Childs v. Nelsoh

33 N.W. 587, 69 Wis. 125
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedJune 1, 1887
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 33 N.W. 587 (Childs v. Nelsoh) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Wisconsin Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Childs v. Nelsoh, 33 N.W. 587, 69 Wis. 125 (Wis. 1887).

Opinion

Obtoh, J.

The appellant, as plaintiff, alleges that the defendant, on the 10th day of January, 1886, wrongfully entered upon his premises at the northwest corner of Second and St. Croix streets, in the city of Hudson, and cut down and broke the fences thereon. The respondent answered that he was street commissioner of said city, and removed said fences as such, in obedience to the direction of a resotion passed by the aldermen of said city on the 6th day of January, 1886, directing and commanding him to remove the fences from St. Croix street, between Second and Third streets, in a summary manner. This was, in substance, the issue. The findings of the court are all in favor of the defendant, and the complaint was dismissed, and this appeal is taken from such judgment. The main facts disclosed by the evidence, deemed material to the decision of the case, are substantially as follows: In 1885 “ Gibson & Henning’s ” addition to Hudson was laid out, haying on the north Division street, and, going south, River, St. Croix, Oak, and finally Myrtle street, all running east and west, and parallel to each other, and with the intervening blocks. Whether these streets are extensions westward of streets of the same name in the original plat of the village I am not informed, but presume this to be so. These streets are sixty-six feet, or four rods, wide. In 1856, “ Gibson, Henning & Massey’s ” addition was laid out on the west, and the above streets, down to and including St. Croix street, are extended through it to the west, and the intervening blocks on either side of Third street, which. divides these additions, are apparently of the same dimensions, blocks D and C, east of that street, [130]*130corresponding with blocks I and J, west of it; and the lots are numbered in all of these blocks from 1 to 12, beginning at the northeast corner, and running down, and then up, and separated alike by an alley running north and south. Blocks I and J are separated by River street, and on the west are separated from blocks K and N by Second street, which are also separated by River street, which runs to First street, on the lake. These blocks are in the second addition, and the plaintiff’s lot is in block J, and should have been numbered lot I, in order to correspond with the numbering in the other blocks, as also in block J; for in the latter block the first series are numbered from 1 to 6, and then there appears to have been an omission of the numbers of three lots,!, 8, and 9, of equal size however, and then lots 9, 10, 11, and 12 above are numbered. The east and west line on the south of block J is fixed on the plat as the north line of St. Oroix street, and in the field-notes of the survey block J is bounded on the south by St. Oroix street by name, and on the north by River street, on the east by Third street, and on the west by Second street. The land on the south of St. Oroix street, opposite block J,. was not platted, but in 185! one of the proprietors of the plat, Louis Massey, owned the land, and deeded to Bishop Ilenni a lot for a Catholic church, bounded in part as follows: “Beginning at 12 feet east of the corner of Second and St. Oroix streets, and 66 feet south of southwest corner of block J, in G., H. & M.’s addition; and thence east 114 feet,” etc. The church was either then or afterwards built on said lot south of St. Oroix street, and has been used in connection with that street ever since.

