Haas v. City of Evansville

50 N.E. 46, 20 Ind. App. 482, 1898 Ind. App. LEXIS 577
CourtIndiana Court of Appeals
DecidedApril 19, 1898
DocketNo. 2,445
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 N.E. 46 (Haas v. City of Evansville) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Indiana Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Haas v. City of Evansville, 50 N.E. 46, 20 Ind. App. 482, 1898 Ind. App. LEXIS 577 (Ind. Ct. App. 1898).

Opinions

Robinson, C. J.

Appellant sued appellee for the value of certain gravel, earth and stone alleged to have been taken by appellee from certain streets in said city and converted to appellee’s use. Appellee answered admitting the taking, and pleading facts in justification. A demurrer to this answer was overruled, and a demurrer to the reply sustained. These rulings are assigned as error, and are first discussed by counsel, but as the same questions are presented by the special finding they will be considered in that connection.

So far as necessary to determine the questions raised, the special finding shows that appellee contracted for the improvement of a portion of First street according to certain plans and specifications,, the cost of the improvement to be assessed against abutting real estate, except street and alley intersections; by the specifications, the stone, earth and gravel on the street were to be removed by the contractor to places to be designated by the city officers, except that all the earth claimed by the property owners should be deposited where directed by them. The price paid the contractor for the improvement included the cost of hauling all the material and substance excavated from the street. Before the commencement of the work appellant notified the contractors and board of public works of appellee to haul the materials taken from First street and deposit the same upon certain lots designated, which demand was refused, the city claiming the right to use the gravel upon other streets [484]*484and stating its intention to so use the same; that in improving First street it was necessary to remove such material; that at the time said improvement was made certain other streets were in need of repair and said contractors by the direction of the board of public works, refused to deliver said gravel to appellant, but placed the same on such other streets needing repair; that no order or resolution had been made by the common council or said board for the repair of these streets, and the repairs thereof did not form a part of the general plan for the improvement of said First street; that appellant did not offer to remove or haul away any of said material, and the only demand ever made was to have the same' hauled and delivered on appellant’s premises; that the whole or the greater part of the earth excavated in said street was delivered by the contractors to appellant as demanded; that throughout the progress of said improvement appellee had exclusive possession of said street and material, and was in the possession of said gravel from the time it was excavated until deposited in other streets; that before bringing suit appellant demanded the - gravel which was refused. >

' Conceding, without deciding, that the title to the material in question was in appellant, the question presented is, what right or title, as against the city, has an abutting property owner on a public street in a city to surplus earth and gravel and other materials excavated from the street in front of such property for the purpose of improving such street. It is well settled that, the other conditions being the same, the rule of law applicable to the taking of material solely to obtain material to be used elsewhere, and not for the purpose of grading or improving the place from which it is taken, is not applicable to cases where the ma[485]*485ferial is taken for the express purpose of grading or improving the street at that point.

The ease of Anderson v. Bement, 13 Ind. App. 248, cited by appellant’s counsel, was an action against a road supervisor for wrongfully digging up and carrying away earth and gravel from within the limits of a highway. It was held the action would lie, but it did not appear that the earth and gravel were removed for the purpose of improving the highway at the place from whence they were taken; and the court expressly holds that the question presented in that case is not whether the supervisor had the right to improve one part of the highway by removing earth and gravel therefrom and depositing such material for the improvement of the highway at another point. In Turner v. Rising Sun, etc., Turnpike Co., 71 Ind. 547, cited by appellant’s counsel, it is held that a road supervisor has no right to open a gravel pit in a highway and remove gravel therefrom to be used on other parts of the highway, and that a turnpike company which has appropriated the highway cannot remove earth and gravel without compensation first made, or assessed and tendered. But in that case the earth and gravel were not removed for the purpose of improving the road at that point. In the City of Delphi v. Evans, 36 Ind. 90, 10 Am. Rep. 12, it was held that the common council of the city had no power to remove earth and gravel from one street for the purpose of filling up another street which had been ordered improved, where the removal of the earth and gravel was not for the purpose of improving the street from whence removed.

It will be seen that in each of the above cases complaint was made because of the removal of earth from a place, not itself being improved, but for the purpose of getting earth to make some other improvement, and [486]*486this fact clearly distinguishes these cases from the case at bar. The same is true of many of the cases of other courts cited by counsel. Although the fee of a street and a public highway may be in the adjoining lot owner, and as a general proposition he retains absolute control, subject only to the public easement, yet the uses to which a street in a city may be put are greater than with respect to ordinary highways in the country. In populous cities the easement is necessarily something more than a mere right of passage. The abutting owner is still the owner of the soil, and retains his exclusive right to all mines, quarries and the like not inconsistent with the public use, and this use in a city extends to the right to construct sewers, lay water and gas mains and the.like. The city has the right to do all acts necessary to the beneficial use of the street by the public. 2 Dillon Mun. Corp. (3rd ed.) sec. 688.

In some jurisdictions it is held that a city, in improving a street, may take the natural material found within its limits and use it in making such other improvements as the authorities deem best. Bissell v. Collins, 28 Mich. 277, 15 Am. Rep. 217; Viliski v. City of Minneapolis, 40 Minn. 304, 41 N. W. 1050; Huston v. City of Ft. Atkinson, 56 Wis. 350, 14 N. W. 444; New Haven v. Sargent, 38 Conn. 50, 9 Am. Rep. 360. See 2 Dillon Mun. Corp. (3rd ed.) sec. 687 and notes. But in this State the rule is declared to be that the city can remove the natural soil from one street to another only when the improvement of the two streets is. embraced in one and the same general plan of improvement. In City of Aurora v. Fox, 78 Ind. 1, suit was ■brought for the wrongful carrying away of the soil of the street. It appeared from the complaint that the city, without having adopted any general plan for the improvement of the streets, and without having ad ver[487]*487tisecl for proposals, and without having entered into a written contract, proceeded to dig up and haul away and appropriate the soil of the street.

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Bluebook (online)
50 N.E. 46, 20 Ind. App. 482, 1898 Ind. App. LEXIS 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/haas-v-city-of-evansville-indctapp-1898.