Herrick v. Cleveland

4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 684, 7 Ohio C.C. 470
CourtCuyahoga Circuit Court
DecidedJanuary 15, 1893
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 684 (Herrick v. Cleveland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Cuyahoga Circuit Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Herrick v. Cleveland, 4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 684, 7 Ohio C.C. 470 (Ohio Super. Ct. 1893).

Opinion

CALDWELL, J.

Myron T. Herrick, Benjamin Rose, John Walworth, Lawrence Sinnott, The Sheriff Street Market & Storage Company, Anne Walworth, Sarah Walworth, Mary W. Bradbury, Manue'l Halle, are plaintiffs in this action against the City of Cleveland.

This action is brought by the plaintiffs to do away with what they denominate a nuisance in a street or in streets in this city. It is known as the market-house on Sheriff street, near the junction of Sheriff street, Broadway and Woodland óvenues, or in that locality; and certain nuisances which they complain of in connection with the market-house.

A petition was filed in the case below, and a demurrer to that petition. The demurrer was sustained. Judgment was tendered upon demurrer, and the case comes here by appeal.

The petition asks for a mandatory injunction.

The substance of the petition is very long, and I will not state the entire substance, but part of it. At and before the first day of October, 1803, there were within the corporation of Cleveland — which is a city within the county of Cuyahoga — three streets or avenues known as Sheriff street, Broadway and Woodland avenues. These streets had a common junction or point of intersection; and these streets were then, and had for a long time been, duly dedicated by the original proprietors of the land embraced therein, for the purpose of streets and highways of the city, and they had been accepted as such.

Th'e petition alleges further that these streets had been for a long time within the control and regulation of the city, and had been improved and adapted for the purpose of their dedication and for the purpose of travel over the same. They were thoroughfares, and the travel leading out into the easterly and southeasterly part of the city was largely over these thoroughfares; that the lots bordering upon these thoroughfares at or near this point were at that time, in 1866, used largely fo; residence purposes, but owing to the growth of the city they have become business prope-ty.

The petifion further sets up that the travel is greatly increased; and that at the time first above named, the city of Cleveland being then charged by law as trustee for the general public with the duty of keeping open and unobstructed- such streets for the general use of persons desiring to pass through or along the same, and of preserving to the owners of lands abutting thereon the advantages and facilities which to their premises belong,, as against all obstruction or diversion to their uses of said streets, and of enabling them, in the natural growth of the city, to improve this property and devote it to business purposes, did in contravention of law, and in violation of its trust in that respect, and in default of its duty, and with the intent of appropriating such portion of said streets to its own business uses, and of raising revenues therefrom, cause to be constructed thereon at said point of intersection of said streets a large building, having dimensions of about 500 feet long and sixty feet wide, and has ever since maintained and used the same for a city market, and the same being sub-divided into numerous stalls; (then it enumerates the renting of these stalls) the said stalls, and the sidewalks being so constructed by said defendant at such point or intersection as to make the course along the length of said building the direct route for foot-passengers passing along any of said streets; and by reason of such advantages of location, which by right belong to the abutting owners of the lands fronting upon said streets, and by means of the diversion of such property to such purposes, the defendant constantly, from such unlawful use of said portion of said streets, derives a large and constantly increasing revnue for its genera/ uses.

[686]*686Here is an averment that was touched upon in argument;

“That for the purpose of enabling the defendant to use such property without completely and entirely cutting off the public from the use of such streets, it- at such time caused the same to be widened by taking certain triangular strips — as shown on the plat attached to-the petition and marked “Exhibit B” — and included within the line of such streets and devoted to public use as such, whereby, and by reason of the construction of such building in the central part of such streets, the direct and immediate access which the public before that time had by means thereof, was converted into a narrow and circuitous course, liable at all times to be impeded by the constant approach and movement of vehicles engaged in the receiving and taking away of commodities from such market-house (the same being for such purposes furnished with frequent entrances along its entire length), whereby even from the original time and erection of such market-house, much travel, more especially upon market days, was, and has ever since continued to be diverted from such streets, and caused! to pass from the central business part of the city to the outskirts by other streets and highways.
“That the said city at or about said time aforesaid, for the purpose of deriving from the use of said streets further revenue for its general purposes, caused such streets for considerable distances above and below such point of intersection thereof, and along said market-building, to be marked out and layed into what were styled market spaces, being certain spaces about six feet in width, lying along the curb lines of said streets around said market-house, and extending far enough into the different streets to admit of horses and wagons standing within the same backed up to the curb, in such manner that persons having commodities for sale can sell the sanie immediately from their wagons to persons passing along said sidewalks; and that from such time down to the present time said city has annually or oftener advertised such spaces for rent for such purposes, and has from time to time, and! still does rent the same by competitive biddings to persons desiring to use them for such purposes, and the same have been ever since, and still are, used for such purposes by the direct procurement and authority of said city; and that included in said streets io used, are the narrow streets or passage ways along the sides of said market-building i * aforesaid, the spaces along the curbs on both sides of the same being devoted to such pur poses.
“The plaintiffs further aver that during the most of every week day said streets and thoroughfares are no.w so obstructed that it was with difficulty that vehicles cap pass through and along the same, or across the same by the different streets leading thereto; and they aver that the effect of it is that travel in the thickly populated part of the city which passes, over these thoroughfares to and from the city, has been diverted to other thoroughfares, more circuitous, and to the damage of the property owners owning property described in this petition; that the said erection and maintenance of said building upon such streets, and the said use of said portion of said streets adjacent thereto is, and at all times has been in violation of the statutes of the state of Ohio, and the same operates as a continuing nuisance.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 Ohio Cir. Dec. 684, 7 Ohio C.C. 470, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/herrick-v-cleveland-ohcirctcuyahoga-1893.