There are two discrepancies, which should here be noticed, and which probably have given rise to all the question or doubt entertained by any one as to the west end of St. Croix street. ■ The first is that, according to resurveys, St. Croix street is a few feet further north in the first addi[131]*131tion than in the last, and they do not quite agree by reason of-the jog so produced. Whatever discrepancy there is should be and was reduced by equal and fro rata parceling or deduction among the lots north, so as to make the street straight across or through the two additions and agree, which is the proper way (O'Brien v. McGrane, 27 Wis. 446; Fleischfresser v. Schmidt, 41 Wis. 223); for the design to make St. Croix and all the streets of the two additions agree perfectly is too obvious for doubt. The other discrepancy is between the boundary of block J and that of the west end of St. Croix street in the field-notes. St. Croix street is described as extending west from the southeast corner of block J, 181½ feet, which would not carry the street more than half way on the south side of the block to Second street. These figures are evidently a clerical error. The boundary of block J is given in words which bear the impress of accuracy. A complete boundary of the block was intended, and there is no more reason or likelihood of a-mistake in mentioning St. Croix street as its south boundary than that of River street as its north boundary. Distances, which are very liable to mistake, yield easily to better evidence. To avoid all question about the west end of the street, in consequence of this discrepancy, the city, in 1874, purchased and procured a conveyance from the original owner of the land within this disputed tract. We shall therefore treat the above facts as established by the evidence. The evidence is conclusive that the whole length of St. Croix street has been constantly used by the traveling public as a street since it was laid out, and as much so over its entire width as streets similarly situated are accustomed to be used. There has been a continuous user of this street by the public for thirty years or more. Before the additions were laid out it was an old, mainly-traveled highway from and to the village. There does not appear to have been any necessity for opening and improving it over [132]*132its entire width of sixty-six feet until recently. The authorities of the city deemed it proper to now open it, and, having found the plaintiff’s fence about his lot 7 an encroachment upon it, ordered its summary removal. As to the location of lots 7, 8, and 9, there is no question, and they are recognized by many conveyances, and have been always treated as so numbered. In 1856 Louis Massey and wife deeded the east part of lot 7 to one Decimus Pell, by commencing eighty-three and three-fourths feet east of the southwest corner of lot 8, in block J, thence east eighty-one and three-fourths feet; thence to an alley stake on north side of St. Croix street, etc.; and by same description it came by mesne conveyances to Sophia L. Coon, in 1865. In 1875, Mrs. C. M. Henderson, who had become entitled to the other or west end of lot 7, bjr mesne conveyances from the proprietors, deeded it to John Coon, the husband of Sophia, by the same description as in the former deeds, as follows: “ Commencing at southwest corner of lot 8 in block J; thence east 76 feet, more or less, to a cedar stake; thence south 66 feet; thence west 76 feet, more or less, to Second street; thence north 66 feet, to the place of beginning.” This comprises the whole of lot 7 by metes and bounds, and it is bounded on the south all the way by St. Croix street by name.

In the same year (1875) John Coon and his wife, Sophia, joined in a deed of the whole of lot 7 to one Anna Boshart by the following description: ‘' Commencing at southwest corner of lot 8, in block J, in said addition; thence east to an alley passing north and south through said block; thence south to the north side of St. Croix street j thence west to the east side of Second street; thence north to the place of beginning.” In 1882, Anna Boshart conveyed lot 7 to the plaintiff by the same description.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Zurbuchen v. Teachout
402 N.W.2d 364 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 1987)
Dept. of Transp. v. Black Angus Steak House
330 N.W.2d 240 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 1983)
Jefferson County v. Mosley
226 So. 2d 652 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1969)
State v. Jewell
28 N.W.2d 314 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1947)
Board of County Commissioners v. City of Lawrence
171 P. 610 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1918)
Zuleger v. Zeh
150 N.W. 406 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1915)
Wyman v. Walker
58 So. 403 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1912)
Adams v. City of Milwaukee
129 N.W. 518 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1911)
Illinois Steel Co. v. Budzisz
119 N.W. 935 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1909)
Walker v. Wyman
47 So. 1011 (Supreme Court of Alabama, 1908)
Quinn v. Baage
114 N.W. 205 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1907)
McClellan v. Town of Weston
55 L.R.A. 898 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1901)
City of Ashland v. Chicago & Northwestern Railway Co.
80 N.W. 1101 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1900)
City of Madison v. Mayers
40 L.R.A. 635 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1897)
Lampman v. Van Alstyne
69 N.W. 171 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1896)
Nicolai v. Davis
64 N.W. 1001 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1895)
State v. Mayor of South Amboy
30 A. 628 (Supreme Court of New Jersey, 1894)
Maire v. Kruse
26 L.R.A. 449 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1893)
Dhein v. Beuscher
53 N.W. 551 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1892)
Chase v. City of Oshkosh
15 L.R.A. 553 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 1892)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
33 N.W. 587, 69 Wis. 125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/childs-v-nelsoh-wis-1887.