Harrison v. Board of Supervisors of Milwaukee County

8 N.W. 731, 51 Wis. 645, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 105
CourtWisconsin Supreme Court
DecidedApril 19, 1881
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 8 N.W. 731 (Harrison v. Board of Supervisors of Milwaukee County) 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
Harrison v. Board of Supervisors of Milwaukee County, 8 N.W. 731, 51 Wis. 645, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 105 (Wis. 1881).

Opinion

TavlqR, J.

The board of supervisors, upon■>their appeal, insist that no mandatory injunction should have been granted requiring them to remove so much of the embankment as rests upon the plaintiff’s land outside of the limits of the highway. The reason urged is, that the court made an order granting the plaintiff a preliminary injunction to prevent them from extending their embankment upon the plaintiff’s land, before any work had been done, and that the plaintiff refused or neglected to render such order effectual by giving the bond required, and permitted the work to go on. It is said that the plaintiff is in [652]*652no better position than he would have been had he lain by and permitted the work to be done, and then commenced an action to compel the defendants to remove the embankment; and it is claimed that in such case a court of equity would not interfere, but compel the plaintiff to seek his remedy in an action at law, and that by such action he would have an adequate remedy for all the damages sustained by him. There is some force in this suggestion, and had the plaintiff permitted the work to be done before filing any complaint asking the court to restrain the defendants, we should have very grave doubts whether a court of equity would interfere for the purpose of compelling a removal of the embankment. In such case, the defendant having done all he proposed to do, and what he had done being in the nature of a simple trespass, the court would probably leave the plaintiff to his action for damages.

But the plaintiff filed his complaint before the work was done, asking that the defendants be restrained from doing it; and, the plaintiff having made out a case entitling him to the relief asked, we are of the opinion that he did mot forfeit his right to an injunction by failing to give the bond which would have entitled him to the preliminary one, and that the defendant acquired no rights because the work was done pendente lite. That the plaintiff was of sufficient means to have readily procured such bond, we do not think has any bearing on the case. By the commencement of his action in due time, the plaintiff gave the defendants notice that he did not waive any of hi's equitable or legal rights; and the defendants having gone on with the work after the commencement of the action, they did so at the risk of being compelled to remove their works from the plaintiff’s land, if, in the end, it was found they had no right to oecupy it with their works. Such notice having been given in a timely manner, the plaintiff was entitled to his mandatory injunction at the end of the litigation to compel the removal of so much of the embankment as had been unlawfully placed upon his land pending the litigation. State [653]*653of Pennsylvania v. Bridge Co., 13 How., 519, and the other cases cited by the plaintiff in bis brief. See, also, High on Injunctions (2d ed.), § 708, and cases cited. As the supervisors encroached upon the plaintiff’s land without any authority to do so, and without making any compensation therefor, the judgment should be affirmed.

The plaintiff, on his appeal, insists that he was entitled to further relief than was granted by the court. His claim is, that the defendants had no lawful authority to make the improvement in front of his land; that they were mere trespassers; and that the structure erected by them in the highway in front of his land was a private nuisance as to him, if not a public nuisance against the state; that he is entitled to have the nuisance abated and removed; and that the court should have so decided by its judgment. It is claimed, and the county court has so found, that the county board did the work under the authority conferred on them by ch. 51, Laws of 1878, and not otherwise; and the learned counsel for the plaintiff insists that such act is unconstitutional and void for various reasons set out in his brief. It seems that the making of this improvement in the highway at the place where the work was finally done, had been in contemplation for several years. In 1876 the legislature passed an act authorizing the county to do this work. See chapter 365, Laws of 1876. In 1877 another act was passed on the same subject (chapter 279, Laws of 1877); and in 1878 chapter 51 was passed, and the acts of 1876 and 1877 were repealed. The act of 1876 declared the road in question a county highway, and authorized and directed its improvement by the county board during the year 1876; and its seventh section provided that “ if, by improving said highway in the manner aforesaid, any damages be sustained by any person or persons owning lands adjoining such highway, at the place or portion of such highway being so improved according to the terms of the act,” then such damages should be ascertained in the manner provided by chapter 19 of the Revised Statues of [654]*6541858; and provided that such damages, when so ascertained, should be collected as other town' charges, but should not be paid until the improvement was made. The act of 1877 again declared said highway a county highway, and made some further provisions concerning the work; and the sixth section provides that “ if, by improving said highway, any damage be sustained by any person owning lands adjoining such highway, at the place or portion of such highway being improved according to the terms of the act, such damages shall be paid out of the treasury of the county.” This act also provides for the levy of a county tax sufficient to cover all the expenses incurred under the same.

Section 2 of chapter 51, Laws of 1878, recites that, the county board of supervisors of the county of Milwaukee having declared and made the portion of Spring street road between the present westerly, limits of the city of Milwaukee and the westerly boundary line of the Calvary cemetery, in the town of Wauwatosa, a county highway, all acts and proceedings of the county board in that behalf are hereby legalized. Section 1 of the act requires the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway Company to erect an iron bridge over their track where it crosses the highway in question in the town of Wauwatosa, and prescribes the manner of constructing the same. The second section, after reciting and declaring as above stated, requires the county board to cause to be constructed, in 1878, a viaduct approach to said bridge from the eastwardly . end thereof, east 400 feet, and also to extend such viaduct still east-wardly 200 feet more, to be made of earth filling, to the present iron bridge over the Menomonee river. This filling is the only part of the work which encroaches on the plaintiff’s land. It also provides for a convenient earth approach from the west end of the railroad bridge, westward, and gives a description of how the viaduct and grade shall be constructed, and the grade thereof, and then further provides “ that the aforesaid portion of county highway shall thereafter, and so long as the [655]*655same shall remain a county highway, be repaired and maintained by said board of supervisors at the proper expense of said county,” etc.

Section 3 provides for making plans and letting the work. Section & provides that the county board “shall, in 1878, levy a tax sufficient to pa.y the said county’s portion, hereinafter mentioned, of t7ie costs and damages of the aforesaid improvement, aud shall annually thereafter levy a tax sufficient to cover the expense and cost of repairing and maintaining said portion of county highway. Three-fourths of the expense of said work, and of cony doomages

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Bluebook (online)
8 N.W. 731, 51 Wis. 645, 1881 Wisc. LEXIS 105, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrison-v-board-of-supervisors-of-milwaukee-county-wis-1881.