Bush v. Peru Bridge Co.

3 Ind. 21
CourtIndiana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 24, 1851
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 3 Ind. 21 (Bush v. Peru Bridge Co.) 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
Bush v. Peru Bridge Co., 3 Ind. 21 (Ind. 1851).

Opinion

Perkins, J.

This was a bill in chancery by John Bush against the Peru Bridge Company, praying a perpetual injunction restraining said company from the use of their bridge, and also praying an account of receipts, &c. Bill dismissed in the Court below.

The facts material to the decision of the cause are as follows: In 1835, Hood, Britton, and Williams, proprietors of the town of Peru, Miami county, Indiana, established, under a license from the county commissioners, a public ferry “ across the’ Wabash river at Broadway street-in” said town. That ferry passed, by successive sales and purchases, through divers hands, and, finally, prior to 1842, into those of Bush, the plaintiff. In 1842, the legislature incorporated the Peru Bridge Company, by a charter containing this section:

“ Sec. 6. The said corporation may erect a bridge across the Wabash river, at the southern termination of Broadway street, in the town of Peru, in the county of Miami; and the said corporation shall have, and may use, the writ of ad quod damnum, and all the benefits arising from the law allowing such writ, for the purpose of having condemned the necessary quantity of ground [22]*22for the erection, of the abutments, toll-house, and necessary causeways.” The bridge, by another section, was to be not less than 25 feet wide. L. L. of 1842, p. 46.

Said Broadway street, being 100 feet wide, was sufficient to accommodate both the bridge and the ferry, at its southern termination, and the particular location in it of the one or the other, does not appear to have been designated by the authorizing power.

The erection of the bridge was commenced in the summer of 1843, and completed in June, 1844. Bush, having somewhat changed one, perhaps both, of his landings, to avoid interference with the bridge, continued his ferry in operation till the 27th of May, 1844, at which time he took off his boat and removed it to a ferry lower down the river, never after using the ferry at Peru.

In June, 1847, he filed this bill, and he seeks to sustain it upon this principle, viz., that the grant of the ferry-right to Hood, Britton, and Williams, (which right is now held by the plaintiff by assignment,) conveyed the exclusive privilege of transportation across the Wabash at Peru; that the Peru bridge is a disturbance of that privilege, and, hence, a nuisance subject to abatement.

Waiving the question whether the remedy, if one exists, should be sought in chancery or at law, we will first examine whether a wrong has been committed that can be remedied in any Court. The right of establishing public fenies is in the legislature; and the extent of ferry-right held by any individual or company, under the legislature, depends upon the terms of the grant made to the one or the other. Had the legislature made a simple, unrestricted grant of the right of a public ferry at Peru, to Hood, Britton, and Williams, that right would not have been construed to be exclusive, but to have been conferred subject to such further grants to other persons of right of transportation across the Wabash river at that place, as public convenience might require. This point is fully discussed, and, as we think, rightly decided, in the case of Charles River Bridge v. The Warren Bridge, 11 Peters, 420.—S. C., 7 Pick. 344.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 Ind. 21, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bush-v-peru-bridge-co-ind-1851.