south of the origin of said hollow; that this hollow, at the time of the laying out of said town, was, at its northern extremity or origin, of no considerable width, but for fifty years last past the action of the surface drainage in wearing away the banks thereof has so increased the same that it has extended westward so as to encroach upon and destroy half of the; width of said Franklin street from the center of Spring street south, and has extended east to the northern prolongation of the western line of said HartselPs hotel, which line is sixty-six feet west of the western line of said Washington street; and has also by like gradual encroachments extended northward, so that at the beginning of this action, its northern boundary, somewhat irregular in form, is about forty feet north of the southern boundary of* said public square, as defined by said plat of the town, and said northern line of said hollow,is within said platted boundary of said public square from a point seventy-five feet west of the east boundary of said square to the western boundary thereof; that during all the time said square was uninclosed, the public continuously and daily used as many as three well defined routes for travel and highway purposes across the territory of said square as originally platted; that one of these routes was somewhat circular in shape and lay north and around the head of said [337]

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Bluebook (online)
91 Ind. 333, 1883 Ind. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-commissioners-v-huff-ind-1883.