Illinois & St. Louis Railroad & Canal Co. v. St. Louis

12 F. Cas. 1199, 12 Dill. 70
CourtU.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri
DecidedSeptember 15, 1872
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 12 F. Cas. 1199 (Illinois & St. Louis Railroad & Canal Co. v. St. Louis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Eastern Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Illinois & St. Louis Railroad & Canal Co. v. St. Louis, 12 F. Cas. 1199, 12 Dill. 70 (circtedmo 1872).

Opinion

DILLON, Circuit Judge.

The ordinance of the city of St. Louis, adopted February G, 1872, the validity of which presents the main question for consideration, in terms describes the place upon which the elevator building therein mentioned is to be erected as a “portion of the public wharf of the said city.” It is material to understand-with precision what is meant by the public wharf in St Louis. The history of the acts of the city in respect to the wharf appears in the papers and documents on file. On March 1,1851, the mayor was authorized by joint resolution to make arrangements to perfect the title of the city to the entire wharf, or to any portion thereof. On the next day (March 2) the city, by ordinance (No. 2,596), established the eastern and western lines of the wharf, from Plum street to the southern limits of the city — these lines being 265 feet apart; and subsequently the wharf was extended to the northern boundary line of the corporation.

In 1851, also, the owners in old blocks 43 and 44, claiming to be riparian proprietors, and to own what are now known as blocks 855 and 856 (in front of which the elevator is authorized by the ordinance of February 6, 1872, to be erected), executed an instrument by which, “in consideration of the benefit which will accrue to us and the sum of one dollar,” they “authorized the city of St. Louis to locate and construct on any lands claimed by us, a wharf two hundred and sixty-five feet wide, as established by the ordinance of the city (No. 2,596, supra).” The instrument then proceeds: “And we do hereby dedicate and appropriate the said lands so taken to the use of a public wharf, to hold the same as established in said ordinance No. 2,596, for the use of a wharf, to be under the entire control and management of said city; said wharf to be constructed, repaired, taxed, and wharfage therefrom applied as the city may deem expedient.”

The city also claims title or right to the wharf property by quit claim from the public schools, which was expressed to be for the wharf as established, and also under an act of the legislature in 1864-5, and also under an act of congress of June 12, 1866, granting to the city all the interest of the [1202]*1202United States in and to all wharves, etc., within the limits of the city corporation. It is not material in this case to determine what rights to the wharf property came from the one source or the other. So far as the right comes through the instrument made in 1851 by the proprietors of blocks 43 and 44 or 835 and 850 (see Board, etc., Public Schools v. Risley, 40 Mo. 356; Schools of St. Louis v. Risley, 10 Wall. [77 U. S.] 91), the dedication is expressly for a public wharf. If the city in any way ever owned the fee to what is termed the wharf, the ordinances produced to the court satisfactorily show an irrevocable dedication thereof by it to the use of the public as a wharf. A city corporation, like any other proprietor, may, unless specially restricted, make such a dedication; and when the rights of the public have attached the dedication cannot be recalled. Dill. Mun. Corp. § 498, and cases- cited. After what the city has done with respect to the wharf property, no court would allow the corporate authorities to regard it as private and sell or otherwise dispose of it as such.

The counsel on both sides have treated the property as having been dedicated to public use as a wharf, and the authority over it to be such as exists in the eity by virtue of its powers under its charter, and not in virtue of any ownership of it, present or past. We shall accordingly assume the wharf property upon which it is proposed to erect the elevator to be property which,- either by the former proprietors or by the city, or both, has been effectually dedicated to the public for a wharf, and that the public may make every use of it, under the control and regulation of the city authorities, or of the legislature, which falls within, but no use which falls without, the scope and meaning of such a dedication.

The reference to the history of the wharf, so-called; its location on the bank of the river; its width and its length, extending along the whole water line of the city, embracing in the phrase not only the improved, but unimproved portions of the bank, will be seen to be material, when we come to consider the question as to the nature of the uses which it is allowable to make of property dedicated for such a purpose.

The legislature, in the charter of the city, has conferred upon the mayor and city council a great variety of powers, and, among others, the following: “8. To construct all needful improvements in the harbor; * * * to erect, repair, and regulate public wharves and docks; * * * to regulate the stationing, etc., of vessels within the city; to charge and collect wharfage,” etc. After a detailed enumeration of the various legislative powers granted to the eity, the charter proceeds: “17. Finally, to pass all such ordinances, not inconsistent with the provisions of this charter or the laws of the state, as may be expedient in maintaining the peace, good government, health, and welfare of the city, its trade, commerce, manufactures,” etc. None of the other provisions of the charter, cited by counsel, seem to have any direct bearing upon the power of the city over the wharf property. It will be perceived, therefore, that there is no express legislative authority to the eity to erect buildings, or~to authorize the erection thereof, upon the property known as the public wharf.

And here the complainant takes the position which we shall now consider, that without direct legislative sanction (if, indeed, with it), it is not competent for the municipal authorities themselves to erect, -or, under an otherwise unobjectionable ordinance, to authorize the erection of an elevator building upon the wharf, to be used for handling grain arriving at or to be shipped from it The argument in support of this position is, that the property is dedicated to be used for a particular purpose, viz: for the pur-: pose of a wharf, and that the occupation of it by a permanent structure of any kind, though its design, purpose, and effect may be to facilitate the receipt and transfer of grain or merchandise at the wharf, is an unauthorized use of the property'. In other words, it is insisted that it is a perversion of the use for which the property was acquired or dedicated, to allow the erection thereon of an elevator to facilitate the receipt and shipment of grain in bulk at the wharf; and, consequently, that such a structure would, if built, be a public nuisance, and liable to be proceeded against and abat* ed as such. This makes it essential to consider what are legitimate uses of property dedicated for a public wharf; and this must depend, in the absence of controlling legislative enactment, or of special limitations imposed by the dedicator, upon his presumed intention, to be gathered from the nature, situation, and location of the property, and the wants of the public. In 1851, when the city began to take steps to provide more adequate wharf accommodations, it was already possessed of an extensive trade and commerce, mainly carried on by the river. Wisely contemplating the future, it set apart a space along the whole water boundary, and termed it, whether improved or not, the public wharf. What was the purpose in setting apart property thus acquired and to be acquired for a wharf? Clearly, it was to make provision that rafts, boats, and vessels of all kinds could effect a landing in front of the city, and have a place upón which to discharge or from which to receive wares, merchandise, and cargoes of all descriptions.

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Bluebook (online)
12 F. Cas. 1199, 12 Dill. 70, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/illinois-st-louis-railroad-canal-co-v-st-louis-circtedmo-1872.